
WorkBoard Acquires Quantive to Strengthen Its Strategy Execution and OKR Software Advantage and Accelerate Innovation
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today we're excited to share that WorkBoard has acquired Quantive, bringing together the top two players in enterprise OKRs and strategy execution to deliver unmatched AI capabilities, a world-class customer experience, and deep expertise serving the enterprise. The acquisition consolidates expertise and accelerates innovation to help leaders and teams achieve peak performance in a fast-changing world.
'This acquisition combined with our co-sell partnerships with both Workday and Microsoft help us execute on our ambitious roadmap, expand customer value, and capture market share faster.'
'Every enterprise must continuously adapt strategic priorities and align resources to changing market forces. Our AI agents radically accelerate strategy adaptation and execution,' said Deidre Paknad, CEO and Co-Founder of WorkBoard. 'This acquisition combined with our co-sell partnerships with both Workday and Microsoft help us execute on our ambitious roadmap, expand customer value, and capture market share faster.'
Over the past year, WorkBoard has rapidly advanced its innovation agenda, launching Chief of Staff and Leadership Coach agents that help organizations and the people in them align faster, drive accountability, and reduce the work of work. These AI agents deliver real-time insights, nudges, and guidance to keep teams focused and outcomes on track.
Quantive joins WorkBoard at a time of accelerating adoption across the enterprise strategy execution and OKR category. Our partnerships with Microsoft and Workday further expand the reach and utility of the WorkBoardAI platform, including the new agent for Microsoft Copilot, which brings OKRs directly into Microsoft 365. Teams can ask for progress, get recommendations, and stay aligned without switching context.
After Microsoft decided to sunset Viva Goals late last year, dozens of enterprises have chosen WorkBoardAI as their next-generation strategy execution platform. From dynamic scorecards to AI-generated action plans, WorkBoard helps the world's largest organizations better align, measure and drive strategic priorities.
As Quantive joins the team, we're expanding our talent bench and accelerating our global community. Quantive customers will transition to the WorkBoard platform over the coming months, supported by a high-touch experience every step of the way. They'll also be invited to join us this Fall at WorkBoard Accelerate, the world's largest OKR and Strategy Execution conference, featuring speakers from Boeing, Mars, A.O. Smith, Aprimo, GHX, and more.
As part of the transaction, Quantive investors will take an observer seat on WorkBoard's board.
About WorkBoardAI
WorkBoardAI is the world's leading enterprise OKR solution and is the only strategy execution system of record with generative and agentic AI to improve alignment, accountability and transparency. Trusted by 3M, AstraZeneca, Boeing, Cisco, Capital One, Elevance, Unilever, Workday, and others, WorkBoardAI makes it easy for organizations to align, measure and drive their strategic priorities more effectively in a rapidly changing world. Its AI helps every enterprise execute better by elevating managers' impact, increasing cross-functional coordination, and accelerating company outcomes. Company investors include SoftBank, Andreessen Horowitz, M12 Microsoft's Venture Fund, Notable Capital, Workday Ventures, and others, along with prior Quantive investors Insight Partners, Index Ventures, and Charles River Ventures. WorkBoard is headquartered in Silicon Valley with offices across the US, Europe and India.
