Datadog, Inc. (DDOG)
NASDAQ: DDOG · Real-Time Price · USD
132.66
+3.18 (2.46%)
At close: Apr 27, 2026, 4:00 PM EDT
132.73
+0.07 (0.05%)
After-hours: Apr 27, 2026, 6:48 PM EDT
← View all transcripts

UBS Global Technology and AI Conference

Dec 3, 2024

Moderator

Instead, covering the software space. This is actually my first time on stage to kick off this year's Tech AI Conference. So I wanna take the occasion to thank all of you for coming. I was telling David earlier that attendance at this year's event is up 45-50%. I don't think in my career I've ever seen one year to the next that kind of growth. So it's phenomenal to have 1,200 of you here and 300 corporates, including Datadog. So I'm really thrilled about that. And Datadog, you may know. I don't know if you get the list of most requested companies.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yuka, you probably know this. Top 10 most requested company to see in one-on-ones of 300.

Moderator

So you're doing something right, David. I don't know whether you were a popular kid at high school, but you are now n ot this popular.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

I didn't have a rising stock price in high school.

Moderator

Okay. Well, let's get started, so let's maybe start at a high level, David, and maybe I could ask you to describe your sense of the environment you're seeing.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Mm-hmm.

Moderator

I know on the earnings call you described the spending environment as being relatively stable.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Mm-hmm.

Moderator

But I think for a lot of us that tried to weave a thread through all of the results across the software industry.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Mm-hmm.

Moderator

It actually felt a little bit better to a lot of people, including me, where.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

We didn't have a lot of blow-ups. The beats were a little bit higher than normal.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Mm-hmm.

Moderator

Tone upticked a little bit. So it feels.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

Like things are a little bit better, but that's not the message you provided. So could you elaborate a little bit on what you're seeing?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. As we've mentioned, we in the time series troughed in the third quarter of last year.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Since that time, things have been progressively improving. The buying environment, the return to digital projects, and the spending has been solid, and I think what we meant by continuation was it continued to improve slightly over the previous period, so it's been like a smooth upward track.

It's been not just a tale of sort of all segments, everything is the same. I think we did note, and maybe that's what you're referring to, is the enterprise part of our business, customers who have more than 5,000 employees, has been in the higher range of net retention and buying. And that continued in the quarter. Our SMB, we have a very broad customer base, 30,000 customers ranging from the largest, governments and enterprises down to cloud natives and smaller companies. It was solid and stable, but really, you know, was sort of at the same level it had been in the previous quarters.

Moderator

Okay. Why do you think that is, David? Why do you think what you're seeing is enterprise steady improvement, but SMB is not yet? Why that difference? And d o you think there's a plausible outlook whereby sort of SMB catches up?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. Good question. First of all, we're sort of, I think, more towards the top end of what you might call SMB. When you think about who's buying Datadog, you have to have a cloud subscription. So it's not gonna be your corner drugstore.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

So we tend to be towards the higher end, I think more towards M. But I think what we saw is, that sector of size and cloud native had burst a bit more, on an upward trajectory during the bubble. So had a little more unwinding to do. Enterprise took it more programmatically.

And then it has a lot to do with the funding environment for venture capital, what entities are being funded. You know, it looks to us like there is, the dollars are weighted more toward AI, and we can talk about our AI group. And so the broader group still might be constrained from a capital. And of course, the change in the equation between growth and profitability caused companies that were spending very rapidly to put a little bit of a center or an edit on top of it.

So we think we still see an SMB, a healthy environment, but still with some constraints. What we're doing with that is we're essentially seeing markets in SMB where we really didn't have the infrastructure in place and the sales teams, take some of the emerging markets, take Brazil. We're landing our first people in India. We're investing in the areas where we think either they're catching up in terms of their maturity.

There are a lot of cloud natives that are moving, you know, more towards investing in systems like Datadog. So we're working on the distribution of our SMB sales team to try to get to the highest growth markets.

Moderator

So those are some positives because if, David, they call it the post-COVID unwind e ventually ends. Rates induce a little bit more spending on the part of SMB a nd then Datadog itself turns around and puts more distribution strength. You can imagine a scenario at some point. Hard to say when, but that p art of your business might pick up.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Okay. Yeah. I think that's right. I think that depends on both things we control, you know, our resources, our products, which we're doing, our sales. And also, I totally agree with you that, the venture capital, the funding environment, and the founding of companies at that side of things. It has a lot of correlation to the growth of that business.

