Filter Events:
Citi's 2023 Global Technology Conference
Who: Charles Lamanna, CVP, Business Apps & Platform
Event: Citi's 2023 Global Technology Conference
Date: September 7, 2023
Tyler:
And I am really looking forward to this conversation. We got Charles Lamanna from Microsoft. I'll let Charles introduce him himself in a minute. But Charles looks over the Dynamics 365 business, which I think is an underappreciated area of the Microsoft growth story. There's a lot of things to be excited about, but Charles, first, thanks for making the trip out here, surviving the humidity and heat that we have here in New York. But could you just start off, share your background, I know you've been at Microsoft a couple different times, just your history at Microsoft and then the roles and responsibilities that you have in your current role.
Charles Lamanna:
Absolutely. First, thanks for having me. Super excited for the conversation today. I've been at Microsoft two times, so right out of university for a short stint. Then I did my own company. I was founder of something called Metrics Hub, which is acquired by Microsoft a little over 10 years ago. That company was focused on public cloud cost management and health monitoring. I say in the very early days of IaaS and PaaS. Worked in Azure for about five years, integrating that, working on some other things. But I've been in business applications at Microsoft the last five and a half, six years.
So that's Dynamics 365, that's power platform. And across that journey, we've seen a pretty broad shift to what that business looks like for Microsoft in I think an exciting way. And despite all of that, I'd say I still think of myself as a developer at heart. That's where I started my career. At least recovering developer.
Tyler:
Right. Yeah. So Dynamics 365, it's obviously a broad encompassing business. There's pockets that are CRM, even some ERP HR. Could you talk a little bit about the strategy for Dynamics 365, how it's evolved over time and how you see it expanding into other application markets?
Charles Lamanna:
Absolutely. So I'd say you probably break it into two parts, the answer to that. The first is we look at Dynamics and business applications in general, and we get excited because our customers are asking us to help them transform their business processes. And to do that, you have to know what does it take to run a marketing campaign? What does it take to run a sales process? What does revenue generation look like in 2023? Or how do you manage your supply chain or how do I manage my financials? So very specific problems and workflows for each line of business in every single department. And customers look to us, and historically we have great platforms to enable them to improve and solve those issues like Azure or you can use Office, but business applications make it possible for us to have an off the shelf, ready-made, fast time to value solution in all of those areas.
So that's what business applications have been about for a while, and we've been able to find a lot of success over the last five years really by going through three, I think main changes in how we think about the strategy. The first we had to complete our move to the cloud. We weren't really there meaningfully five or six years ago, but now Dynamics with Dynamics 365, 100% SaaS, 100% hosted in public cloud. We've been there for a while and Dynamics revenue was over $5-billion last fiscal year for us. And over 80% of that was in the cloud. That is a big shift, and that happened because of those investments and really modernizing in a meaningful way. And when we talk about things like generative AI, the agility we're seeing in Dynamics born because of that cloud migration. So that's one big change.
Second thing is in business applications, historically there's a big focus on big monolithic investments like the full CRM or the full ERP or the full SCM, all the different acronyms out there. And that means there's high cost of adoption in the enterprise. You frequently are looking for one system for the whole company. And if you ever want to switch those things, it's a huge budgetary hit way more in services than in software. What we've done is we've taken Dynamics and we've decomposed it into individual modules, which customers can easily adopt at a departmental or workflow level. So you don't have to replace your whole CRM, you can just use us in the contact center for one business. You don't have to move your entire supply chain over to us. You can move say your parts or your warehouse management and that type of thing.
So that modularization has allowed us to really break into very established markets without having to have a huge services cost. Probably the last thing, which is from a product perspective, the thing which has been the most exciting for us is we really got comfortable with the idea of being part of Microsoft. And Microsoft is not a business applications company, just like it's not a cloud infrastructure company. It's a lot of different capabilities under one roof.
