$:Palantir Technologies Inc.(PLTR)$ $:Amazon.com(AMZN)$
Key Points
- Palantir's Foundry software is used by governments and businesses around the world.
- Wall Street has been skeptical of Palantir's ability to outmaneuver its competition in the private sector.
- The company recently introduced a certification program to bolster the usage of Foundry.
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It comes as no surprise to anyone in the business world that companies are increasingly relying on data for everything they do. According to IDC, more than 80% of an organization's data will be unstructured by 2025. This means that customer records or important legal documents are siloed in different systems, which presents a challenge for traditional data solutions.
As a result, managementcouldspend years working with high-cost consultants attempting to build in-house solutions. Fortunately, Palantir Technologies(NYSE:PLTR)develops asoftware-as-a-service (SaaS)platform called Foundry. Unlike much its competition, Foundry provides multiple capabilities as part of a unified platform. This helps prevent the risks that come with disparate technologies and ensures a seamless experience in which data history, security, and privacy are protected.
Amazon(NASDAQ:AMZN)also recognized early on that data was becoming more important for decision-makers within organizations. Just as Amazon identified that aggregating and storing data was going to become a problem, Palantir has identified that unifying and interpreting this data is becoming increasingly challenging as companies acquire more customers and invest in new operating systems.
Where is Palantir today?
Following its IPO in September 2020, Palantir received a lot of media coverage. It even briefly became ameme stock, and by January 2021, shares had skyrocketed over 250% from its IPO price.
Throughout 2021, Palantir slowly came back to Earth as investors started forming a better understanding of its business. Palantir reported $392 million in revenue during Q3 2021, representing 36% year-over-year growth and 203 total customers. Although this level of growth is impressive, the company has been criticized by Wall Street for being heavily reliant on government contracts, leading some to fear that Palantir will struggle to expand into the private sector in a meaningful way. By comparison, competing software analytics platformSnowflake reported over 5,400 customers, 173% net revenue retention, and revenue growth of 110% year over year for the fiscal quarter ended Oct. 31, 2021.
Although Snowflake and Palantir experienced heavy sell-offs during the final months of 2021, Snowflake currently trades at 106 times its trailing-12-month sales compared to Palantir's 25 times. Despite committing to 30% revenue growth each year over the next four years, the pace at which Palantir is growing compared to peers and its path to penetrate the private sector remain legitimate investor concerns.
Why are certifications important?
As a company acquires more customers, it inherently collects more data which can be used to hone existing product features. In the early 2000s, Amazon understood that data would become an important pillar for companies and that physical servers should be virtualized. This dynamic is referred to ascloud computing. Cloud computing allows businesses more flexibility and scalability than physical servers, and is often a more cost-effective solution.
In 2006, Amazon made its first strides to tackle server virtualization by introducing a cloud hosting solution called Amazon Web Services (AWS). Perhaps what was even more innovative was thewaythat Amazon commercialized this product: Amazon drove awareness in the marketplace by introducing a certification program. Since businesses are increasingly requiring candidates to be experts in areas such as digital advertising, customer relationship management (CRM), and data analytics, certifications allow employers to have standards across the employee base because companies need teams that are well-versed on these software products.
Public health agencies are already leveraging Foundry to create unified catalogues of data to power response workflows including tracking and analyzing the spread ofCOVID-19 and coordinating with hospitals and medical supply manufacturers. Moreover, Palantir is used by financial institutions to combat crimes such as money laundering. Although it is encouraging to see Foundry used for critical business operations, it could be argued that its use cases have much more room to growacrossthese organizations, rather than combating one specific problem.
In mid-January, Palantir announced that it would be rolling out a certification program for Foundry. The certification program is an important step in an ongoing effort to support Palantir customers in unlocking value from the software. The company noted in the press release that "with its certification program, Palantir is accelerating and expanding the productization of its approach." This means that Palantir is looking to generate network effectswithina company through its certification program. As more professionals are proficient in Foundry software, this platform could become more engrained into the fabric of global operations.
In effect, tools such as AWS or Foundry can become vertically integratedacrossdifferent product groups and functions in a company. This methodology has helped Amazon sell AWS to millions of customers and grow it into a $50 billion run-rate revenue business. By comparison, Palantir has only guided for revenue of $1.5 billion for calendar 2021, but Palantir is looking to replicate the AWS blueprint as it seeks to penetrate private sector growth. Just as AWS has become a market leader in the cloud, Palantir has a huge opportunity as it looks to build the central operating system for big data.
How does this help Palantir?
Amazon used used its AWS certification program to create more awareness in the marketplace. In turn, it was able to learn the pain-points of business of all sizes and create numerous applications for those organizations. The primary goal of Foundry is that it will have such a profound impact within an organization that its use cases begin to compound. In effect, Foundry would become the central nervous system and backbone for data asartificial intelligenceandmachine learningbecome more mainstream for companies. Instead of selling Foundry to one organization for one particular use case, Palantir can accelerate and expand the use of its software as more people become certified across different functions throughout a company. The certification program could be a lucrative driver of future business for Palantir, especially as the company seeks to grow beyond its government segment, thereby fueling long-term momentum for the stock.
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