Moderator

Okay. So, the one positive we just talked about is steady improvement on the enterprise side. The other, what I thought was, a big positive from your last p rint was the growth of, quote, the AI Native. Now, 6% of Datadog's ARR are up from 2.5% a year ago. That's phenomenal growth. Even if it's concentrated, i t's phenomenal growth.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

But when on your print, it initially created a little bit of mixed reaction. There was a good and a bad. Great that you're attached to a customer segment that's growing so quickly, but you did highlight that there could be a catalyst for some of these AI natives to, you know, search for better pricing upon contract renewal. Or optimize their spend. So I think the investor community was a little bit mixed initially. But I think, as you can see in the stock price with time. I think they sided on the more favorable view of the exposure to AI natives. So, can we talk about both sides?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. Definitely.

Moderator

When you were talking about optimization, David, what were you referring to? Is there sort of a contract restructuring? Moment coming up where if they're blowing through their commits, they would naturally wanna get lower unit pricing? And then the positive would be if there's some kind of reset. After that point, you would grow off that reset base. What do you think?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Definitely. That's the way our business has always run.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

We've shown this publicly a number of times. We showed it when we had the cloud natives optimize on the back end of COVID. So that's our model, which is essentially a commitment model where clients sign up for an amount of commitment. They can use the platform fairly frictionlessly. They aren't repricing their deal, you know, every day in real time.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Depending upon their ability to project, their consumption, not only the consumption in total, but where it's gonna be, and also execute their engineering projects to manage that, there is not a perfect timing between the price they're paying, and the amount they're spending. What we were pointing out was because of the rapid growth in this, good growth vehicle for us, albeit small part of our business, that if these customers act like any other sane customers, they will over time and will help them price their deal to their current volume.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

I mean, we have active discussions, and this is just not with this group, all the time. And you ramp past your commitment, let's talk about your new deal.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

And so what that is exactly what you said. For the most part, what that means is you might have less growth. In some cases, you might have a lower ARR as they digest. It depends upon the interplay between the price and the volume.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

They generally do that in conjunction with a new commitment.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Which is a very good thing, and we can go to the good side of this, and then we grow with them, and this happens in our 30,000 customers. It's just that because of the growth of this, we pointed out that this is a very good thing long term, but may affect the volatility of the growth rate in the short term, which we wanted to be transparent about.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

David, how do you think about the risk profile of this group? I know you got haven't named names. But if those AI natives are highly concentrated among, you know, call it the premier AI natives. We're talking about the OpenAI, Anthropic. Versus a scenario where they're concentrated among AI startups that. The investment community needs to ask whether they'll even be around in two years. Those are two very different outcomes that have different risk profiles . Is there any way to help us evaluate the risk profile of those AI natives? Anything qualitative you can say without naming names?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. I think it's both broad and concentrated, and so there's a lot of names there. If you look at the diagram of, you know, the AI infrastructure spend, you know, everywhere from hyperscalers to models to vector databases, they're cloud native companies, and they're delivering a product which is the kind of customer that chooses Datadog.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

They're born in the cloud. Their whole business is delivering it. So you have a lot of customers in there, and because when you look at who are the winners in this on the infrastructure side, you have some concentration. You have a combination of either already large companies or, companies that are getting very large and a very, very long tail.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

I would say it's similar to, you know, it's similar, although maybe more concentrated to our overall business in that we have very large customers. The tail. What we've seen is, you know, the gross retention rate in our tail has been still in the low to mid-90s. So we've seen a lot of stickiness in the smaller customer base. But, you know, you will have some that don't win and eventually go out. But, we'll have to see. It's early on to see how big this is, how rapid it is.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Who the winners are, we might not even know who all the winners are yet.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

Okay. Good, and maybe one last one on these AI natives. Can you describe what a common use case is for Datadog? Like, how are these AI natives utilizing Datadog? What are they monitoring exactly?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

They're monitoring their workloads and their applications. So they would be using the observability platform, which are metrics, traces, and logs. So, they would be, you know, monitoring how their applications, which they're delivering, are interacting with the infrastructure, how the code's working.

So it's a very similar type of log.

Moderator

Logs to investigate?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

No, no. I would say it's a similar use case. What they're doing with it, the end user's doing with it, whether it's training or inference, is less of a matter. It's more of a matter of this particular vendor is delivering a software solution or. Infrastructure solution, and w e're a choice to monitor it.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

Let's talk about the other way that Datadog has, AI exposure. Other than selling your core product. To these new exciting hyperscale c ompanies, you yourself have, AI products in the form of things like LLM Observability that you're selling.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yes.

