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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCompanies should embrace newer AI-based technology to improve cyber protection, says Zscaler CEOJay Chaudhry, CEO of Zscaler, discusses using AI and improving legal avenues to better address emerging and evolving cybersecurity issues.
Persons: Jay Chaudhry
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailLightning Round: I would hold on to Pure Storage, says Jim Cramer'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer weighs in on stock including: VICI Properties, Zscaler, STMicroelectronics, Crown Castle, New Fortress Energy, Rocket Companies, and Pure Storage.
Persons: Jim Cramer Organizations: , New, Energy, Rocket Companies Locations: STMicroelectronics, ,
These could be for "a very top-level job," he says, and they could be for "an entry level job." 1 most important quality Chaudhry looks for is passion, he says. When it comes to hiring, Chaudhry looks for this by taking note of people's excitement. "In today's world, everything is changing rapidly," says Chaudhry, adding that "the way you work, how you work, where you work — all that is changing." To ensure a candidate has this quality, Chaudhry might give them an exercise during the interview process.
Persons: Jay Chaudhry, He's, sussing, Chaudhry, They're
When Jyoti Bansal made "the hardest decision" of his career — selling his software startup AppDynamics for billions — he did it with his employees in mind. As the startup's founder and chairman, Bansal would've become wealthy either way — but only one of his two options guaranteed the same for many of his staffers, he says. Upon Bansal's acceptance of the offer, roughly 400 AppDynamics employees saw their shares of the company rise in value to at least $1 million, a spokesperson for Bansal says. Today, he's the CEO and co-founder of two other software startups, Traceable and Harness, the latter of which was most recently valued at $3.7 billion in 2022. At least 70 of the company's 80 employees became millionaires on paper when VeriSign's stock soared two years later, Chaudhry said.
Persons: Jyoti Bansal, AppDynamics, Bansal would've, Bansal, could've, Zscaler, Jay Chaudhry didn't, Chaudhry, Get Organizations: Cisco, CNBC, SEC, VeriSign
His first was SecureIT in 1996, which was sold for $70 million in an all-stock deal two years later. He founded his most recent company, Zscaler, in 2008, and is currently serving as its CEO. With so many companies founded, Chaudhry has done his fair share of hiring. People who focus on 'building fiefdoms'One thing Chaudhry pays attention to is how interviewees measure success. Instead, Chaudhry is interested in hiring people who know that "it's the growth that's very, very important," he says.
Persons: Jay Chaudhry, AirDefense, Zscaler, Chaudhry, doesn't, they're Organizations: Builders
The 66-year-old co-founded his first company, SecureIT, with his wife in 1996. He then founded three other companies, AirDefense, CipherTrust and CoreHarbor, all of which were ultimately acquired. In 2008, he founded his current venture, cybersecurity company Zscaler, at which he now serves as the CEO. Zscaler has a current market cap of $25.31 billion as of Thursday. When it comes to what traits it takes to succeed, Chaudhry cites one characteristic: passion.
Persons: Jay Chaudhry, Zscaler, Chaudhry Organizations: Forbes
And the latest is another cybersecurity company, Zscaler, which he founded in 2008 and which has a market cap of $24.13 billion as of Wednesday. Here's how both types of workers function and why you should try to be each throughout your career. "Often builders can scale" and help a company grow, he says. Big companies tend to have more systems in place to ensure their many employees work together harmoniously. For them, "the ability to build teams, inspire them, grow them to scale the business" is ultimately what's important.
Persons: Jay Chaudhry, He's, Chaudhry's, Chaudhry Organizations: Forbes, Builders
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAnalyst: near-term upside for Zscaler, but longer-term outlook neutral given its capex plansJohn Blank from Zacks Investment Research discusses Zscaler’s Q4 earnings and his recommendation.
Persons: John Blank Organizations: Zacks Investment Research
Zscaler CEO on guidance, market reaction and CrowdStrike impact
  + stars: | 2024-09-04 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailZscaler CEO on guidance, market reaction and CrowdStrike impactJay Chaudry, Zscaler CEO, joins 'Closing Bell: Overtime' to discuss earnings, the market reaction and stock plunge and outlook for the company.
