The next BriefingsDirect intelligent workspaces discussion explores how for 30 years Citrix has pioneered ways to make workers more productive, IT operators stronger, and a vast partner ecosystem more capable.
We will now hear how Citrix is
by no means resting on its laurels by charting
a new future of work that abstracts productivity above apps, platforms,
data, and even clouds. The goal: To empower, energize, and enlighten disaffected
workers while simplifying and securing anywhere work across any deployment
model.
To hear more about Citrix’s
evolution and ambitious next innovations, please welcome David Henshall, President and
CEO of Citrix. The discussion is moderated by Dana Gardner, Principal
Analyst at Interarbor Solutions.
Here are some excerpts:
Gardner: To me
Citrix is unique in that for 30 years it has been consistently disruptive, driven
by vision, and willing to take on both technology and culture -- which are
truly difficult things to do. And you have done it over and over again.
As Citrix was enabling multiuser remote
access -- or cloud
before there was even a word for it -- you knew that changing technology for delivering
apps necessitated change in how users do their jobs. What’s different now, 30
years later? How has your vision of work further changed from delivery of apps?
Do your best work
Henshall: I
think you said it well. For 30 years, we have focused on connecting people and
information on-demand. That has allowed us to let people be productive on their
terms. The fundamental challenge of people is to have access to the tools and
resources necessary to get their jobs done -- or as we describe it, to do
their best work.
Henshall |
We look at that as an absolute
necessity. It’s one of the things that makes people feel empowered, feel
accomplished, and it allows them to drive better productivity and output. It
allows engagement at the highest levels possible. All of these have been great
contributing factors.
What’s changed? The technology
landscape continues to evolve as applications have evolved over the years – and
so
have we. You referred to the fact that we’ve reinvented ourselves many
times in the last three decades. All great companies go through the same
regeneration against a common idea, over-and-over again. We are now in what I
would describe as the cloud-mobile era, which has created unprecedented
flexibility from the way people used to manage IT. Everything from new software-as-a-service
(SaaS) services are being consumed with much less effort, all the way to distributed edge
services that allow us to compute in new ways that we’ve never imagined.
And then, of course, on the
device side, the choices are frankly nearly infinite. Being able to support the
device of your choice is a critical part of what we do -- and we believe that
matters.
Gardner: I was
fortunate enough to attend a press conference back in 1995 when Citrix WinFrame,
as it was called at that time, was delivered. The late Citrix cofounder Ed Iacobucci was leading
the press conference. And to me, looking back, that set the stage for things
like desktop as
a service (DaaS), virtual
desktop infrastructure (VDI), multi-tenancy, and later SaaS. We all think of
these as major mainstream technologies.
Do you feel that what
you’re announcing about the future of work, and of inserting
intelligence in context to what people do at work, will similarly set off a
new era in technology? Are we repeating the past in terms of the scale and
magnitude of what you are biting off?
Future productivity goes beyond products
Henshall: The
interesting thing about the future is that it keeps changing. Against that
backdrop we are rethinking the way people work. It’s the same general idea about
just giving people the tools
to be productive on their terms.
A few years back that was
about location, of being able to work outside of a traditional office. Today
more than half the people do not work in a typical corporate headquarters environment.
People are more distributed than ever before.
The challenge we are now
trying to solve takes it another step forward. We think about it from a productivity
standpoint and an engagement template. The downside of technology is that it
does make everything possible. So therefore the level of complexity has gone up
dramatically. The level of interruptions -- and what we call context
shifting -- has gone up dramatically. And so, we are looking for ways to
help simplify, automate common workflows, and modernize the way people engage
with applications. All of these point toward the same common outcome of, “How
do we make people more
productive on their terms?”
Gardner: To
solve that problem of location flexibility years ago, Citrix had to deal with
the network, servers, performance and capacity, and latency -- all of which were
invisible. End users didn’t know that it was Citrix behind-the-scenes.
Will people know the Citrix
name and associate it with workspaces now that you are elevating your value
above IT?
Henshall: We
are solving broader challenges. We have moved gradually over the years from
being a behind-the-scenes infrastructure technology. People have actually used
the company’s name as a verb. “I have Citrixed into my environment,” for
example. That will slowly evolve into still leveraging Citrix as a verb, but meaning
something like, “I Citrixed to get my job done.” That takes on an even broader
definition around productivity and simplification, and it allows us more
degrees of freedom.
We are working with ecosystem partners
across the infrastructure landscape, all types of application vendors. We therefore
are a bridge between all of those. It doesn’t mean we necessarily have to have
our name front and center, but Citrix is still a verb for most people in the
way they think about getting their jobs done.
Gardner: I commend
you for that because a lot of companies can’t resist making their name part-and-parcel
of a solution. Perhaps that’s why you’ve been such a good partner over the
years. You’ve been supplying a lot of the workhorses to get jobs done, but
without necessarily having to strut your stuff.
Let’s get back to the issues
around worker talent, productivity, and worker user experience. It seems to me
we have lot of the bits and parts for this. We have great apps, great technology,
and cloud distribution. We are seeing interactivity via chatbots, and robotic
programming automation (RPA).
