ServiceNow CEO details ‘the only deflationary fighting force left in this economy’

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ServiceNow CEO Bill McDermott joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss company earnings, the state of the software market, and the outlook for digital business.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: ServiceNow topped estimates for the first quarter and expects subscription revenue growth to accelerate for the full year. Joining us now for a deeper dive on this growth is ServiceNow CEO Bill McDermott. Bill, always great to get some time with you here. What recession? Didn't see it in your numbers.

BILL MCDERMOTT: Well, it's because if you look at the world situation rising rates, inflation, and supply chain dislocations, the war in Ukraine, all these issues are real. And large enterprises that we serve, because we're the enterprise software market leader in the cloud, they need our services now more than ever to get past these choppy waters and grow their business, take care of their customers, and inspire their employees. So we're right behind that major movement in the enterprise.

And, you know, I think one of the leaders I talked to summed it up well, Brian. You know, and that's why the enterprise is so resilient right now. If we slow investment in the short-term, we'll lose ground in the midterm. And we won't be in business in the long-term. That's pretty much the state of the affair.

BRIAN SOZZI: You've been around the software industry for quite some time Bill. Have you been surprised how just the sector has done in terms of stock performance, just given, really, the strong results for the space out for the first quarter?

BILL MCDERMOTT: Well, you know, everything has adjusted on a PE ratio basis based upon the environment that we're operating in. But fortunately, the business software market leaders like ServiceNow have done extremely well compared to the relative peer group. But having said that, I think they'll all do better soon because the only deflationary fighting force left in this economy is software, because you have to do more with less. You have to create great experiences for your employees, especially to battle this tough talent war that everybody is in.

And the customer is now fully digital. Two years ago, a 1/3 of the revenues for customers was digital, now 2/3. And in another two years, it'll be nearly 90%. So you have to transition to digital. And I think the only way forward is for all technology companies to be software companies. One of the stats, Brian, that I think is really significant is, there'll be 750 million net new applications built in enterprises for enterprises. So they got to build their own software.