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Microsoft 365
PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing. Chances are that you already use and appreciate the power of Microsoft 365. The behemoth of personal expertly facilitates collaborative work, packs tons of class-leading features, and benefits from regular (and substantial) updates. We especially appreciate the flexibility to work across desktop, mobile, and web versions of its apps. The complexity of the suite's feature set can be overwhelming, and some Copilot AI features are more annoying than useful, but Microsoft 365 still easily earns our Editors' Choice award because of its reliable performance and unbeatable functionality across apps. If you prefer not to pay for continuous updates, however, you should check out the standalone version of the suite, Office 2024, another Editors' Choice winner. Microsoft 365 is the latest name for the suite of apps that includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and more. Microsoft formerly called it Microsoft Office and then Office 365. The company also now maintains an app for desktop, mobile, and web platforms called Microsoft 365 Copilot (formerly Microsoft 365). On all platforms, it provides links to the appropriate versions of the suite apps and lets you ask the Copilot AI assistant questions. Microsoft 365 maintains native apps for every major platform except Linux. Subscription-locked desktop apps are available for macOS and Windows, and you can download free mobile apps for Android, iOS, and iPadOS. Free, web-based versions of the apps allow you to use them practically anywhere, including on Linux. Simply signing up for a Microsoft account gets you 5GB of free storage and access to web and mobile versions of Excel, PowerPoint, and Word. A Microsoft 365 Basic subscription ($19.99 per year) gets you 100GB of OneDrive storage and an ad-free version of Outlook on the web. However, to unlock Microsoft 365's best capabilities, you need to pay more. The Microsoft 365 Personal tier ($99.99 per year) allows a single person to use desktop versions of Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook (you get an email address as part of the subscription), OneNote, and Word on up to five supported devices. This plan also includes 1TB of OneDrive storage, Copilot AI features across the apps, the Microsoft Defender antivirus app, more AI credits for the AI-based Designer app, and premium Clipchamp and features. The more economical Microsoft 365 Family plan ($129.99 for up to six people) unlocks those same features for each person. Both of those rates increased by $30 when Microsoft added Copilot features, much to the dismay of many AI-averse subscribers. The good news is that you can optionally downgrade to the cheaper Microsoft 365 Standard tier ($69.99 per year for individuals, $99.99 for families) if you are an existing subscriber and don't want Copilot features. Microsoft 365 has a business version (starting at $4.75 per user per month, billed annually) and the aforementioned standalone version (starting at $149.99), while college and education students can get the Personal version with Copilot for half off ($59.88 per year). It is a fast-evolving suite that adds new features and interface tweaks every few weeks, so I strongly recommend one of the subscription options. The most popular competitors are the Google Docs Editors (a Gen Z favorite). Available as cloud-connected mobile and web apps, they make collaboration especially easy and bundle more storage (15GB) than Microsoft does at the free level. Apple users might still prefer the suite of Keynotes, Numbers, and Pages. They work on all Apple devices, as well as on the web (with real-time collaboration). Just know that you need to export documents in universal formats to share them broadly. The open-source LibreOffice might appeal for legal reasons, though its desktop-only apps aren't as capable as Microsoft 365's. Other more affordable work-alike desktop apps include ($129.95 for a perpetual license or starting at $29.90 per year) and Kingsoft WPS Office (free for a limited version or starting at $35.99 per year). Only one major office suite doesn't try to imitate Microsoft: Corel WordPerfect (starting at $99.99 for a perpetual license). It uniquely uses a reveal-codes screen that lets you see and completely control and clean up your document's exact formatting. If you purely care about writing text, check out our roundup of the (including some distraction-free options). Below, I detail my experiences with each of the core Microsoft 365 apps: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. You likely already know these apps inside out, so I concentrate on new features and some (admittedly particular) issues. To not leave you in suspense, these are all still the preeminent apps of their type. Yes, annoyances and occasional instability are present, but the apps' benefits far outweigh their downsides. Word is a unique blend of effortless power and occasional frustrations that you have probably learned to live with because it's the only practical choice. It might just be among the most feature-rich apps ever; aside from complex controls over every aspect of document formatting, it offers drawing tools and even integrates Microsoft's translation and research services. Almost all the features in the Windows version of Word are available for the macOS version, too, except the myriad keyboard shortcuts that ease navigation. Word continues to gradually shed its old-style dialog boxes in favor of modern, multi-pane interfaces. For example, you