Updates

Adaptive Insights & Workday

Sergio Monsalve
March 16, 2020
Share this post

This morning, Workday (WDAY) announced plans to acquire Adaptive Insights for more than $1.6 billion. This is Workday’s largest-ever acquisition. At first glance, this would seem like just another big SaaS deal. However, this acquisition is fundamentally different and transformational. Why? Because it unites two great companies that are defining the future of work in important ways: they have developed cutting-edge technologies that help workforces collaborate and adapt more efficiently in a rapidly changing world, and they have both developed industry-leading best practices in company culture, people development, and partner/customer care. So, as much as some like to sensationalize the doomsday storylines of “computers vs. people,” what we have here is a fantastic example of two great companies coming together to accelerate their bet on people and on the future of work.

Workday and Adaptive both share a common purpose and mission: to make workforces more thoughtful, effective, adaptable, and better at planning for the future. Using technology to plan and adjust quickly is one of the biggest challenges today’s companies are dealing with, especially given the increasing pace of innovation. The emergence of Artificial Intelligence, machine learning, robotics, autonomous vehicles, and other innovative technologies will require business leaders to be more agile and strategic as they react to changes in the landscape.

I see “The Future of Work” as the partnership of cutting-edge technology with humans in order to deliver agility and efficiency. This is AI (Augmented Intelligence), and these two companies together have a great opportunity to deliver it. This is why I am so excited about the future of these two companies and why the combination will be transformational for the future of how we work.

Norwest became one of the largest investors in Adaptive in 2011 when I led that investment and joined the board of directors. Adaptive’s success, growth, and our successful sale to Workday can be tied back to bets we all made in people and in the relationships we fostered. I first heard of Adaptive from John Herr, a friend who had worked with me at eBay/Paypal and someone who later joined me at Norwest as an Executive in Residence. He and I worked closely together as he surfaced Adaptive and became its growth CEO and a catalyst for the company in its scaling phase; he later became CEO of Avetta, another very successful Norwest portfolio company. Adaptive’s current CEO, Tom Bogan, is a seasoned executive who has incredible leadership skills, especially around people development. Tom is a people-first kind of leader and that is a big reason why the board bet on him. As we prepared the company for further growth, Tom partnered closely with Rob Hull, Adaptive’s fantastic founder and the true soul of the company. Tom’s discussions always focus on people first and that leadership style is what made Tom an incredible recruiter and groomer of top talent. Tom and Rob, along with the whole executive team, have created a very positive culture at Adaptive. The culture was cited by employees, partners, customers, and Workday as Adaptive’s biggest asset and crown jewel. Tom recruited nearly all members of its world-class executive team, created a company which received multiple awards as a “best place to work,” and a culture which energized people. He also brought in a top-notch independent board including its Chairman, Mark Templeton, ex-CEO of Citrix.

The chemistry and mutual respect between Aneel and Tom are clear—I know they will form a dynamic duo. I could go on and on, but the point is that our success in this venture investment (and all great ones I have made), overwhelmingly depends on the bet you make on the people.

Since I joined the board of Adaptive seven years ago, I’ve been focused on “The Future of Work.” I am now spending all of my time investing and working with entrepreneurs in education technology, workforce development, Augmented Intelligence, human SaaS and other key areas that will transform our workforce through technology: "The Future of Work." In 2014, I also led Norwest's investment and I became a board member at Udemy, which is the largest and fastest-growing global life-long learning platform. Udemy and Adaptive are two examples of “unicorn” companies, which have been able to make a difference in the future of work while having a relentless focus on people, both in their mission as well as in their own culture. Adaptive and Workday are proof that betting on people is a smart business.

Note: This legacy content was originally published before the current iteration of Roble Ventures, and may be out of date.

About the author

Sergio Monsalve
Founding Partner, Roble Ventures

Guiding early-stage founders to success

Related Insights.

Updates

Because Enabling Humans Takes Humanity: Meet Roble’s New Look

Learn more about our recent brand refresh—and how we're doubling down on human enablement, internally and externally.
Updates

Adaptive Insights & Workday

This transformational $1.6B deal unites two great companies that are defining the future of work in important ways.
Updates

Meet Roble's Summer 2023 Interns and Fellows

We are thrilled to introduce this year's exceptional group of summer interns.