Why do you think being at the
middle is the right place to pull this all together? How can Citrix uniquely help,
whereas none of the other individual parts can?
Empower the people, manage the tech
Henshall: It’s a
problem they are all focused on solving. So take a SaaS application, for
example. You have applications that are incredibly powerful, best of breed, and
they allow for infinite flexibility. Therein lies part of the challenge. The
vast majority of people are not power users. They are not looking for every
single bell and whistle across a workflow. They are looking for the opportunity
to get something done, and it’s usually something fairly simple.
We are designing an
interface to help abstract away a lot of complexity from the end user so
they can focus on the task more than the technology itself. It’s an interesting
challenge because so much technology is focused on the tech and how great and
powerful and inflexible it is, and they lose sight of what people are trying to
accomplish.
We
start by working backward. We start with the end user, understand what
they need to be productive, empowered, and engaged. We let that be a
guiding principle behind our roadmap. That gives us flexibility to
empathize, to understand more about customers.
We start by working backward. We
start with the end user, understand what they need to be productive, empowered,
and engaged. We let that be a guiding principle behind our roadmap. That gives
us flexibility to empathize, to understand more about customers and end users more
effectively than if we were building something purely for technology’s sake.
Gardner: For younger
workers who have grown up all-digital all the time, they are more culturally
attuned to being proactive. They want to go out and do things with choice. So
culturally, time is on your side.
On the other hand, getting
people to change their behaviors can be very challenging. They don’t know that
it could be any better, so they can be resistant. This is more than working
with an IT department on infrastructure. We are talking about changing people’s
thinking and how they relate to technology.
How do you propose to do that?
Do you see yourself working in an ecosystem in such a way that this is not just,
“If we build it, they will come,” affair, but evangelizing to the point where
cognitive patterns can be changed?
Henshall: A lot
of our relationships and conversations have been evolving over the last few years.
We’ve been moving further up what I would call “the IT hierarchy.” We’re having
conversations with CIOs now about broad infrastructure, ways that we can help
address the use cases of all their employees, not just those that historically needing
all the power of virtualization.
But as we move forward, there is a large transformation going on. Whether we use terms like digital transformation and others, those are less technology conversations and more about business outcomes – more than any time in my 30-year-career.
Because of that, you’re not
only engaging the CIO, you may have the same conversation with a line of
business executive, a chief people officer, the chief financial officer (CFO),
or someone in another functional organizations. And this is because they’re all
trying to accomplish a specific outcome more than focusing on the technology
itself.
And that allows us to elevate
the discussion in a way that is much more interesting. It allows us to think
about the human and business outcomes more so than ever before. And again, it’s
just one more extension of how we are getting out of the “technology for
technology’s sake” view and much more into the, “What is it that we are actually
trying to accomplish” view.
Gardner:
David, as we tackle these issues, elevate the experience, and let people work
the way they want, it seems we are also opening up the floodgates for addition
of more intelligence.
Whether you call it artificial intelligence
(AI), machine learning
(ML), or augmented intelligence, the fact is that we are able to deal with more
data, derive analytics from it, learn patterns, reapply those learning lessons,
and repeat. So injecting that into work, and how people get their jobs done, is
the big question these days. People are trying to tackle it from a variety of
different directions.
You have said an advantage Citrix has, is in access to data. What kind of data are we talking about, and why is that going to put Citrix in a leadership position?
Soup to nuts supervision of workflow
Henshall: We
have a portfolio that spans everything from the client device through the
application, files, and the network. We are able to instrument many different
parts of the entire workflow. We can capture information about how people are
using technologies, what their usage patterns look like, where they are coming
in from, and how the files are being used.
In most cases, we take that
and apply it into contextual outcomes. For example, in the case of security, we
have an analytics platform and we use those security analytics. We can create a
risk score that’s very similar to your credit score for an individual user’s
behavior if something anomalous happens. For example, you’re here with me and
you’re in front of your computer, but you also tried to log on from another
part of the globe at the same time.
Things like that can be
flagged almost instantaneously and allows the organization to identify and -- in
many cases -- automatically address those types of scenarios. In that case, it
may immediately ask for two-factor authentication.
We are not capturing personally identifiable
information (PII) and other types of broader data that fall under a privacy
umbrella. We access a lot of anonymized things that provide the insights.
Citrix
operates in about 100 countries around the world. We are already very
familiar with local compliance and data privacy regulations. We are
making sure that we can operate within those and give our customers in
those markets the tools to make sure they are operating within those
constraints as well.
Every company has [had privacy
discussions] and will continue to evolve over time as technology evolves
because the underlying platforms are becoming very powerful. Citrix operates in
about 100 countries around the world. We are already very familiar with local
compliance and data privacy regulations. We are making sure that we can operate
within those and certainly give our customers in those markets the tools to
make sure that they are operating effectively within the constraints as well.
Gardner: The many
resources people rely on to do their jobs come from different places -- public
clouds, private clouds, a hybrid between them, different SaaS providers, and different
legacy systems of record.