So we got very comfortable making Dynamics 365 integrate with the broader Microsoft ecosystem. So if you use Office like Teams or Excel, the best way to connect your business applications to it is to use Dynamics 365. Similarly, if you want to go manage your data warehousing or your analytics or an AI in Azure, Dynamics 365 is the best and easiest way to go do that. So that really integrated single Microsoft platform is something our customers have been hungry for and continue to be very hungry for. No data silos, no walled gardens, that type of thing. So really those three things, I'd say those are the big changes the last few years, which have really accelerated the business.
Tyler:
Okay. Yeah. And you talked about some of those big changes. One of the questions we get a lot from investors is just if you look at the Dynamics 365 growth, it's actually accelerated. Meanwhile, some of your competitors, certainly in the CRM space have seen growth slow. So would you mainly attribute it to those internal investments that you made in the platform? Or maybe talk about how that's impacting your ability to compete and take share in the respective categories.
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, so I say that's laid the foundation for sure, for the growth that we've seen. And over the last year there's been a lot of generative AI momentum too. And so I think that's also played a major part. But I think by getting to the cloud and being in the public cloud, just the agility we can have with updates and features and releases is super differentiated compared to a lot of other business application vendors. And if we go look at that modularization, that's how we'd found a way to get out of the business of only talking about replace your whole CRM, replace your whole ERP, but instead let's start with this department, start with this function, and then we prove and we earn the right to get more departments and more functions.
Tyler:
Yeah. Okay. And that's consistent across CRM or marketing or whatever application?
Charles Lamanna:
Absolutely. Yeah. And I think probably the shape is a little bit different if it's say on the CRM or ERP side. For CRM, it's much more end-to-end ownership of a process within a department or line of business. So all customer service say in a consumer business for a bank, whereas the ERP, it's sometimes we call it like a multi-tier architecture where you have an ERP for your headquarters, but on the edge for say, running your warehouses or manufacturing plants, you may use Dynamics to just do that and post back to HQ. So slightly different shape with the same idea.
Tyler:
Yeah. So talking about generative AI, I think it's hard to have a conversation about Microsoft without not bringing it up. But over the summer we saw some pretty interesting demos and announcements around CRM Copilot. And I know we were just talking before, we have a lot of events for the fall to look forward to, but how do you see the, what should investors look forward to this fall in terms of generative AI capability specific for Dynamics? And then how's the feedback been from customers since the launch of it?
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, so the biggest thing is I think we're past the point of, we're still going to do announcements, but we're past the point of just say announcements and demos and press releases. There's an immense amount of generative AI product in market generally available in Dynamics. We shipped our first GPT-3 powered feature even before GPT-3.5, back in early 2021 to market. So we've been at this for a while and we now have some incredible customer stories, some incredible adoption examples. And I think a lot of our conversations around Dynamics will be showing what people have done with the product.
And as one example, blog posts that we published this morning talking about how we've adopted Copilot for our CRM in Microsoft and the benefits that we've seen. So we have one of the world's most complex customer support organizations, 10s of 1000s of people, hugely diverse products from Windows to Xbox to Azure, and we use our Copilot and 100 days of rolling out, we were able to see a 12% improvement in our department in all terms activity. So basically how long does it take you to work customer support case?
That level of productivity benefit and measurement by economists, statistically significant AB testing type of thing, we haven't really seen in this area for 30 years since the original digitization in the personal computer. And that's just early innings. So that and what we're seeing with other customers adopt, you'll see more and more customer stories coming out is I think a lot with the look forward to. And then from a product perspective, we're just early innings, so there's a lot of exciting stuff coming through.
Tyler:
Yeah. And I think the Dynamics business, it's obviously have a ton of different customers, but could you just talk about the demand trends you're seeing? You're serving both SMBs with Dynamics, but I think increasingly enterprise maybe departmental with enterprises, but how would you compare and contrast what you're seeing on the demand front just given the macro environment?