Persons: Jay Chaudry
Dollar Tree — Shares plunged nearly 11% after the dollar store missed second-quarter revenue estimates and trimmed its full-year forecast. Zscaler — Shares of the cloud security company slipped nearly 17% after its fiscal first-quarter earnings forecast missed Wall Street estimates. GitLab — Shares of the software developer surged 11% after its third-quarter earnings forecast surpassed Wall Street estimates. GitLab expects to earn 15 cents to 16 cents per share, while analysts polled by LSEG were calling for 11 cents. The company's full-year revenue forecast of $742 million to $744 million also came in above a forecast $737 million.
Persons: Dick's, Sweetgreen, Cowen, LSEG, PagerDuty, Nordstrom, , Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: Nvidia, Bloomberg, U.S . Department of Justice, Dick's, , Wall, FactSet, AMD —
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Dollar Tree — Shares tumbled more than 22% after the discount retailer slashed its full-year outlook for net sales and adjusted earnings per share. GitLab — The software developer's stock soared more than 21% thanks to a strong third-quarter earnings outlook. Zscaler — The stock lost more than 18% after the cloud security company's fiscal first-quarter earnings outlook came in weaker than expected. Zscaler expects to earn between 62 cents and 63 cents per share, below the 73 cents per share analysts were estimating, per LSEG. Asana sees sales for the third quarter coming in between $180 million and $181 million, while analysts expected $182 million, according to LSEG.
Persons: LSEG, Zscaler, Cowen, Andrew Charles, , Lisa Kailai Han, Michelle Fox Organizations: Dick's, Goods, FactSet, UBS, AMD Locations: Cape Canaveral , Florida
(This is a wrap-up of the key money moving discussions on CNBC's "Worldwide Exchange" exclusive for PRO subscribers. Worldwide Exchange Word of the Day: Tempest Victoria Greene of G-Squared said investors are facing both literal and metaphorical storms that they need to consider. Best Q4 Ideas: LVMH and Estee Lauder Tiffany McGhee of Pivotal advisors said LVMH and Estee Lauder will be big beneficiaries of China stimulus. (This is a wrap-up of the key money moving discussions on CNBC's "Worldwide Exchange" exclusive for PRO subscribers. "Moisturizer is not a 'nice to have' it is a must have," said McGhee about Estee Lauder.
Persons: Tempest Victoria Greene, Squared, Said, Milton, Zscaler Malcolm Ethridge, Greene, Estee Lauder Tiffany McGhee, LVMH, Estee Lauder, McGhee, Estee, Ethridge Organizations: PRO, Worldwide, Pepsi, Area, Global, Pepsico, Siete Locations: China, Estee Lauder
The cybersecurity software contender has more than 2,400 customers, including Maersk, Xerox and Mattel — in all, some 17% of the Fortune 500, according to the company. Cybersecurity company Abnormal Security said Tuesday it has raised $250 million in a Series D funding round that values the firm at $5.1 billion. With Microsoft surpassing $20 billion in cybersecurity revenue last year, competition has picked up among cybersecurity sector incumbents Cloudflare, Zscaler and Palo Alto Networks. Additionally, CrowdStrike veteran James Yeager was recently hired to head up public sector sales, an area that the email security vendor is targeting for growth. In March, Abnormal hired CFO Smita Sanadhya, a former executive at Microsoft Hong Kong and HP as well as startup Okta, which she helped to scale to a $2 billion public company.
Persons: Evan Reiser, Cloudflare, Reiser, Michael DeCesare, James Yeager, Smita Sanadhya, Jeff True Organizations: Twitter, Maersk, Xerox, Mattel, Fortune, Wellington Management, Greylock Partners, Menlo Ventures, Insight Partners, Security, Microsoft, Palo Alto Networks, Software, Cloudflare, CNBC, Forescout Technology, Microsoft Hong Kong, HP, Abnormal Locations: Zscaler, Palo, Exabeam
When Jay Chaudhry sold his first company for $70 million, he focused less on his own riches, he says — and more on how the deal could turn dozens of his employees into millionaires. Chaudhry, 65, is known today as the billionaire founder and CEO of Zscaler, a cloud cybersecurity firm valued at roughly $28 billion, as of Wednesday afternoon. Nearly two years after the deal closed, as VeriSign's stock price soared, more than 70 of SecureIT's 80 employees "on paper, were millionaires," Chaudhry tells CNBC Make It. "People were going crazy in the company, because they had never thought of so much money," he says. The bubble burst later that year, and VeriSign's stock lost roughly 75% off that high point at the end of 2000, sinking to a low of nearly $4 in 2002.
