Pure Storage Launches

Today marks the launch of Pure Storage, one of the most exciting enterprise companies in the Greylock portfolio.  Founded by John Colgrove (better known as “Coz”) and John Hayes, Pure has assembled a world class team of product innovators that is setting out to disrupt the world of enterprise storage.  How you might ask?  By delivering the world’s first all-Flash Enterprise Array. 

While flash technology has been around for some time, it’s been mostly viewed as a consumer electronics technology, commonly used in smartphones and tablets.  But in recent times, flash has emerged as THE technology of the future for enterprise storage as the existing, 50 year old (!) hard disk platforms are quickly running out of steam.   Specifically, trends such as virtualization and data consolidation are increasing the demand for random input/output (I/O) well beyond the capabilities of hard disk technology.    While other startups and incumbents have begun to embrace flash technology, most are doing so in an evolutionary way:  introducing flash as a new tier into their current lineup of hard disk-based arrays.  While this tactic may work in the short term, history has shown that the winning formula for embracing new disruptive technologies usually requires a “clean sheet of paper” approach like the one that Pure is taking.

Greylock led the series B round in Pure in July 2010 and participated in the most recent $30 Million series C round.  Our good friends at Sutter Hill Ventures had incubated the company and led the series A investment.  At the time of our original investment, we were attracted to the combination that all venture firms are looking for:  1) world class team, 2) HUGE market and 3) disruptive technology.  As easy a formula as it might seem, finding all 3 in one company is a rare occurrence.   Soon after making the investment, we worked actively with the team and board to recruit Scott Dietzen as CEO.  Known to many as “Dietz”, Scott was the perfect choice for CEO:  a brilliant entrepreneur (BEA/Weblogic, Zimbra) who brought strong technology and go-to-market talents.  And he was a great cultural fit:  along with the founders, Scott wanted to create a strong culture and build a company for the long term.

Pure Storage is the latest example in Greylock’s long history of investing in the storage industry.  We have been fortunate to be a part of storage leaders such as Data Domain, Legato, Decru, Polyserve and Data Robotics.  Please join us in wishing the Pure Storage team the best of luck in creating the next great storage company.

Sincerely

The Greylock Partners

Google & Motorola

Very very interesting news about Google buying Motorola Mobility this morning. It’s got so many implications it’s tough to take in all at once, so wanted to capture a few thoughts quickly.

First thing worth pointing out, though, is this: we don’t actually know the shape of the whole deal at this point. Will Google keep the MOTO hardware business? Keep the patents and sell the hardware side? Keep both? It’s hard to know how their internal evaluation went, and what they’ll do from here, so a lot of this is really hard to speculate about.

Having said that, a few thoughts:

- it’s another instance in a long history of software (and now Internet) business devouring the previous generation’s hardware businesses. Internet business are inherently more leveraged: distribution power trumps almost everything else, especially in a phase where the technology portion is maturing.

- along those lines, it’s interesting to think about what happens next for Samsung, RIM, HTC, Nokia, but I’m way more interested in what the software players do. All eyes in that regard are on Microsoft, but I think the more interesting long term questions are for Facebook and Amazon.

- 2 things it’s clear that Google didn’t buy MOTO for: its margins or its ~20k employees.

- seems like Google definitely wanted the IP portfolio.

- and it seems to me that, assuming they keep the hardware business, that they want Motorola because it gives Google full control over the hardware and software stack, which is the only way that they’ll ever be able to even approach the excellent UX fit & finish of the Apple offerings. I feel like that’s one of the top drivers, and maybe the most important one over the long term.

- One other thing that this merger is decidedly not about is distribution — if anything, Google’s distribution power with respect to Android is somewhat weakened, at least in the short-to-medium term, as they’re undoubtedly going to cause some grief with partners Samsung and HTC. Feels like Google has calculated that control over getting the experience right trumps any distribution help they might get from their handset partners.

All of this lines up pretty well with my post about Screens, Storage & Networks last week — the last 60 days have seen Google push hard to get in the top tier on Screens (MOTO) and Networks (Google+).

My most esoteric point I’ve left for last, though: one of the unfortunate consequences of this development is that I think it will move perceptions of big corporations building open software (and in this particular instance, I’m specifically talking about open source software) at least a few more notches towards the cynical. The question that everyone will ask anytime a company tries an open experiment like Android in the future, the inevitable line of questioning will be: “Sure it’s open now, but for how long?” Whether premeditated or not, the path of Android has been from wide open to asserting more and more control — and this is another data point on that path. I’m not criticizing or indicting anyone for this — I think it’s essentially just a natural evolution and response to market conditions that require tighter integration. I think in a lot of ways it’s inevitable in technology networks for this to happen. (And I’ve written about it a bit before.) My only real sadness here is that it’ll move cynicism on corporate open source efforts up one more notch, and that’s not good.

Overall, though, fascinating day, fascinating time. Big moves!