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, so one thing we are seeing more of is price sensitivity. And we hear this from customers that when they go evaluate a CRM or ERP, are they getting the value they expect for the price they're paying? And if you go look at the market, there's already very high per user prices, which are getting even higher in a lot of cases. And also you have things like AI being additional charges on top of that. So customers are being very discerning as they should be and make sure they're getting the return they expect from the product. So many of our customer conversations start with what's it going to cost and what's the value I'm going to get from a productivity perspective on the other end?
And this is a pretty different say environment in the past, or maybe it was, "Of course I need a CRM, so I'm going to get a CRM. Of course I need an ERP in the cloud, I'm going to get an ERP in the cloud." The good news and that we've been very encouraged by and influenced of our decisions is we've done things like haven't increased the price of Dynamics 365 in the cloud. We think it's a very high per user price already. Very reasonable, fair price. And we've also gone ahead and included our Copilot capabilities for Dynamics in the existing enterprise license, which is the main license our customers' buying.
Tyler:
Like E3 or E5?
Charles Lamanna:
Exactly. So if you get Dynamics 365 Enterprise, which is the standard skew, that comes with a sales Copilot or a customer service Copilot or a finance Copilot and so on. And that combination is largely influenced by these conversations with customers. And that has allowed us to really nail that ROI. And I think in the entire time I've been in business applications at Microsoft, I've never seen an environment like right now where there's such an appetite for switching at a CRM or ERP level for this reason. And it all goes back to the value I get per dollar I spend.
Tyler:
Yeah, yeah. That's interesting. And I guess from a sales perspective, and I know more on the product and roots are in development, but how are sales incentives structured for the Microsoft go-to-market organization, which obviously is one of the biggest on the planets, but is Dynamics or CRM getting more quota retirement or are you incentivizing the Dynamics business in any way to really drive that even more?
Charles Lamanna:
I mean, our mainline sales organization at Microsoft is strongly incented to drive business applications, which is Dynamics 365 and Power Platform. It's a mainline investment for us. We also have specialized sales resources globally which are focused only on Dynamics 365 or the Power Platform. And I think not maybe a huge change from past years, but it's a top-line priority across the sales organization.
Tyler:
So if we take a step back and just think about the TAM for Microsoft's applications, I mean, you're touching a lot of different front office, back office, mid-office, we'll call it, well over in probably in the hundreds of billions of dollars. How do you think about, A, the addressability of Microsoft's portfolio to capture that TAM? And then how does generative AI accelerate that or even increase that TAM?
Charles Lamanna:
So when we look at business applications, we've historically thought that TAM ballpark is $150 billion per year. That's a substantial TAM. And I mean that spans a lot of different categories. That's CRM, ERP, new CDP, HCM, even increasingly the blurring of service management like ITSM and more. So that's a very big opportunity, but we also include low-code in there and RPA. So we view that all as one business application because they all start by having offerings which help our customers transform their business process.
So $150 billion. Within that, we think both Dynamics 365 and Power Platform are key growth engines for us. And hopefully we'll talk a little bit more about Power Platform, but we think that's an area which really has a lot of upside for us, particularly with generative AI. And if you look at that $150 billion, we're encouraged by Microsoft's opportunity inside of it because it's extremely fragmented. It's very different from a lot of other big software markets and categories that we participate in where it's very fragmented across that $150 billion. And that really means no one's run away with it. We're also very encouraged because it's a very high margin business too, which is something that is, I mean, at that scale and high margin is great.
But also we think it's going through a pretty profound transformation on many different fronts. I mean, the first one is you're seeing this big change where buyers are really focused on ROI, which is different. It's not just taken as a fact you have to go upgrade your CRM, ERP every year. And also our customers are looking for a new value proposition around productivity. And that's what generative AI is great for, productivity boosts. So the market's changing a lot, so you got high fragmentation, high opportunity, high margin, a lot of disruption. And we think that Microsoft is exceptionally well positioned to lead that disruption for this existing market, largely because it's about generative AI, it's about integrating with your broader IT estate, that type of thing. So yeah, so I think it's big. It's getting bigger. Generative AI will only increase the technology spend further. But yeah.