Persons: Jay Chaudhry, Chaudhry, Jyoti Organizations: CNBC
He's currently CEO of Zscaler, the cloud security company he founded in 2007, which is valued at $28.56 billion as of Monday morning. "I think it's to make a difference in the world," Chaudhry tells CNBC Make It. Growing up in a farming village in rural India, Chaudhry says he "never had money in my early childhood." In his youth, his idea of success never even hinted at the prospect of launching a business, much less one worth tens of billions of dollars. He had a good job with financial security, yet he couldn't help but think: "There may be an opportunity to make a big difference'" if more companies got on the internet, he says.
Persons: Jay Chaudhry, Chaudhry, Jyoti, Zscaler Organizations: He's, Zscaler, CNBC, University of Cincinnati, IBM, Unisys, Netscape, Forbes Locations: India
Chaudhry, the 65-year-old founder and CEO of cloud security giant Zscaler, has an estimated net worth of more than $11 billion. Some people get money [and] need to buy five houses and boats and planes and all of this kind of stuff. Some people get money [and] need to buy five houses and boats and planes and all of this kind of stuff. Owning 100% of your company early on allows you to control your own business decisions, which Chaudhry recommends. "Once you raise money, that's not an accomplishment, that's an obligation," he told Ryan Seacrest in a 2019 interview, "because "now you're reporting to whoever you raised money from."
Persons: Jay Chaudhry, he's, Chaudhry, Jyoti, , SecureIT, I'm, Zscaler, Jay, I've, VCs, Mark Cuban, that's, Ryan Seacrest Organizations: Cuban Locations: India
Not really," Chaudhry, the billionaire founder and CEO of cloud security company Zscaler, tells CNBC Make It. Together, they plunged their life savings — roughly $500,000 — into SecureIT, a cybersecurity software startup they co-founded in 1997. His timing was perfect: In 1998, Chaudhry sold SecureIT to VeriSign in an all-stock deal worth nearly $70 million. I said, "If [Netscape co-founder] Marc Andreessen could start a company — he was a young guy [right] out of college — why shouldn't I start a company?" It took us a few years to really start getting traction in the market, and VCs can write you off and move on.
Persons: Jay Chaudhry, he'd, Chaudhry, Jyoti, SecureIT, Chaudhry —, , Marc Andreessen, Let's, we'd, Zscaler, you'll, VCs Organizations: IBM, Unisys, CNBC, Netscape, Atlanta, Software, BellSouth, Fortune, Forbes, IDC, Gartner, VCs Locations: India, SecureIT, Atlanta, Alpharetta , Georgia
Against that uncertain backdrop, Wall Street analysts are focused on identifying stocks with solid fundamentals and strong long-term growth prospects. In that climate, here are three stocks favored by the Street's top pros, according to TipRanks, a platform that ranks analysts based on their past performance. Finally, Feinseth mentioned Microsoft's strong financial position, which supports enhanced shareholder returns and enables investments in the company's AI ambitions. The company's Zscaler Zero Trust Exchange platform securely connects users, devices and applications by protecting them from cyberattacks and data loss. Following the Zenith Live 2024 event, Baird analyst Shrenik Kothari reaffirmed a buy rating on Zscaler stock with a price target of $260.
Persons: Kevin Scott, TD Cowen, Helane Becker, Becker, TipRanks, OpenAI, Ivan Feinseth, Feinseth, Baird, Shrenik Kothari, Zscaler, Kothari Organizations: Microsoft, Technology, Artificial, Seattle Convention Center, Federal Reserve, Street, Delta Air, Delta Air Lines, DAL, Delta, Activision Blizzard, Zero, Zenith Locations: Seattle, Seattle , Washington, Toronto, Delta
GameStop — The meme stock dipped 1.1% after Keith Gill, known as "Roaring Kitty," seemingly increased his ownership in GameStop. He appears to be holding 9.001 million GameStop shares and over $6 million in cash, according to a screenshot he posted to Reddit. JPMorgan upgraded shares to overweight from neutral on Friday, saying Adobe is poised for "smoother sailing ahead" after its strong quarterly print. Hasbro — Bank of America upgraded the toymaker to buy from neutral, sending shares 1.7% higher. On the other hand, the company saw $727 million in revenue, topping the $725 million estimate from analysts.