–John

John Lilly is a partner at Greylock Partners and former CEO of Mozilla.

 

 

 

Greylock Partners Welcomes Data Wizard DJ Patil

I am happy to announce that DJ Patil has joined Greylock Partners as Data Scientist in Residence from Color, where he was Chief Product Officer.

DJ Patil

DJ and I have been working together to solve data problems for years. DJ led the build out of the data and analytics group at LinkedIn. Indeed, our many conversations about data led me to my “Data is Web 3.0″ thesis, which I presented at South by Southwest this past March. In short, the idea is that people generate a massive amount of data when they use Web 2.0 applications. Creative companies and organizations can use that data as a foundation for a new set of unique and innovative products and services. DJ’s team proved this thesis at LinkedIn by building some of the most highly trafficked applications at LinkedIn, including People You May Know, Who’s Viewed My Profile, Career Explorer and Skills.

We at Greylock believe that data strategy will be a key ingredient to the success of most high-growth tech companies today—especially those building products and services in software, Internet and mobile. Now is the time to leverage data in new ways to create useful, fun and engaging experiences. Many of the companies we support have built data functions into their organizations. My partner James and I wrote a blog post in January about the Power of Data as a way to explain why we invested in Groupon.

The more we talked about this theme internally at Greylock, the more our conversations turned to how we can use it to help our companies. A few months ago we pulled together a hands-on data summit for our companies and other friends, which we held at LinkedIn. Speakers and attendees included data, product and engineering talent from Cloudera, Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, One Kings Lane, Pandora, Redfin, Rich Relevance and Zynga. DJ gave a talk on “data jujitsu” and helped us think through the right content that would make for a compelling and useful workshop.

The summit was a hit, and showed us that our companies have strong appetites to learn more ways to leverage data as a competitive tool. Finally, we realized we needed an in-house expert. DJ had already demonstrated his abilities in building new and innovative data practices at LinkedIn and it was clear to us that he was the right person to help us with this on a full-time basis.

DJ is the natural entrepreneurial leader for this work, as he has built new groups around his ideas and worked with start-ups in multiple capacities. At LinkedIn he worked closely with Greylock-backed Cloudera to implement Hadoop and sponsor technologies like Voldemort, Askaban and Kafka. He has held roles at Skype,PayPal and eBay. As LinkedIn’s Chief Security Officer he partnered with Facebook, Google, Twitter, Zynga and others to take on hackers, spammers and fraudsters. He has also done strategic advisory work for the U.S. Department of Defense, the Department of Energy and Civilian Research and Development Foundation.

In his new role DJ will help Greylock-backed start-ups to learn the art of data jujitsu. Together they will build core competencies and teams around data, conceive new data strategies to optimize decision-making and create new user-facing products.

At LinkedIn, DJ's team came up with multiple ideas of how to visualize and make use of data, including network maps, like this one. Make your own map here: http://inmaps.linkedinlabs.com/

I’m looking forward to partnering with DJ again. Welcome, DJ!

–Reid

Reid Hoffman is Co-Founder and Chairman at LinkedIn and a partner at Greylock Partners. He is a member of the founding team at PayPal and has been an angel investor and adviser to dozens of organizations including Facebook, Zynga, Flickr and Last.FM. Reid is a board observer at AirbnbGowalla, and Swipely, an advisor to Groupon and a director at Zynga, Mozilla Corp., Six Apart, Shopkick, and Kiva.org. His complete profile can be found here.

Screens, Storage and Networks

I’ve been thinking a bunch about platforms lately, and how they’re evolving very very quickly. Generally, there are two categories of thing that people talk about as platforms. Traditionally, they’ve been computer operating systems: Windows, OS X & Linux, now iOS & Android. Lately people are talking about cloud platforms: services like EC2, but also web services with APIs that other apps are built to integrate with.

But more and more, that’s not the way I’m thinking about my own systems; as devices proliferate at my own home, and as I tend to use tiny connected computers in more numerous and varied contexts.

I’ve been interested in what I call “4 screen & a cloud” products for a while: products that help us unify and take advantage of our laptop + phone + tablet + tv — but it all became a little clearer to me a few weeks when a wave of devices entered the house all at the same time. In the space of a few weeks, I upgraded to an iPad2, got a Samsung Tab to experiment with Android Tablets, got an Android phone in addition to my iPhone, and got a WebOS phone from the D9 conference. So we had all those devices in the house, plus our iMac, Kathy’s set of devices, and my mom’s as well, since she was visiting. Oh, and 3 Kindles between the three of us. Screens were everywhere.

Now, I’m the first to recognize that we’re somewhat atypical in our technology consumption in normal times; add to that the devices that I’ve picked up lately because of work and my house is a jumble of operating systems, devices and power adapters. Exciting!

When you get that many screens and devices, what happens is interesting: when you want to do something, communicate with someone, remember something, schedule an appointment, read a book, or whatever, you just pick up whatever screen is nearest to you and work from that.

