Why SolarWinds is pivoting to a subscription-based model

In This Article:

SolarWinds (SWI) reported fourth-quarter earnings, showing $198.14 million in revenue for the quarter, a 5.9% increase year-over-year, while full year revenue was $758.7 million, representing a 5% year-over-year growth.

Sudhakar Ramakrishna, SolarWinds CEO & President, joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the company's performance, its switch to a subscription model, and the company's ongoing battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Ramakrishna explains: "SolarWinds has always been excellent at monitoring capabilities, networking, databases, applications, and systems. What we have done is unified all of it on to a single entity, which is a SolarWinds platform. We're able to give them [customers] better ways of integrating across all of these. So whereas some of the competition is looking at applications or infrastructure, or database discreetly, we're able to pull together all of these, give them a comprehensive visibility, thereby helping them reduce the time it takes for them to detect issues and solve issues. Thereby improving productivity and reducing cost and overall improving their security as well.

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Nicholas Jacobino

Video Transcript

[AUDIO LOGO]

- Shares of SolarWinds getting a boost today following a beat on fourth-quarter earnings. The software developer saw total revenue grow 6% year-over-year. For more on the latest results we're joined by Sudhakar Ramakrishna, SolarWinds CEO and president. Thank you so much for being here.

Talk to me about the demand that you are seeing from enterprises right now. I mean, we talk a lot about companies cutting back, right? And that that's one of the reasons that they are seeing gains, but obviously they are still investing in the enterprise as well.

SUDHAKAR RAMAKRISHNA: Yes, first of all, thanks for having me here. We are very fortunate to have a very large customer base globally. In fact, we have more than 300,000 customers all over the world, and they are all looking for how do we reduce their complexity, how do we improve productivity and do it in simple ways.

That's what we deliver for them because every one of them is constrained for resources. And both physical as well as monetary and we solve their problems, and that's where we are seeing the demand from.

- And Sudhakar, top of mind for your investors and financial analysts covering you all on the Street, is the transition you all are making, Sudhakar, to more of this kind of subscription model? Why do you think you all are well positioned for that pivot?