Moderator

Can you give us an update on how that? Product launch is going? I know it's relatively early, but anything you can share?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. There are two other ways, and I'll go through one, the product rescue side, and then two is what about our own platform?

Moderator

Yeah. Exactly. We'll get to that.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Because that's the third. So there's three real areas. So in terms of how we're designing our platform to service clients, those of you that follow Datadog know that we rapidly integrate with any of the data sources that are relevant to our clients' delivery of the applications. So, we have integrations with these AI vendors. And one way we know about activity is of our roughly 30,000 customers, 10% of them or 3,000 of them are sending us data from that.

Now, that's part of our platform. We don't charge per integration. That's a platform feature. Always been a platform feature. And so that gives us a sense of the overall activity level that's out there. Another thing is our LLM monitoring. Now, what this is, is, you know, it's like we have an APM. We have, you know, code profiling.

You know, we have all these different features that illuminate the user on what's going on in the application. And one of them is LLM monitoring. And that is the function of the LLM model within the application. And we have not released pricing on that.

Moderator

Okay.

We essentially have it out in the market. We said hundreds of customers. I think if to interpret that, you know, roughly, it's about one, one% of our customer base. We had a couple anchor customers or development partners speak at DASH on that. These are customers who have successfully integrated LLM in their applications, and we are monitoring that functionality as part of our overall observability.

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

I would say this group also is quite broad. You have some cloud native, and you have some cloud progressive efforts at large enterprises. Still very early. We want to be able to give a metric like, you know, what's the activity on this? You know, we'll see how things go. But I think that's where the rubber's really gonna meet the road in this thing over time.

Moderator

Okay, and then you alluded to it. But the other obvious way that Datadog. Benefits from AI is when your customers begin rolling out AI applications that require observability.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. So that's what I just mentioned.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

What I mismentioned was that, which is. Essentially. So AI or the part of the large language model is part of the overall functioning of the application, including how it deals with the infrastructure. Networks, database. All of our products are around monitoring pieces of this or diagnosing. So that is correlated to the rollout, as you said o f LLM in production.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

And then the last piece, which we're getting to, is the Datadog platform itself. What is Datadog doing as a piece of software in putting large language models or chat into our platform? And, you know, we are slowly but surely rolling things out. And the areas that would be most germane would be, you know, your chat or your ability to interact with the platform, but also using LLM models to help diagnose problems. We talked about the continuum, out to the brave future of autoremediation.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Along that path is using LLMs and AI, which we've been doing for some time, to diagnose problems quickly, and that is we're building models and putting that in. Again, like everybody, a lot of this is not in GA production. A lot of this is being tested, but w e're working on it.

Moderator

That's the question I wanted to ask you about the broader pull along, David. That's your observation about where enterprises are on their journey i s coming out of pilots and t aking, model-based AI apps to 5,000- 20,000 employees. 'Cause I'm actually, even in my own work, starting to hear from companies when I ask them.

You know, what piece of the tech budget might get pulled along a s they roll out their AI applications. I am b eginning to hear some of them mention that my observability spend might need to ramp. So I wanted to ask you, w here you think enterprises are on that rollout process? Are we hitting an inflection point where you and your team are beginning to hear that there's a significant ramp in rollouts?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

I think we're still very early.

Yeah.

Moderator

There's a lot of what's been rolled out. A lot of the investment has been in infrastructure, testing, training.

Mm-hmm.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

And a lot of it when you talk about internal employees and some of the use cases, those really aren't the Datadog use cases, you know. So I think we're pretty early on. But the metrics I just mentioned of the use of the integrations and the LLM and the number of customers that have it rolled out indicate I don't know if we're in a position to call it an inflection point.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

But there's a lot of activity.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

So I think we're, you know, we think people are getting serious. They're getting more mature in their testing and modulation of these models. In certain use cases, it is in production. We're optimistic that this is gonna affect Datadog in a couple ways. One is workloads. Two is, more rapid creation of modern software and potentially, accelerated transformation of legacy application architecture to new architecture, which is a friend of Datadog.

Moderator

Okay. Let's switch subjects, as interesting as AI is, to a couple of others. One is on the pricing side, David. So, in a lot of the customer conversations we have around Datadog. To put it simply love the product. But not cheap.

