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Sridhar Ramaswamy sees the major software players beginning to sort the AI winners from the losers. As of now, Snowflake, the cloud storage company where Ramaswamy is chief executive, is on the upside.
Ramaswamy just delivered a blowout first quarter for Snowflake, which this week reported a beat across the board. The results helped vault its shares up 36% and extended five-day gains past 50%. Shares also surged after the 14-year-old company said it would pay Amazon $6 billion during the next five years for the tech giant’s popular Graviton chips, reflecting strong demand Snowflake is seeing for its services.
The positive results were much needed for Snowflake following a stock slump that has decimated many software-as-a-service businesses due to investor fears about AI replacing traditional software vendors. Snowflake is among a pack of companies anchoring themselves after launching major AI initiatives that incorporate agentic technology with the data the company handles. The strong Q1 results (revenue grew 33% year-over-year, the fastest pace in two years) validated the consumption-based pricing model the company has long had, Ramaswamy said, and showed that traditional software can transition to AI compute.
“It’s important to understand that all software companies are not the same,” Ramaswamy told Fortune on Friday, days before Snowflake is set to host its tech summit in San Francisco.
The difference for Snowflake, Ramaswamy said, is that it has priced its products by consumption from the getgo. “We recognize revenue only when a customer actually uses Snowflake’s capabilities,” he said. “We have to show value to make money.”
3 days ago

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