wonderfully unique software solutions

Digitisation and e-signature software powers business leap to AI: DocuSign

Relatively modest applications such as e-signatures can help move business customers along a path towards Big Data implementations from the Internet of Things (IoT) to machine learning and AI.

That’s according to DocuSign chief executive officer Dan Springer, speaking to CNBC‘s reporter for Squawk Box Europe on the digital documentation company’s plans and outlook for growth as a public company.

New trends such as hybrid working, AI, 5G, Big Data, and the IoT are having a monumental impact on the IT industry and on how companies prepare for the future, he agreed.

“In those specific examples, artificial intelligence (AI) is probably the one that’s most relevant to think about with Big Data applications,” Springer said.

“People used to come to DocuSign and say they just want to do electronic and digital signatures. Now they’re saying I have all these agreements done digitally, I need to manage them. I need to have some sort of repository for them, and I need to do intelligence search.”

Customers often now want to move to leveraging AI and are asking to integrate that advanced capability into the overall DocuSign agreement, he said.

“I think we’re going to continue to see that need for innovation be a big part of our business, and really what our customers are demanding.”

DocuSign, meanwhile, was continuing to look for growth and expansion, particularly outside its home US market in places like Europe — suggesting the company will support growth opportunities for its channel partners too.

“We’re gonna do our darndest to put up such numbers that incredibly increase that valuation, to make it harder and harder for someone to acquire the company,” Springer said.

“Only 20% of our revenue comes outside of the US, and for a company that will be approaching about $2 billion of revenue this year, I’d like to see that higher.”

The company is making investments in Europe through its Dublin headquarters and offices across the region. Good ethos and execution would continue to be key, he suggested.

Dave Stevinson, chief executive at pan-European distributor QBS Software, suggested European partners too should be looking at closer engagement with DocuSign.

“Inviting our European partners to engage closer with Docusign makes obvious sense. Docusign is the undisputed leader in e-signature and has over 250 technology integrations. Our pre-sales and onboarding team are ready to enable this activity,” Stevinson said.

Recent Articles

Foxit PDF editor suite expands AI capabilities for 2024

Smart PDF commands and enhanced AI assistant functionality are set to give the desktop and cloud versions of Foxit PDF Editor Suite...

Vyond bundles in further AI and branding capabilities for corporate creatives

Video creation platform vendor Vyond is expanding its offerings with new brand-management tools as well as further generative AI functionality responding to...

LastPass analyst warns of looming credentials crisis

Organisations should beware of an oncoming crisis in the secure management of user access, according to a cybersecurity specialist at password management...

Octopus Deploy follows Codefresh buy with 2024.1 Server

Continuous delivery (CD) pipeline platform vendor Octopus Deploy has acquired fellow development software specialist Codefresh and rolled out a new version of...

Top-25 cloud list runs gamut from Visma to Cloudflare, Wasabi to Azul

The Software Report market insights website has named 25 software companies as the top companies in cloud computing for 2024, offering specific...

Related Stories

Leave A Reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Weirdware monthly - Get the latest news in your inbox