Tyler:
Great. Well, that's a great segue because I did want to move to the Power platform, which I know you're excited about. So maybe it'd be great to just define all the different products in Power Platform. I know Power is used in a lot of different Microsoft projects, but how has that evolved? And then certainly with Fabric announcement out of Build in May, how are you thinking about the next evolution considering that's this new vision of integrating data analytics Power Platform?
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, so for folks that maybe aren't familiar with Power Platform, that's Power BI for self-service analytics and reporting, Power Apps for web and mobile application development, Power Automate for workflow and robotic process automation, Power Pages for website development and Power Virtual Agent for chatbots, so conversational agents. So a whole bunch of different capabilities all united by the fact that they're what we call low-code. And low-code basically means historically it's drag and drop, a very visual authoring environment as opposed to having to drop down and write JavaScript or C# or Java, what have you or Python.
And the benefit of it being low-code is your developers and IT professionals can be a lot more productive. We have some great studies out there where you can be six or seven times more productive in the solutions you build using low-code than not. And also you can start to empower business users to also create solutions. So someone in the finance department can use Power BI to analyze the last quarter without having to go through IT. Or someone in the HR department can create a web application which people can use to do HR tasks without having to go turn around and get IT to do it. Or if you go say supply chain and core operations, you can use Power Automate to automate tasks. So this idea of full company creation and full company development is really critical to make it so that our customers can basically build the solutions they need.
And what we've seen over the last decade is there's pretty much an insatiable desire to create digital solutions in every single enterprise everywhere. And I don't think you'll find a CIO ever that says I have enough resources and enough developers to build all the solutions I want. Power Platform starts to make that more attainable.
So that's kind of what Power Platform is all about. And we shared it's over 33 million monthly active users, growing over 50% year over year, really just a massive user base, something that we think is only going to grow further. And we share in the past, this is a business measured in the billions of dollars as well in the cloud. And this Power Platform concept, we only coined it in early 2019. So very young product for us. And as we go look to where this space goes to the future, we think this is a very large market opportunity and we think it increasingly will be how a lot of IT development is done, a lot of digital transformation is done. But all of that though, of my product portfolio that's going to be most re-imagined with generative AI, it probably is Power Platform. That's really just because it starts to make it even more simple and even more straightforward to create solutions.
Tyler:
So there's three pillars, I guess to Power Platform, you got Power BI, your data and analytics, you got the low-code, no-code development tools, and then the automation or RPA. I guess, where are you seeing, I guess the most momentum from customers? And then which category innovates the fastest with the Fabric announcement?
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, so yeah, I think that's exactly right, probably the biggest three categories are those three. And I think if you look at Power BI, Power Apps and Power Automate, we think we have the market leader in all three of those areas by adoption and usage and lots of great studies out there reflecting that as well.
So those are probably the three big categories. If you look at Fabric, Fabric reflects what we hear from our customers. They ask us constantly, " Can you put more things in the Power Platform? Take more of these historically dev only data science only concepts and make them more accessible through low-code." And for example, we expose GPT models through Power Platform now. We expose very complex, say operations around analytics inside a Power Platform so far.
And then Fabric is kind of the next evolution of that. This idea of how do we take Power BI, great for reporting and analytics, and how do we expand it to encompass things like data warehousing, data storage, data movement, and how do we make it easier for developers in IT to work with business users to create these solutions? So Fabric is that natural progression. And I would say you can probably expect us to keep doing an expansion in Power Platform because that's where customers come and push us to do. I can't grow my dev team, I can't grow my budget, but I want grow my output. I can do it in Power Platform faster and use it.
Tyler:
Yeah, one big driver of Office 365 broadly has been the frontline worker opportunity. How do you think about the addressability of the Power Platform? And maybe you can hit on Dynamics too, but just in the context of that frontline worker opportunity, which Microsoft's had a lot of success there?