Well, you do that if you can. Because in our current platform chaos, not all devices are fungible, not all activities are available from all platforms.

So that got me thinking some about what I need, and where, and in what contexts and on what devices, and now I think about platforms this way: I have a set of screens, a set of stuff, and a set of people that I want to do things with — and I want those sets available to me wherever & whenever I am.

By screens, I mean something more than just pixels: I really mean input & output systems, of which screens are the most visible parts; really it should probably be screens, sensors & speakers. In other words, it’s the displays of each system, the audio systems, and the ways that we indicate intent, be it typing, swiping, speaking, remote-button-puching, smiling, waving, running, or just being.

By storage, I mean something more than just bits: while Dropbox and iCloud and Clouddrive are important, I want to do more than just store and share my files with others. It’s about more than having a place to put my music. It’s about having the context of my life: my apps, my reading material, my history of shopping & interest intent. It’s really the things I’m creating, consuming, sharing, saving, working on and just thinking about. One of the things that’s probably non-obvious about this formulation is that for this to work, the storage is going to be pretty keyed to my identity. Without knowing something about who I am, it won’t work.

And by network, I mean something more than just my Facebook graph: what’s becoming clear is that we’ve all got many and diverse groupings in our lives, ranging from the very intimate groups of a nuclear family to the wide-ranging groupings of Twitter followers. The short version, though, is that it’s becoming increasingly clear that, just like in the offline world, people online want to do things with each other. Shocking, I know.

That’s the definition of platform that’s relevant to me: a combination of screens, storage and networks that help me do my work and live my life. The companies that see that true platforms transcend any one particular technology stack will be the ones that prosper — you can already see some interesting ones emerge.

As a side note, I think screens, storage & networks is one way to look at the landscape of the giants competing: it’s where Apple, Google, Facebook & Amazon are slugging it out (and to some extent it’s the evolution now of my old stomping ground, Mozilla). I would argue that each of the giants has a super strong position in 1 or 2 of the three areas, but none has a lock on all three, and most of the interesting initiatives of each are about strengthening the places where they’re historically weak.

Apple is obviously terrific at screens, okay at storage, and not very good at networks.

Google’s now strong at screens (although probably not as strong as Apple) and could be great at storage, and finally has a credible start on networks.

Facebook is incredibly strong at networks, has some weakness in screens, and is pretty good with storage (at least for things like photos).

And Amazon is very strong on storage, weak at networks, and weak (at the moment) on screens.

I’d argue that their relative strengths and weaknesses are  important for startups to understand as well, as that gives you a bit of a map of one set of opportunities.

Anyway, that’s how I’m thinking about things lately. What do you think?

–John

  John Lilly is a partner at Greylock Partners and former CEO of Mozilla.

Welcoming Mark McLaughlin to Palo Alto Networks

I’m thrilled to announce that today we are announcing Mark McLaughlin as Palo Alto Network’s new President and CEO.

Mark joins Palo Alto Networks from VeriSign (VRSN) where he has been President and CEO since 2009. We selected Mark for his exceptional leadership capabilities, his intensity and commitment, his passion for innovation, strong cultural fit with the Palo Alto Networks team and prior experience in the security sector. A West Point graduate, Mark began his career as an attack helicopter pilot. He has held business development and sales leadership positions earlier in his career and held increasingly senior leadership positions at VeriSign over the last decade (including ownership for all products and marketing). He is also an insider in Internet infrastructure and serves on President Obama’s national security telecommunications advisory committee.

Palo Alto Networks is a once-in-a-decade company. PAN just completed a record quarter, has an installed base of over 4,500 customers and is at a bookings run rate of over $200 million. The company is in the midst of rapid growth and expansion — PAN recently moved into new corporate headquarters in the bay area and expects to hire more than 300 new employees in the coming year. PAN has been on a very strong sales growth curve since inception and is one of the fastest growing companies in the enterprise IT sector.

Nir Zuk founded PAN in early 2005 with an initial seed round from Greylock Partners and Sequoia Capital, and worked out of Greylock’s offices during 2005. After multiple brainstorming sessions and customer visits together, Nir had the bold vision and ambition to re-enter the mainstream network security market with a disruptive next-generation firewall approach. Nir was joined by Rajiv Batra (a world-class engineering leader) and began shipping product in the summer of 2007.

We’re looking forward to the start of the next chapter in the company’s history as Mark helps Palo Alto Networks scale and grow into the industry’s largest independent network security company.

Welcome Mark!

–Asheem

Asheem Chandna is a partner at Greylock Partners, where he is focused on helping founders and management teams initiate and build industry-leading companies selling new technologies to enterprise buyers. His current company boards and investments include AppDynamics, Aquantia, Delphix, Imperva, Palo Alto Networks, Sumo Logic, TechProcess and Xsigo. Follow on Twitter, Quora and LinkedIn.

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