can now use a spacious Navigation pane to search for text instead of the cramped old Find dialog. An Editor pane (formerly the Proofing pane) also replaces the old spell-check dialog, too. If you use a mouse, Word's multiple-pane interface works beautifully. But if you don't want to move your fingers from the keyboard, getting to these panes quickly is a challenge. Pressing the F6 key lets you jump to one of Word's panes from the editing screen or ribbon, but these panes still don't respond to many traditional keyboard shortcuts, such as Alt + Down to open a drop-down menu. Another recent controversial change is the removal of Track Changes balloons in the left margin. If all you need to do is type a report or a letter, then Word's ribbon interface gives you easy access to every feature you need. But if you want to customize formatting or use advanced features like fields that contain variables—which you can change throughout a document with a single command—you might need to customize your keyboard or ribbon with components Word doesn't usually display. Beginners can get started by choosing among hundreds of elegant, downloadable template designs directly from the app's New menu. If you want to concentrate on the text you're writing, a distraction-free Focus mode is available. Just click the Focus button on the toolbar (you might need to enable it from the right-click toolbar) to launch a full-screen editing mode with just a scrollbar and no visible menus. At the same time, advanced users can configure the interface to show a cornucopia of detail. Right-click on the status bar at the foot of Word's window to get an idea of the dozens of things it can tell you about your document. If you haven't spent half a lifetime learning Word, some behaviors might frustrate you. For example, Word adds a horizontal line at the foot of a paragraph if you type a few too many dashes by default, and then doesn't let you easily delete it (you need to use the border drop-down menu in the Paragraph section of the Home tab to remove it). And if you want to change the length of the separator line between text and footnotes, you might not easily guess that you can do so only by switching from the default Page view into Draft view and accessing the drop-down menu in the lower pane of that window. You can stop Word from adding border lines—and other things it does automatically, such as creating numbered lists—by customizing its auto-format features. However, you need to navigate through multiple dialog boxes to find all the options, some of which are inconvenient to manage. For example, you can tell Word not to flag grammar issues as you type, but you can't turn off the distracting grammar-checking in the Editor pane without turning off dozens of individual options, one by one. To help you find features and support topics, Word (and other Microsoft 365 apps) includes a prominent search field in its title bar. For instance, if you can't remember that you need to open the Ribbon menu's Insert tab to edit headers and footers, simply type Insert Header, and Word will bring up the relevant menu. However, this dialog won't tell you where to look on the ribbon for the feature in question or always bring up the correct menu. For example, if you search for the Master Document feature, which lets you build a large document from separately editable chapters, Word takes you to a completely different feature for displaying multiple pages in a single window. The search tool finds the Master Document feature only if you find it first; changing the View setting from Print Layout to Outline causes the Ribbon to show the Master Document menu. Word also sometimes makes formatting errors. For example, while I was working on this review, I also worked on another document containing many book titles. Word suddenly decided to italicize everything in two pages in the middle of the document, not just the book titles. Restoring the correct formatting took more than an hour. The Master Document feature is notoriously unstable, sometimes losing track of which parts of the document belong in the Master Document itself. Unless you're a Word wizard, you might not know that Word stores the formatting of the current paragraph inside the paragraph mark at the end of it—you can't even see this mark until you click the Show/Hide button (which looks like a paragraph mark) on the Home tab. If you delete the invisible paragraph mark between two paragraphs (for example, by backspacing across a paragraph break), the format of one paragraph might change to match the format of the other. I've wasted many hours restoring formatting that Word changed without warning. Word's layout options are sometimes a pain. If you want to change page margins in the middle of a document, you have to create a new section. Doing so, however, disrupts any automatic footnote and endnote numbering. Almost every other modern word processor imitates Word's nonsensical layout rules, except for WordPerfect, which lets you change margins anywhere in a document without affecting anything else. If you or your organization still has Word files from 20 or more years ago, Word now refuses to open them. Why? Because Word's old file formats supported macros that run automatically and can potentially damage your system. Other word processors, such as LibreOffice and WordPerfect, can safely open and import these old documents because they can't run these macros at all. You can persuade Word to open some but not all old documents by changing settings in the Trust Center on the Options menu. Word has the most full-featured programming