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, I mean, one of the things that's been interesting is frontline workers historically are a very underserved market when it comes to digital technology. And that's because there's not a lot of apps built for them. And if you go look at IT app dev budget, if you go, do I do back office development or customer facing development or frontline worker development, this kind of always ends up playing like third fiddle. So what we've really focused on doing with Power Apps is making it easy to create those mobile applications for frontline workers. Because really they stand apart because they don't have a PC, they don't wheel around a computer if you, say work in a retail location or manufacturing plant or inside, say like a hospital. So that mobile application development is very easy to do on Power Apps. And we have some amazing stories out there with companies like Walgreens Boots in their retail location or some great examples like with Ikea for their retail locations or even say in the manufacturing plant scenario with GSK.
So those are all examples of frontline applications that historically were pen and paper or data entry, or I just call someone become a true standardized mobile application. And we've kind of seen this renaissance of development focused on frontline workers using Power Apps. And it's not just the things our customers build, it's also what we ship out of the box. We have Dynamics 365 Field Service, which is very much focused on frontline workers, and that can help you do work orders and track tasks and has some mixed reality capabilities. And what we've seen with Field Service is that together with the back office, say for scheduling and management of the workforce, has been a really strong combination for our customers. And Power Apps plus Field Service, you can start to cover a lot of those scenarios that are out there that just historically had no digital support at att.
Tyler:
Yeah, no, it certainly seems like a big opportunity and one that maybe Microsoft's uniquely positioned to go after. We got about 18 minutes left. I know it's a packed room, so if there's any questions, feel free to raise your hand. But I'm sure we could keep going longer than 18 minutes here. One thing I did want to hit on, just given your background, you've worked on the Azure business and you referenced cost optimizationthe original product you built, what's your perspective? I know that you're not focused on that day to day, but what's your perspective? You're out talking to a lot of customers just in terms of cloud optimizations. Are we at the tail end of it? Anything that you're hearing just given that that's been a focus for you historically?
Charles Lamanna:
I myself am a large Azure customer, even internally, and we always go through constant optimization. The thing I would say is, optimization is probably something that will always exist in public cloud. It's always existed. I think the big question will be, will it swing more towards more digital solutions, and less on optimization over time?
One thing I am seeing and hearing consistently from customers is, generative AI, and I know everything is generative AI, but it really is changing the conversation. Because in the past, it was all about how do I go reduce my VMs, reduce my data warehouse, those types of things. Now, it's much more how do I bring more workloads to be AI enabled, and how do I transform more functions and responsibilities in my company to be AI enabled? And the reason customers are doing that shift, is just because the other side has such a large productivity benefit.
10% productivity boost, that's something you don't ever get really from a single technology implementation, or single project. So, there are lots of opportunities like that across the board, and the same thing is true for all the other software companies that build on Azure. They're then trying to integrate generative AI into their applications.
Every Microsoft product definitely has a copilot today. All of our customers want to have a copilot experience as well. So, that's changed the conversation definitely. So, that's one key aspect. And then maybe just the only thought I would have is, generally what's great about the public cloud, is the fact that you can do this optimization. It's not like you buy your servers, you got to wait for them for three, four years to depreciate, you can actually turn off servers, and book the savings.
That is the promise that we've been making in the public cloud for ten years, and now customers are benefiting from it. I think when we come out of this, it'll only help drive more workloads to the cloud, because people have seen the opportunity there, where you can actually kind of dial up and down as needed.
Tyler:
You hit on an interesting point just around the ROI and productivity gains, obviously from Copilot. And certainly, when we've talked to customers who are using Copilot, we hear great feedback, but obviously no one wants to pay more. So, in an area like knowledge workers where certainly as a user you can appreciate the productivity it gives, how are you seeing customers measure, or justify, that ROI? Is it in terms of hours, or happiness of the organization? Just talk to the hard measuring tools they're using to justify these investments in Copilot.
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, I would say definitely not in a climate where I think employee happiness is maybe the main motivator, and it's going to depend from department by department. I think this is one of the great benefits of having these different business applications is, we really understand what does productivity look like for a seller? That's revenue per head. How fast do you close deals, and what's the revenue generated per seller?