You are in a unique position
in the middle of that. You can learn from it and begin to suggest how people
can improve. Those patterns can be really powerful. It’s not something we’ve
been able to do before.
What do we call that? Is it
AI? Or a valet or digital assistant to help in your work while protective of privacy
and adhering to all the laws along the way? And where do you see that going in
terms of having an impact on the economy and on companies?
AI, ML to assist and automate tasks
Henshall: Two
very broad questions. From the future standpoint, AI and ML capabilities are
helping turn all the data we have into more useful or actionable information.
And in our case, you mentioned virtual assistance. We will be using intelligent
assistance to help you automate simple tasks.
And many of those could be
tasked between applications. For example, you could ask your assistant to move
a meeting to next Thursday or any time your other meeting participants happen
to be available. The bots
will go out, search for that optimal time, and take those actions. Those are
the types of things that we envision more for the virtual assistants going
forward, and I think those will be interesting.
Beyond that, it becomes a learning
mechanism whereby we can identify that your bot came back and told you you’ve
had the same conflict two meetings in a row. Do you want to change all future
meetings so that this doesn’t happen again? It can become much more predictive.
And so, this journey that Citrix
has been on for many years started with helping to simplify IT so that it
became easier to deliver the infrastructure. The second part of that journey
was making it easier for people to consume those resources across the
complexities we have talked about.
Now, the products
we announced at our May 2019 Citrix Synergy Conference are more about
guiding work to help simplify the workflows. We will be doing more in this last
space on how to anticipate what you will need so that we can automate it ahead
of time. And that’s an interesting journey. It will take a few years to get
there, but it’s going to be pretty powerful when we do.
Gardner: As
you’re conducting product development, I assume you’re reflecting these
capabilities back to your own workforce, the Citrix global talent pool. Do you
drink your own champagne? What are you finding? Does it give you a sense as the
CEO that your workforce has an advantage by employing these technologies? Do we
have any proof points that the productivity is in fact enhanced?
Henshall: It’s
still early days. A lot of these are brand-new technologies that don’t have
enough of a base of learning yet.
But some of the early
learnings can identify areas where you’re multitasking too much, or are in an
inefficient process, or in my case, I tend to look at automating opportunities
for how much I am multitasking inside of a meeting. That helps me understand
whether I should be in that meeting in the first place, whether I am a 100
percent focused and committed -- or have I been distracted by other elements.
Those are interesting
learnings that are more
about personal productivity and how we can optimize from that respect.
More broadly speaking, our
workforce is globally distributed. We absolutely drink our own champagne when
it comes to engaging a global team. We have teams now in about 40 countries
around the world and we are very, very virtual. In fact, among my leadership
team, I am the only member that lives full-time in [Citrix’s headquarters] in South
Florida. We make that work because we embrace all of our own technology, stay
on top of common projects, communicate across all the various mediums, and
collaborate where need be.
That allows us to tap into
nontraditional workforce populations, to differentiate, and enable folks who need
different types of flexibility for their own lifestyles. You miss great talent
if you are far too rigid. Personally, I believe the days are gone when
everybody is expected to work inside a corporate headquarters. It’s just not
practical anymore.
Gardner: For
those businesses that recognize there is tremendous change afoot, are using new
models like cloud, and don’t want complexity to outstrip productivity – what
advice do you have for them as they start digital transformation efforts? What
should they be putting in place now to take advantage of what companies like
Citrix will be providing them in a few years?
Business-first supports global collaboration
Henshall: The number
one thing on any digital transformation project is to be currently clear about
what the outcome is you are trying to achieve. Start with the outcome and work
backward. You can leverage platforms like Citrix, for example, to look across
multiple technologies, focus on those business outcomes, and leave the
technology decision in many cases to last. It shouldn’t be the other way around
because if you do, you will self-limit what those outcomes should be.
Make sure you have buy-in across all stakeholders. As I talked about earlier, have a conversation with the CFO, head of marketing, head of human resources, and many others. Look for breadth of outcomes, because you don’t want to solve problems for one small team, you want to solve problems across the enterprise. That’s where you get the best leverage. It allows you the best opportunity to simplify the complexity that has built up over the last 30 to 40 years. This will help people get out from under that problem.
Gardner: Lastly,
for IT departments specifically, the people who have been most aware of Citrix
as a brand, how should IT be thinking about entering this new era of focusing
on work and productivity? What should IT be thinking about to transform
themselves to be in the best position to attain these better business outcomes?
Henshall: I
have already seen the transformation happening. Most IT administrators want to
focus on larger business problems, more than just maintaining the existing
infrastructure. Unfortunately, the budgets have been relatively limited for
innovation because of all the complexity we have talked about.
But my advice for everyone is,
take a step back, understand how to be the champion of the business, to be the
hero by providing great outcomes, great experiences, and higher productivity.
That’s not a technology conversation first and foremost. Obviously it has a
technology element but understand and be empathetic of the needs of the
business. Then work backward, and Citrix will help you get there.
Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Read a full transcript or download a copy. Sponsor: Citrix.
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