Mm-hmm.

I wonder what Datadog is doing to get those customers over the hump on the pricing side. Whether there's any impetus. To maybe move to a more flexible pricing model. What are the kind of things you're doing to address t hat concern?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. I think one thing that's maybe, maybe not fully understood to explain it, but we've been selling for quite some time on, it's a similar model to AWS, a commit model.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Meaning you buy credits for the platform.

Mm-hmm.

And you can choose. You can use all aspects of the platform as you see fit, resurgence, etc. So, you know, I think we've gotten better and better at that, but we've been doing that for some time. We have, I would say, we sell based discounts based on volume and term. I think we've gotten better about using both of those and plotting out capacity planning.

Moderator

Mm-hmm.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

We have a whole group that helps clients understand how they should be using Datadog, so that we help them if they're not optimizing it or not using the right mix to, you know, suggest there. We have transparency of the meter ticking so they can see. We've always sort of if things spike up, we've always said, you know, "We're not gonna charge you this month. Let's work on this together."

And then we've, I think, gotten better at some pricing models like, as we consolidate, instead of charging you a full price, a full ramped load for the first six months as you might migrate from another APM to Datadog, we're amenable if the economics are right to ramping that, by all credits and things like that. It hasn't affected the overall average price, but what it's done is remove some friction. From the consolidation effort.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

So those are all the things I think we've learned, you know, and, you know, we try to work with our clients. I would say, yes, we try to value sell. We also try to bring more of the point solutions onto the product. So if they have a spend with Datadog, they're actually, you know, spending it on more product with Datadog rather than other vendors.

Got it.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Okay. Thanks for that.

Moderator

Yeah.

I also wanted to ask you a little bit about competition, David. You mentioned when we were chatting earlier. That you were on your way to re:Invent t onight. So specifically, I'd love to ask you about the relationship with AWS a nd the hyperscalers because I think one of the a ttractive aspects of the Datadog story is i n contrast to a number of the consumption-based d ata software firms that are c ompeting very directly with the hyperscalers, I've personally never felt like Datadog is up against an enterprise-grade version of o bservability from the hyperscalers.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yep.

Moderator

So I wanted to get your impression of that and what the nature of the relationship is with AWS.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

Friendly enough to be for you to be heading up to re:Invent? So my sense is it's more, it's more friendly than it is an enemy relationship. But can you opine a little bit?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

It's definitely in a partnership on many levels. I think you're right. Because of the desire for Switzerland to monitor, the desire to be able to be multi-cloud and integrate all this data, some of which is germane to a single hyperscaler and some not.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

We tend to have a community pro-product that is more protected than what you're talking about from the competition. So I think you're right. Our partnership involves technology partnership to make sure that we're integrating what they're doing and so we can monitor what they're doing. This helps them because they wanna be able to sell hybrid cloud that can be monitored.

We sell through their marketplaces significantly, so we have a significant active relationship both on the sales side and through our partner organization in lead. We go to a big part of our marketing budget is partner marketing with them. So we support them, and they support us with that. So I would say with all the hyperscalers, it's a very, very strong multi-dimension partnership.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

And it's proven to be not so much competition, but how can we help each other? You sell more cloud and compute.

Moderator

Okay. Got it. Let's move the conversation to sales and marketing. David, 'cause I think that's actually an i nteresting part of the Datadog story and in particular, on this last call.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

You made a comment implying that Datadog wants to lean into the s ales and marketing effort more.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

I think you even articulated a view that your sales, headcount growth m ight even pick up a little bit.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

So why are you doing this? How can everybody square that with comfort in the marketing story?

Yeah. Definitely. So we have a pretty efficient go-to-market with a really strong return. So I think we've generally tried to lean in, and we've said we're trying to grow our ramp quota capacity in line, it's correlated with revenue growth. I would say what happened was we pulled back a little bit during the bursting of the bubble after COVID. We were essentially the market environment was a little less robust. We didn't have access to travel and being in international markets as much. So I think we had lower than desired and pro rata growth. Our sales and marketing grew 4% in the year before.

Moderator

Mm-hmm.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

So what we did was we looked at, then the question is, why are we doing this? We looked at white space, customers, geography, ways to go to market, where we can make the investment and, you know, at a very attractive return. And we think there's a lot of places we can go.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

So this isn't just right now. We've been doing this during the course of the whole year.