What does productivity look like for customer support? How many cases do you work per day, and what's the cost per case? If I go to basically any company, they know those two metrics. And what we're able to do is, say roll out Copilot and measure the before and the after. And that's something that we, like I mentioned at Microsoft, that we've done. And we can very clearly look and say, "Okay, the composition of the workforce can change in terms of expertise because Copilot can really augment new hires, and things like that. And we can also really boost productivity by closing more cases per day. So that's one example.
And then if you go to finance, or supply chains, how many finance employees do you have per dollar of revenue, that you generate? Or for supply chain, how much inventory do you keep? How long does it take to fulfill an order? How often do you deliver them full on time? These are all business metrics that I think if you go to any CFO, CRO, CIO, they just know them like that, and Copilot moves the needle on those.
And maybe I've been a little bit pessimistic, say historically, it's very hard to show the benefit. With Copilot, it's not very hard. With customers that we work with, we roll these things out, those metrics improve. And I think when I talk about that new buying environment of wanting more ROI and more productivity benefit, that's what you're going to see from customers. I'll only adopt the CRM if you show me more revenue per head per seller. I'll only adopt this case management tool, if you show me more case resolve per day. So, that's the shift very much across the board.
Tyler:
Okay. Okay. That's helpful color. So your CFO has talked about how AI will be one of Microsoft's fastest growing, or the fastest growing business to ten billion. How do you think about the contribution from Dynamics and the Power Platform to that ten billion dollar target?
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, so the first thing is, as you could tell, we are very, very bullish on what AI means to Microsoft. And I think if you go look, like what we hear from customers, the appetite is just a mess. And so if we look at business application specifically, I think it'll have a overweighted contribution to that, compared to say historical cloud revenue at Microsoft. What exactly that looks like, there's a lot of things moving right now, so hard to say. But we're really seeing it happen because of three things in business applications.
The first, like I mentioned earlier, we put our Copilot for Dynamics 365 in our existing applications, not an additional fee. Benefit of that is, we can sell more of our bread and butter. And we have a lot of share to gain and we have many years in a row where we've outgrown the market, and we think this will really help us accelerate our core offerings. So we will just win more deals, sell more deals, be more competitive, and we're already seeing that. So just our core products will go faster.
Second, we do have some add-ons where it makes sense, which are AI oriented as part of Dynamics 365 or Power Platform. So for example, in Power Apps we have something called AI Builder, which is how you can use AI models in your application and you get a certain amount of credits with it. But, if you want to do a lot of AI, you have to buy AI add-ons. And for that, we now support GPT, which draws down a lot of that AI capacity. And we're seeing rapid adoption around AI Builder, for example, inside a Power app. So we'll see add-ons and attachments where it makes sense.
And the third thing is we have entirely new AI first products. So Microsoft Sales Copilot, it's been generally available for a while, that is a product which is not a CRM, in fact it works with any CRM, and it just makes their sellers more productive wherever they work, whether that's in Outlook, whether that's in Teams, whether that's Windows, whether it's on the go, Sales Copilot makes them more productive by having an AI assistant to help them to have better conversations, prepare for meetings better, understand accounts better. Those types of things.
In these new AI first applications, we think are a huge opportunity for us, because their net new revenue lines, and they're also entirely greenfield markets. If I go to a company, they don't have a Sales Copilot today, not like a CRM where you have to have that constant, "How does it connect to my existing CRM type of thing?" So, we think all three of those will drive a lot of revenue for biz apps. In the near term, in the next 12 months, is primarily going to be our core bread and butter products selling more in those add-ons. Go to three years, it's going to increasingly be those AI first products. And GitHub Copilot is a great example of that.
Tyler:
Right, right. You hit on some greenfield opportunity maybe with Sales Copilot. Could you just talk a little bit more about that, and how big that opportunity could be?
