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On this 234th episode of "Marketing Today," host Alan Hart speaks with the CMO of NetApp, James Whitemore. Over the last six years, NetApp has made the switch from a traditional data-storage company to a cloud-based storage company, and Whitemore is here to talk all about it.
We start our conversation off with Whitemore's childhood in the U.K. and how an affinity for toying with technology sparked an early interest in the field. Whitemore then outlines his professional journey, starting as a salesman for a mobile phone company in the U.K., which led him to work for big tech in the data storage field in the U.S. Whitemore made the switch to the startup industry and that eventually led him to NetApp. NetApp has been "managing large-scale data storage" for over 30 years in countries all over the world. We then dive into the recent shift into large-scale cloud data storage and how that has affected NetApp's sales and marketing processes.
Whitemore's background in sales helped him make the shift, staying true to the guiding question, "what's the selling experience got to look like for that client?" He has found that there is no cookie-cutter process, and the clients must "pick their own journey." Whitemore then touches on how the shift in technology has forced a change in employee demographics, stating that "we had a lot of people who understand how to use the technology...but if you don't have people that really know how to put it to work," then you're stuck. In a world that is navigating chaos, NetApp is trying to "redefine what enterprise-class cloud storage services should look like!"
Highlights from this week's "Marketing Today":
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this 234th episode of "Marketing Today," host Alan Hart speaks with the CMO of NetApp, James Whitemore. Over the last six years, NetApp has made the switch from a traditional data-storage company to a cloud-based storage company, and Whitemore is here to talk all about it.
We start our conversation off with Whitemore's childhood in the U.K. and how an affinity for toying with technology sparked an early interest in the field. Whitemore then outlines his professional journey, starting as a salesman for a mobile phone company in the U.K., which led him to work for big tech in the data storage field in the U.S. Whitemore made the switch to the startup industry and that eventually led him to NetApp. NetApp has been "managing large-scale data storage" for over 30 years in countries all over the world. We then dive into the recent shift into large-scale cloud data storage and how that has affected NetApp's sales and marketing processes.
Whitemore's background in sales helped him make the shift, staying true to the guiding question, "what's the selling experience got to look like for that client?" He has found that there is no cookie-cutter process, and the clients must "pick their own journey." Whitemore then touches on how the shift in technology has forced a change in employee demographics, stating that "we had a lot of people who understand how to use the technology...but if you don't have people that really know how to put it to work," then you're stuck. In a world that is navigating chaos, NetApp is trying to "redefine what enterprise-class cloud storage services should look like!"
Highlights from this week's "Marketing Today":
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.