Google Cloud Hires 2 Key Execs, Revs Its VMware Engine
Google Cloud has made some strategic moves in the past two weeks, to the benefit of partners.
The third-largest public cloud vendor has brought on two prominent executives, one from SAP and one from Accenture, in positions that will interact with channel partners. Google Cloud also bolstered its VMware partnership.
Google Cloud on Monday went public with news that it hired Lori Mitchell-Keller from SAP; she is now global leader of the industry solutions group. Mitchell-Keller worked at SAP for 13 years, rounding out her career there as co-president of SAP Industries. She spearheaded sales, including partner sales, across 20 fields.
Now Mitchell-Keller takes on a newly created role at Google Cloud. She will target the six markets CEO Thomas Kurian has identified as key to the company’s growth: media, telecom and entertainment; retail; financial services; manufacturing and industrial; health care and public sector.
To support the very first sector, Google Cloud also snapped up George Nazi from Accenture. Nazi, based in Belgium, joined Google Cloud last week as global vice president of telco, media and entertainment industry solutions. He reports to Mitchell-Keller and oversees strategy around the three sectors in his title. The work should feel familiar to him — Nazi led Accenture’s global communication and media division. Prior to Accenture, Nazi was at Alcatel-Lucent and BT.
Mitchell-Keller told Channel Futures she is excited to join Google Cloud.
“I look forward to bringing my leadership and experience to ensure we’re building the right solutions that help our customers and partners reach their business goals and objectives,” Mitchell-Keller said, noting that “the cloud has never been more critical” than it is amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Nazi expressed similar sentiments.
“I’m excited for the opportunity to shape our long-term strategy and to empower our customers with Google Cloud’s…technologies and solutions,” he said.
Google Cloud Revs Its VMware Engine
Meanwhile, Google Cloud took the next step in its work with VMware by launching Google Cloud VMware Engine. It’s a fully managed service that Google Cloud partners can offer. Here’s how June Yang, general manager at Google Cloud, described the product to enterprises in a blog:
“You can migrate or extend your on-premises workloads to Google Cloud in minutes by connecting to a dedicated VMware environment directly through the Google Cloud Console. This allows you to seamlessly migrate to the cloud without the cost or complexity of refactoring applications, and run and manage workloads consistently with your on-premises environment. By running your VMware workloads on Google Cloud, you reduce your operational burden while benefiting from scale and agility, and maintain continuity with your existing tools, policies and processes.”
The platform works with VMware’s entire Cloud Foundation stack, which supports hybrid and private cloud environments. That stack includes vSphere, vCenter, vSAN, NSX-T and HCX for cloud migration.
“Google Cloud VMware Engine is designed to minimize your operational burden, so you can focus on your business,” Yang wrote, speaking directly to enterprises. “We take care of the life cycle of the VMware software stack and manage all related infrastructure and upgrades. Customers can continue to leverage IT management tools and third-party services consistent with their on-premises environment.”
Yang also said Google Cloud is teaming with …
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