Charles Lamanna:
So Microsoft Sales Copilot, we charge $40 per user per month. If you connect to a non-dynamic 365 CRM, and it's included with our $95 per user per month Dynamics 365 user license. And I think every single seller in a pretty short period of time, will have a Sales Copilot. So P times Q, we think that's a big opportunity for us. And that's why if you see a lot of the announcements going all the way back to the Modern Work announcements for Copilot back in March, Sales Copilot was a major feature in that announcement.
So we think there's huge opportunity around these Copilots which work with any business application vendor, and bring generative AI value where the user spends the most time, which in the case of a CRM, is usually not in the CRM. It's actually inside of Office.
Tyler:
And ultimately, the $40 could be a way to onboard the broader Dynamics license for that organization. Okay. You hit on an interesting point earlier on, clearly budgets are tight. Microsoft, I think, has really benefited from this environment in terms of the consolidation potential. You've seen that in security, you've seen that certainly across Power BI and data and analytics, but you could argue maybe you haven't seen that yet in the application side in CRM or marketing or ERP. What's your confidence level that maybe that's what could happen over the next three to five years? And I guess is AI the catalyst to maybe drive that similar consolidation wave in the application layer like we've seen on the productivity and Power Platform?
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah, so at a high level, if we look at, say those modules that I talked about earlier, say customer experience, service, finance and supply chain, we've been able to do over a billion dollars in each of those. And for many years running now, we've been gaining market share, relative to our competition across all of those.
So I think we have something which is working in market, and growing in this climate in a way which I think we're pretty happy with. As we go to the future, we think there's real opportunity for a few reasons.
The first, we think that we can hit a really great price point for Dynamics, that other companies maybe struggle to hit. And that's just in terms of how efficiently we run, and how efficiently Microsoft goes to market. So we think that is going to be a huge asset in business applications, because $95 per user sounds like a lot relative to say maybe something like Office 365, but that's actually a very low list price compared to a classic CRM per ERP.
So, we do think price is something which is interesting. And the second is, the value we include in that, we have all the standard cloud-based CRM and ERP bells and whistles, but now we have a pretty clear leadership position for generative AI in business applications included in that great price.
So if you look at those two things, a great set of prices, a great set of value, really leading the way on that next generation of business applications, those two things together we think will really help us go drive more standardization and more adoption with Dynamics. And as we think about Copilot in general, one of the things that we've talked about a lot is we think Copilot starts to blur the lines between productivity applications and business applications. And you've probably seen that in some of our events where in the past you'd have, say we talk about Outlook and Teams and Excel, and then in a different event we talk about Dynamics and Power Platform. We now have events where we talk about both of those things together.
The reason is because with a Copilot, if I'm say in Excel and I want to analyze some financial data, I don't want to have to go to my ERP and export data and go to the web and search information. My Copilot can just bring that data to me right in context for my analysis inside of Excel. If I'm running an email to a customer, I don't want to go leave Outlook to my CRM to look up the accounts and pricing, I want Copilot to bring that data right where I'm working. And this idea of less application switching and more data intelligence brought to where I work, which for most office and business workers is Office, is going to be a really big benefit for Microsoft more broadly. So I'd say I think there's some price value considerations. Then there's also some product category merging and blurring that's happening too.
Tyler:
Got it. Yeah.
On the competitive side, on the CRM business, you highlighted your price point. Your nearest competitor that is having a big conference next week also announced a price increase. Have you seen any increased engagement with large customers that have renewals on the table for Q3, Q4? Are you seeing an increased appetite for customers to re-platform as a result of the price increases elsewhere and your attractive price point and the Copilot functionality?
Charles Lamanna:
Yes. The short answer is yes. I don't think we've had these level, like I mentioned earlier, these level of switching conversations in the entire five, six years I've been in business applications, they've never been higher than they are right now. And I would say every conversation that I'm having, say CEO, CIO, CFO, boils down to two things. What's the total cost over the next five years from Microsoft versus other vendors? And it's a very favorable equation when you do that. I'd say the CFO really likes that equation in the Dynamics favor. And the second thing is the last 20 years were defined by cloud CRM. The next 20 years will be defined by AI CRM. Who do I think is actually the leader in AI CRM? Right now, that's Microsoft. And that's what we have the most products in market, the most usage, the most adoption. So those two things work really much in our favor to create a moment and a reason to switch today.