language support of any word processor, the same Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) as in Excel and PowerPoint. It's not an easy language to grasp, but anyone can learn the basics by recording a macro and then studying the resulting code in Word's built-in Visual Basic editor. LibreOffice and Corel WordPerfect also have powerful macro languages, but Word's is so universal that you can quickly find help online. Mac users can alternatively use the easy-to-learn AppleScript scripting language to automate Word. Excel continues to outclass every other spreadsheet app in terms of speed and power, with the latest version further widening the gap. Google Sheets is almost on par in terms of processing speed, but it lacks a desktop app and isn't as capable. LibreOffice Calc is the best desktop-based rival to Excel, but it's slower and far less feature-rich. Apple's Numbers stands out for its ability to create graphics-rich, easy-to-manage worksheets, but it isn't as powerful or suitable for advanced corporate or financial use. Unlike Word, Excel is low on frustrations and always easy to navigate. It's even beginning to pick up some of the graphics-based features of Apple's Numbers. Excel does have automated formatting and layout features like Word, but these work reliably with the structured data that goes into an Excel worksheet (as opposed to the free-form prose you type into Word). I especially like Excel's Power Query feature, which saves hours of effort by converting raw data from web-based tables or comma-separated data files into a lucidly formatted Excel worksheet, complete with sorting buttons at the top of each column. The same feature exists in both the Windows and macOS versions, but looks better in the latter. Unfortunately, the macOS edition tends to get new features long after the Windows and web-based versions. For example, the Check Performance feature that can clear unused metadata and other unnecessary details isn't in the Mac version yet. But at least it now has the nifty Flash Fill feature that makes it easy to, for example, create a column of full names from separate columns of first names and last names. Among the hottest new features in Excel is a spacious Python Editor pane for modifying any Python code that you enter into cells in your worksheet. You can test your code here before entering it into your worksheet, and even see how it executes, cell by cell, so you can easily debug any problems. If you're ready to try out Python in Excel, you can find it in the Formula tab of the Ribbon or simply press Ctrl+Shift+Alt+F2. Another impressive feature is the ingenious XLOOKUP function that makes it simple to display a value from a large array of data. For example, you might have a column that lists stock symbols and another that lists their current prices. You can then type in a stock symbol somewhere else in your worksheet and assign another cell to display the price of said stock. (You use the XLOOKUP formula in the second cell.) A dynamic array feature lets you create a formula in the first cell of a table that returns data from all the rows in the table, no matter how many rows it contains. That way, you don't have to know in advance how many rows your table will contain. This is an extension of the aforementioned Flash Fill feature. Finally, the app allows you to use a picture as the content of a cell (rather than having it float over the spreadsheet) so that it moves with its row or column of data. You can import pictures from a web address, and the cell's contents will update if the picture on the web changes. Excel now works as well on the web as Google Sheets. It lets you share just part of a workbook, such as a range, table, or chart. Collaborators can edit the data in these specific areas without the ability to share or modify anything else. This is an extension of an earlier feature that let you create a custom sheet view for specific people that shows only what you wanted them to see. Additionally, if you use Microsoft Forms to gather data, Excel can automatically update a live worksheet whenever someone submits a form. Traditional presentations never go out of style, no matter how many people dislike them. PowerPoint keeps adding innovations that make presentations easier to create and watch. A new Presenter Coach feature tells you to summarize your slides instead of simply reading them and alerts you to filler words like 'um.' A Record tab in the ribbon creates a video of you narrating your presentation and lets you read your text in a teleprompter tab at the top of the screen, so you don't have to keep looking down to read what you want to say. The Review tab includes a Check Accessibility function that allows you to test whether your slides have all the information that users who rely on screen-reading software need. PowerPoint's ease of use extends to its ability to add a live camera feed to all slides without inserting the feed into each slide individually. Earlier, it added a feature that records your freehand inking for playback later. If you're creating traditional presentations in Windows, PowerPoint is your only serious choice. Keynote is similarly superb for creating elegant slide decks from an Apple device. But if you're creating something for the web, consider an innovative alternative like , which creates non-linear presentations in which you zoom in and out of a large canvas. The complicated Outlook you know and probably don't love is finally destined for the recycle bin. Microsoft's new Outlook app (see the image below), available as part of Microsoft 365 or from the