 Hi, welcome to theCUBE. I'm your host, Lisa Martin, and we are on the ground at Google with CloudNow, which is a nonprofit organization for women in cloud computing and converging technologies. Tonight, CloudNow is celebrating their fifth annual top women in cloud innovation, and we are very excited to be joined by one of the winners of the award tonight, Shamla Bhandla, who's the vice president, global cloud operations and DevOps at Paulus. Welcome to theCUBE. Thank you. So you're an award winner tonight. Tell us about the project that garnered you this prestigious honor. I'm happy to share that, and actually I'm very thrilled and excited to be here and participating with the other accomplished leaders. There were actually two key projects which got me. One is the scale in the big data and the complexity dealing with the clouds. And it's not one cloud. Paulus being the cloud provider for security, and we manage security products for different customers. We are talking about big scale. We do three billion scans annually. We do about 100 billion detections annually, and we do about one trillion security endpoints or data points. So how do you manage the scale and bringing new features to the market at a lightning speed is the key. So I had three key strategies which got me to the award. One is agility, visibility, and security. And being a service provider for security, security is in the forefront all the time for the platforms. We also believe in sipping our own champagne. We use our own products to make sure our platforms are secure. Visibility, things break. And when things break at scale, Paulus is no different. And the strategy I had evolved and the team had executed on was a single pane of glass for knowing when things break and how do you quickly fix it. And agility, how do you deploy? Regardless whether you're in Amazon as your or Google Cloud platform or soft player or even your own private cloud on VMware, we should be able to deploy our platforms quickly. So I had initiated a new DevOps strategy where regardless of your underlying infrastructure, how do you quickly deploy your workloads? That is the key. How do you fail fast? And to top it off, the culture is very important, transforming the entire operations team, being just not a support organization, but being that innovation driving organization was the key. Wow, fantastic. You are obviously, you're in a very accomplished technologist. You're an award winner. Give us a quick overview of some of the things that are the most influential or have been the most influential to get you to be where you are now, this successful female leader in technology. Two things come to mind. First is believe in yourself. Never think anything is impossible. Everything is possible. Always believe in making an impact. Be that problem solver, whether it is within your own organization or whether it is in a cross-functional, whether it's a technology problem, whether it's a process, always believe you can make an impact. I love that. Believe in yourself, believe you can make an impact. Shomla, thank you so much for joining. Thank you. Congratulations on being one of the top women in cloud innovation. We're thrilled to have you. Thank you so much. You've been watching The Cube. I'm your host, Lisa Martin. And if you know a female that should be featured on our program, tweet us at The Cube, hashtag women in tech, and we'll see you next time.