And just some of the stats to show kind of how much adoption there is. We shared this last quarterly earnings. We have over 63,000 organizations already using Copilot in production. That was 75% growth quarter over quarter. I don't know what the other numbers are, but I'm quite confident that is near the top of Copilot adoption of any generative AI features out there. And the reason the adoption is so large is it's been in market for years. We were early with GPT, we have great partnership with Open AI and others for foundation models, and we've included it in our existing pricing and SKUs. There's no wait list, there's no gate. You don't have to pay to use Copilot Dynamics 365, you can use it today.
So those three things have really allowed us to expand that install base. And as you go into the future of AI CRM, we think that's the only thing you're going to look at, just like if you don't really evaluate an on-premise CRM today. No enterprise says, "I want to go get an on-premise CRM." We only think about cloud CRM. Going forward, people are only going to consider AI CRM. There will be nothing else. And for that reason, that's why we put it in the existing licenses.
So anyway, I think there's a few different trends happening. But yeah, definitely top of mind for our customers.
Tyler:
Awesome.
Well, maybe in the last two minutes I did just want to get your perspective on...
Audience question:
The high cost of running these LLMs is fairly widely known, and to some extent it's reflected in the pricing of Copilot in Office 365. Can you talk a little bit about the roadmap going forward? I would assume that we're looking at maximum costs at the moment, because there's only one hardware vendor that can provide the hardware. Can you talk about Microsoft's anticipation of the future costs as these LLMs go mainstream across Microsoft's platforms?
Charles Lamanna:
Yeah. The first thing I would say is it's going to depend heavily on the business, so the intensity of usage. So if I want to run an LLM for every email I get, that's very high usage compared to say, running an LLM for every sales call that I do. So there is going to be some difference based on the product, how much GPU usage you use.
The second thing is, one of the things that we've learned, because we've been at this for a while, say in biz apps is, you don't always need to use the biggest models for everything. One of the things we did about a year ago, we did a fine-tuned version of GPT 3.5 for Power Platform so that we can use natural language to create workflows and applications. And that fine-tuned model, we use something called LoRA, Low Rank Adaptation, is able to run on a GPU SKU below a hundred. So I think what we're going to see is, you'll see a proliferation of more models which work with more diverse set of GPU SKUs to get that cost equation right. And right now for biz apps, very specifically, where I live and breathe, I would say we think that the work we've been doing the last couple of years actually puts us in a very unique position to offer a lot of LLMs at a very low cost, because of the fine-tuning, because of our unique OpenAI partnership, because of the work we've done in the application.
So I think I would just say things will get faster, things will get cheaper, things will get more efficient. That's definitely been the trend the last year and a half.
Tyler:
Maybe in the last minute, just talk to the audience about the key events or product releases expected the second half of the year, because I know there's a lot. And then what your three biggest priorities are heading into next year.
Charles Lamanna:
I think we got a couple big events I think every month through the end of the year as a company. So I'd say there'll be no shortage of announcements and capabilities. And as you were saying, the three big things that we're focused on; Copilot, Copilot, Copilot, is probably half of the truth. I'd say the majority, if not the super majority of all future work in my team is in some form Copilot related. Just because even problems which you wouldn't think are Copilot enabled, if you look at it slightly different, are very transformed and improved if you take that Copilot lens. So Gen AI is indeed at the heart of what we're doing.
Tyler:
Yeah. Great.
Well, thanks so much for joining us and thanks for the crowd. This was great.
Charles Lamanna:
Awesome. Thank you. Thanks everyone.
Upcoming Events
JP Morgan Global TMT Conference
Jefferies Software Conference