Microsoft Store for free, also replaces the old default Mail and Calendar apps on Windows. The revised email app does much of what the outgoing one did, but has a refreshingly simpler interface (though you can still switch back to the previous version as of publishing). Many Outlook alternatives are available. Thunderbird for Windows and Mac is free and has the most powerful search features of any mail client. Apple Mail works especially seamlessly within Apple's ecosystem. And of course, Gmail is available on the web and mobile. The latter version is uniquely easy to use and flexible, though the Outlook mobile app is also compact, elegant, and fast. The latest version of Outlook adds S/MIME encryption and lets you manage .PST files from the older app. If you have a Microsoft 365 subscription, Outlook now checks your spelling and grammar in an Editor pane like in Word. However, the translation features from the older Windows version of Outlook aren't available yet. A sidebar in the new Outlook app with Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneDrive icons confusingly opens the web versions of the app, which might not even have the files you're looking for. Issues like this mean it still needs more fine-tuning before it can fully replace its predecessor, but it does continue to improve rapidly. The biggest new changes in the Microsoft 365 apps are the Copilot AI features. I especially like Copilot's presence in Excel, where it suggests useful ways of graphing data that would otherwise require some expert programming. Its capabilities in Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word are less impressive, however, and I turned them off after testing. Like rival AI systems from Apple, Google, OpenAI, and others, Copilot is better at organizing existing data than generating new content. Ask it to create a year-to-year percentage change in Excel, and it gets the job done in a few seconds. Ask it to write a Word document about anything that involves human beings and their life or work, and it produces wordy, overenthusiastic prose. At the time of testing, it often 'hallucinated,' meaning it invented facts that vaguely resembled the reality I asked about. If you're tempted to use it, make sure to check everything it says. I don't advise using Copilot to write an email for you in Outlook. It tends to open a message with 'I hope this message finds you well,' a phrase that tends to signal that you used AI to write the message. Every message I asked it to write used too many words to say what a real human being could have said in just a few. Unless you really want Copilot, you should go to the Options menu in Microsoft 365 apps and turn it off. If you don't, Word will open new documents with a prompt to use Copilot, and the Copilot icon will appear in the margin every time you start a new paragraph. If you don't intend to use these features at all and are eligible, you should downgrade to the aforementioned, cheaper, and Copilot-free Microsoft 365 Standard subscription.
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Workday (WDAY) Debuts AI Toolset to Customize and Connect AI Apps and Agents on the Workday Platform
We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where Workday, Inc. (NASDAQ:WDAY) stands against other buzzing AI stocks on latest news and ratings. On June 3rd, Workday, Inc. (NASDAQ:WDAY) announced a new unified, AI developer toolset at its annual developer conference, Workday DevCon 2025. This AI developer toolset will enable developers to customize and connect AI apps and agents on the Workday platform. The new toolset includes an Agent Gateway that allows developers and partners to connect, list, and manage third-party agents in Workday for seamless agent-to-agent collaboration and workforce integration. The toolset also includes an option for AI Widgets, which developers can add to apps and define custom prompts. These widgets offer personalized AI assistance for creating and refining content quickly across HR and finance use cases. Moreover, expanded AI Gateway APIs will allow developers to integrate new Workday AI services natively into apps. Users will be able to ask questions about reports and understand documents using natural language. A group of finance professionals analyzing market trends on their computer screens. The company also announced the expansion of its Developer Copilot, the conversational AI companion that helps developers code faster, across Workday Extend. The AI companion has been reported to improve developer productivity by more than 50%. Meanwhile, their new command-line interface (CLI) tool called Workday Developer CLI will help developers automate tasks and collaborate more effectively. 'Today, developers are under immense pressure to rapidly deliver sophisticated AI apps while navigating a complex and fragmented AI landscape. They're piecing together disparate tools and services, hindering their ability to innovate. Workday's new AI developer toolset removes these barriers by empowering developers to seamlessly integrate powerful AI capabilities into the apps and agents that will define the future of work.' -Matthew Grippo, senior vice president, core software, Workday. Workday, Inc. (NASDAQ:WDAY) provides enterprise cloud applications. Overall, WDAY ranks 7th on our list of buzzing AI stocks on latest news and ratings. While we acknowledge the potential of WDAY as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an extremely cheap AI stock that is also a major beneficiary of Trump tariffs and onshoring, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.
