 From the heart of Silicon Valley, it's theCUBE. Covering CloudNOW's seventh annual Top Women Entrepreneurs in Cloud Innovation Awards. Hi Lisa Martin with theCUBE on the ground at Facebook headquarters. We're here for the seventh annual CloudNOW Top Women Entrepreneurs in Cloud Innovation Awards. Excited to welcome from the at scale team to theCUBE for the first time, Sarah Gorick co-founder and chief architect and award winner. Sir, it's so great to have you on the program. Thanks so much, it's great to be here. So I mentioned you joined a number of your peers at at scale who've been on theCUBE, so we're glad to have you on. So co-founder of a tech company, we're here celebrating women who have not only founded companies, technical entrepreneurs, venture about companies, really hard things to achieve. Give us a little bit of the backstory about the co-founding opportunity that you and your co-founders had about what five or so years ago at at scale. Yeah, so a number of us, a number of the founding team came out of Yahoo where in the analytics group, we were seeing that the scale of data that companies were operating with was changing and the operational environment was changing with both public and private clouds. And even at Yahoo as a technology company, we found we were struggling both internally to develop the tools that we needed and also to find tools on the market that serve the needs of our business users and our executives and our accounts and the sales people. So we realized that this was just a sort of pivotal moment in the change of the way business was being done in the valley and that there was this great opportunity to really help companies connect to their data wherever that data might be and whatever types of data they might have. So about five years or so ago, from your perspective, you are a STEM kid, you've got background in math and physics. So you knew from the time you were a kid, I love this is what I wanna do. What were some of the things that inspired you as being in many industries is challenging but tech is as well that inspired you to not only continue doing what you love but to actually step out of maybe you'd say a comfort zone of a large company like a Yahoo with your co-founders and start something brand new. Sure, I think it's the key thing to me is you have to sort of just believe in yourself and be your own champion because really everybody out there who accomplishes these things takes these steps and says this is gonna be my moment, this is gonna be my thing and I think whether you're a woman or a minority or a man or anybody, you just have to be confident in yourself. Look for the things that you really enjoy. For me that was math and science and technology and just sort of find here's my niche, here's something I can be really good at and become an expert in that area and that's sort of something you walk into over time and sort of develop that confidence to sort of strike out and do some amazing things in your life. How do you find that for those next generation or even those that are in tech now to go, I don't feel confident enough or they might feel some pressure. Do you have a recommendation aligning themselves with a mentor whether it be male, female, whatever, to help them just kind of take stock of what's really important to them? Yeah, I think finding people who have been through it and talking to them, whether it could be a boss or a coworker who's done interesting things in their lives or an old teacher or a present teacher, I think finding somebody who can sort of give you that story of like here's how I felt because you have to have confidence in yourself but really nobody feels confident all the time. Everybody gets anxious or fearful before doing something new, that's part of it and sort of learning to look back and say, well, I've been successful in the past and I've overcome these obstacles and I'm ready for another one. I always think something that's so interesting is the concept of imposter syndrome and how many people suffer from it and I didn't even know it existed until a few years ago and it levels, okay, I'm not the only one and so I think that's something that, some people are kind of born with that regardless, like you love math and physics and you're gonna keep going but for those I think even sometimes acknowledging, oh, this is something that a lot of people that have confidence now didn't have back in the day, I can overcome this as well. Right, I think everybody has a little bit of imposter syndrome at times. I just think that the world can seem like such a big and challenging place but really it's all made of people and they all have the same sort of interests and desires, not necessarily all the same skills but deep down we're all people. Exactly, so tonight though in the last minute or so, you have the opportunity to present in front of one of the most influential females of our time in technology, Cheryl Sandberg. Can you think back to yourself in college and if you'd known this opportunity was gonna happen, would you just said, yeah, that's about right? You know, I would have been a surprise but I think with work and with sort of following your passion, I think anything's possible. I love that. Well Sarah, congratulations on the award and for all of your success at AtScale. We congratulate you and we thank you for stopping by theCUBE. Thank you. We have a great night as well. Thanks. We want to thank you for watching theCUBE. I am Lisa Martin on the ground at Facebook headquarters. We'll see you next time.