Persons: Keith Gill, Adobe, RH, LSEG, ZScaler, Alex Harring, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: GameStop, Adobe, JPMorgan, Hasbro — Bank of America, Wall, Boeing, New York Times, Federal Aviation Administration, Zero Trust Network Security
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFriday's rapid fire: Adobe, Twilio, Nucor, Zscaler and Bank of AmericaCNBC's Jim Cramer on Friday examined major Wall Street headlines outside the Investing Club portfolio.
Persons: Bank of America CNBC's Jim Cramer Organizations: Bank of America Locations: Zscaler
Piper Sandler reiterates Pinterest as a top pick Piper said it's sticking with its overweight rating on the stock. JPMorgan reiterates Amazon as overweight JPMorgan said the e-commerce giant remains a top pick at the firm. The firm also says it's sticking with its outperform rating on Apple. "We are reiterating our Buy rating and raising our price target on shares of Costco from $890 to $940." Morgan Stanley reiterates Tesla as overweight Morgan Stanley said it's sticking with its overweight rating on Tesla .
Persons: Bernstein, it's, D.A, Davidson, KBW, Tesla, underperform Bernstein, Musk, Piper Sandler, Pinterest, Piper, Evercore, Morgan Stanley, Sunrun, Guggenheim, Macquarie, Roblox, TD Cowen, Cowen, Michael Colglazier, Morgan Stanley downgrades Twilio, JPMorgan, GenAI, Wolfe, Elon Organizations: Bank of America, Elon, Spotify, UBS, TPC, Galactic, America, JPMorgan, Adobe, " Bank of America, Hasbro, of America, Monopoly, Apple, Baidu, Apple Intelligence, Costco, Nvidia, Tesla Locations: China
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Adobe — The software stock surged 14% on stronger-than-expected quarterly results. Adobe posted adjusted earnings of $4.48 per share on $5.31 billion in revenue and boosted its full-year guidance. JPMorgan also upgraded shares to overweight from neutral. Hasbro — The toymaker's shares jumped 4.8% on the back of an upgrade from Bank of America to buy from neutral. Dell Technologies — The PC maker fell more than 1% after CEO Michael Dell disclosed the sale of 5.7 million shares.
Persons: RH, LSEG, Zscaler, Keith Gill, Stellantis, Michael Dell, , Alex Harring, Michelle Fox, Pia Singh Organizations: Adobe, JPMorgan, Wall, Hasbro, Bank of America, Zero Trust Network Security, Boeing — Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, Airbus, New York Times, GameStop, Dell Technologies Locations: Bank, U.S
Jim Cramer's daily rapid fire looks at stocks in the news outside the CNBC Investing Club portfolio. Twilio : Shares dropped more than 2.5% after Morgan Stanley downgraded the communications software maker's stock to a hold-equivalent rating. The Investing Club owns Palo Alto Networks . Morgan Stanley is the other financial in the portfolio. "Morgan Stanley is more problematic to me," given the positioning of rival Goldman Sachs , Cramer said.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, They've, Jim Cramer, Morgan Stanley, Cramer, Keefe, Goldman Sachs Organizations: CNBC, Club, Wynn, Resorts, CNBC Investing, JPMorgan, Investing Club, Palo Alto Networks, Bank of America, Investing Locations: U.S, Carolina, Wells, Fargo
Analyst Brian Essex upgraded Zscaler to overweight from neutral and raised his price target to $230 per share from $205. The bank upgraded the software stock to overweight from neutral on Friday, and raised its price target to $580 per share from $570. Champine reiterated a buy rating on the wholesaler and raised its price target to $940 per share from $890. The analyst upgraded shares of BofA to outperform from market perform and raised his price target to $46 per share from $37. He has an overweight rating and a price target of $52, implying upside of 20% over the next 12 months.
Persons: KBW, Piper Sandler, Pinterest, Brian Essex, Essex, — Brian Evans, Mark Murphy, Laura Champine, Champine, Keefe, David Konrad, Konrad, Brian Evans, Thomas Champion, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, of America, JPMorgan, Security, Zero Trust Network Security, Adobe, Wall, Costco, Bank of America, Bank, America Locations: U.S, Los Angeles
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
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