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Workday Unveils AI Developer Toolset, Empowering Developers to Customize and Connect AI Apps and Agents on the Workday Platform
New Agent Gateway to Help Developers Accelerate Agentic AI Innovation Across the Enterprise Workday Brings the Power of Illuminate™ into the Development Process, Ushering in New Levels of Productivity and Driving AI-Powered Experiences LAS VEGAS, June 3, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Workday DevCon 2025 – Workday, Inc. (NASDAQ: WDAY), the AI platform for managing people, money, and agents, today announced a new unified, AI developer toolset to bring the power of Workday Illuminate directly into the hands of customer and partner developers, enabling them to easily customize and connect AI apps and agents on the Workday platform. Announced at Workday DevCon 2025, the company's annual developer conference, the toolset includes: Agent Gateway. Developers will be able to connect third-party agents to the Workday Agent System of Record (ASOR) to enable seamless agent registration and agent-to-agent collaboration. Partners will also be able to enroll in Workday's new Agent Partner Network and list their agents on the Workday Marketplace. This will enable customers to select and use the right agents for their specific needs while having a unified, trusted way to manage their human and digital workforce. AI Widgets. Developers will be able to add AI-powered widgets into apps and define custom prompts, providing users with personalized AI assistance to create and refine content quickly across HR and finance use cases. For example, AI widgets can help with customer support, automate answers to common questions, or guide users through tasks. Expanded AI Gateway APIs. Developers will be able to integrate new Workday AI services natively into apps, enabling users to ask questions about reports and understand documents using natural language. For example, a developer could leverage document intelligence to automatically classify documents and extract key information. "Today, developers are under immense pressure to rapidly deliver sophisticated AI apps while navigating a complex and fragmented AI landscape. They're piecing together disparate tools and services, hindering their ability to innovate," said Matthew Grippo, senior vice president, core software, Workday. "Workday's new AI developer toolset removes these barriers by empowering developers to seamlessly integrate powerful AI capabilities into the apps and agents that will define the future of work." Turbocharging Productivity with AI Developer Copilot Workday is also expanding Developer Copilot, the conversational AI companion that helps developers code faster, across Workday Extend. Developer Copilot has been shown to increase developer productivity by more than 50% and, now, Workday developers will be able to: Generate App Code Snippets and Data Queries. Chat with Developer Copilot to generate code or data queries, then easily embed these suggestions into apps. Find the Right APIs. Prompt to receive high-context recommendations on the best API for a particular use case, along with examples to get started quickly. Generate and Document Orchestrations. Quickly generate functional orchestrations, then prompt to summarize the orchestration behavior to produce always-up-to-date documentation. Workday is also introducing a new command-line interface (CLI) tool called Workday Developer CLI. This will help developers automate development tasks, collaborate more effectively, and integrate Workday into their DevOps workflows. Workday Illuminate: AI to Power the Future of Work Built on the largest and cleanest HR and financial dataset – fueled by more than 1 trillion transactions a year – Illuminate understands the business context around the data to transform business operations by elevating humans, accelerating finance, and managing an organization's entire fleet of AI agents. From skills to performance, goals, cost and ROI metrics, organizational models, and individual identities, Illuminate has deep contextual understanding of how work gets done. AvailabilityAgent Gateway will be available to early adopter customers by the end of 2025. New Workday AI Services, AI Widgets, new Developer Copilot capabilities (available with Workday Extend Professional), and Workday Developer CLI will be generally available by the end of 2025. For More Information Read about the new Workday Agent Partner Network. Explore new agents from Workday and partners available today on Workday Marketplace. About WorkdayWorkday is the AI platform for managing people, money, and agents. The Workday platform is built with AI at the core to help customers elevate people, supercharge work, and move their business forever forward. Workday is used by more than 11,000 organizations around the world and across industries – from medium-sized businesses to more than 60% of the Fortune 500. For more information about Workday, visit © 2025 Workday, Inc. All rights reserved. Workday and the Workday logo are registered trademarks of Workday, Inc. All other brand and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. Forward-Looking StatementsThis press release contains forward-looking statements including, among other things, statements regarding Workday's plans, beliefs, and expectations. These forward-looking statements are based only on currently available information and our current beliefs, expectations, and assumptions. Because forward-looking statements relate to the future, they are subject to inherent risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict and many of which are outside of our control. If the risks materialize, assumptions prove incorrect, or we experience unexpected changes in circumstances, actual results could differ materially from the results implied by these forward-looking statements, and therefore you should not rely on any forward-looking statements. Risks include, but are not limited to, risks described in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), including our most recent report on Form 10-Q or Form 10-K and other reports that we have filed and will file with the SEC from time to time, which could cause actual results to vary from expectations. Workday assumes no obligation to, and does not currently intend to, update any such forward-looking statements after the date of this release, except as required by law. Any unreleased services, features, or functions referenced in this document, our website, or other press releases or public statements that are not currently available are subject to change at Workday's discretion and may not be delivered as planned or at all. Customers who purchase Workday services should make their purchase decisions based upon services, features, and functions that are currently available. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Workday Inc. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data