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And Veeva's CEO said on his company's earnings call that generative artificial intelligence has been "a competing priority" for customers. Add it all up and it was a brutal week for software and enterprise tech. "Every enterprise software company kind of has adjusted" since after the pandemic, Benioff said on his company's earnings call. "Macroeconomic headwinds are still out there," Okta finance chief Brett Tighe said on the company's earnings call. Veeva CEO Peter Gassner cited "disruption in large enterprises as they work through their plans for AI."
Persons: Marc Benioff, Dell, Salesforce, Benioff, Brett Tighe, Daniel Dines, Dines, Rob Enslin, Tomer Weingarten, Peter Gassner, Gassner, Zscaler, Jay Chaudhry, — CNBC's Ari Levy, FBB, Mike Bailey Organizations: Salesforce, Economic, Computing Fund, Dell, Barclays, CNBC Locations: Davos, Switzerland, Paycom, U.S, UiPath, reprioritize
Veeva built its core software on top of Salesforce's app-development platform, but that will be coming to an end in 2025. Peter Gassner, Veeva's founder and CEO, ran the Salesforce platform before starting Veeva in 2007. "Peter has been an outstanding CEO," Benioff was quoted as saying in 2017, as the two companies deepened their partnership. The agreement between the companies holds that Veeva is on the hook to pay Salesforce as Veeva customers use Salesforce's platform — and costs have risen as more people have come to rely on Veeva. But it has grown into a profitable publicly traded software company with $2 billion in annual revenue and a $28 billion market capitalization.
But people running factories expect that the sudden U-turn will at least deliver a recovery that will be faster than what would have followed a phased withdrawal of controls. Economically, the country should finally leave behind a pandemic that suppressed domestic demand and snarled global supply chains for three years. LIMPING BACK TO NORMALLi's factories had to scramble last month, when up to a third of their workers were down with COVID at the same time. Her industry peer Li says his factories might even need to cut jobs later this year if external demand weakens. "If the U.S. economy enters a recession, then it's going to be very damaging to us," he said.
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