Moderator

Mm-hmm.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

But to get the engine going and get everybody in and get them ramped takes time.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Ollie mentioned that, you know, from the first time in Q3, we saw more of an inflection up in terms of quota capacity growth.

Yeah.

We're gonna continue, and that will bear fruit if it works. We'll bear fruit next year because you gotta get the people ramped up and in seats. We do it bottoms up. I'll give you some examples. I'll give you an example. We've been selling to India from Singapore for all these years. Now, there's a lot of cloud natives, but there's a lot of bigger companies. There's a lot of GSIs, and we essentially went from zero to having 30 or 40 people in India now.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

And I think it'll at least double that. And it's not just in enterprise sales and sales engineers. It'll be in CS and commercial and marketing. It's another example of becoming more local.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

We were also able to sell from hubs that really paid off, but you know, as we evolve, we learn that we need to be in more local markets, so there's a number of things we're doing.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

that we think are gonna pay off.

Moderator

David, the translation of those investments to your margin outlook, does that imply that we should be thinking more flat, or are there efficiency gains you can extract elsewhere such that, you know, there's still potential for additional margin gains despite that uptick in sales and marketing?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

What we said was, you know, we gave a 25-plus margin target.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

At our analyst day in February, right at the time, we also had said I think right before right after we said, we had soared past it. We were at 27% EBIT and 30s cash flow. And we said, "Wow, we've been too good operators. You know, we've been really, you know, we managed this crisis well." And so we essentially think that there's some of the opportunities to invest both in R&D and sales and marketing.

We haven't given, there are a lot of economies to harvest. So the business itself, because of the go-to-market, etc., has economies. And it's really, you know, our choice of whether we wanna reinvest them. Or even lean in a little more than above revenues. And we haven't given our guidance yet, but I think we're signaling that we're a long-term growth company. We see a lot of opportunities. We're gonna attempt to invest in this next period of time.

Moderator

Makes sense.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Mm-hmm.

Moderator

We've probably got time for one or two questions. Okay to take a few, David?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. Definitely.

Moderator

Anybody wanna ask one? Feel free to raise your hand. I think we've got a, a mic, around as well. No? Oh. Okay. No. Right in the front. A small enough room that you might be able to just ask it out loud. In what? In India. Okay. The question was, can you describe the competitive landscape in India?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. I think India for observability, India has been it. It's not one where they're, like, in some businesses, local companies. It's the same players, you know, that have been in APM, logs, and infrastructure. We, I think, got there, as we talked about later. So there are installed bases, in APAC some APM companies that have been there a while. So we're competing, very much with the APM companies, the New Relics, the Dynatraces, the Splunks, the AppDynamics, somewhat with open source with Grafana and others, and the cloud-native tool. So it's very. It's not different than the rest of the world.

Moderator

I'll ask another q uestion, David. It, obviously, since the Trump administration, w ho's winning the election, there's all kinds of buzz about the federal government g etting, you know, more efficient p resumably through the use of technology.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

How are you viewing this as an opportunity for Datadog? And can you remind us what portion of your revenue mix actually comes from the U.S. federal government?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah. Definitely. To remind everybody, we started a few years ago on our FedRAMP. We're Impact 2. We're working on impact three. We set, you know, for data centers and our distribution. We have a pretty low percentage of our revenues, low single digits.

Moderator

Okay.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

In federal, we underpunched our weight. It might have to do probably with when we started. B ut also, as you said, we're dependent upon the modernization of IT infrastructure. And, you know, the government may be a little behind. So I think that anything that does shake that up and accelerates replatforming and efficiency is gonna complement Datadog. It's too early to know.

Moderator

Yeah.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

But I would say we're excited that any industry that modernizes its infrastructure is good for Datadog.

Moderator

Yeah. I get it.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah.

Moderator

Okay. Good. Why don't we end? Oh, Nadi, time for one more, 38 seconds, but it's gonna be a good one.

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. It's not something that we run the company on. We know that the big correlation is on workloads in the cloud. So to the extent that we all see, and we don't see, the portion of their reporting that is on the cloud delivery of modern applications, it is correlated. It's just that their data is so homogeneous, so, you know, heterogeneous, varied in stuff, and all that, you can't really see it. But the core cloud workload correlation is in effect.

Moderator

Good. Why don't we end it there, David?

David Obstler
CFO, Datadog

Yeah, Yuka.

Moderator

Thanks for coming to t he UBS event. Thanks, everybody, for listening.

Powered by