Thomas Surran
Analyst · Jefferies
Yes. So let's take that one second, let's go back to your first question, the outperformance. In the press release, we made a comment that we've assembled and have an extremely strong management team. And as I think through and I can give you specific examples, the person that's going to be heading up our sales and marketing and how that team has gone out there in just a tremendous job introducing the new products as well as some of the existing products and working with our customers and communicating the message of what we're trying to do, fantastic. Our supply chain. I'm going to come back to that one a little bit. So let's just put a pin, but they've executed extremely well. Our product management and our engineering team shortening development cycles, creating new differentiated products that create and deliver value to our customers, exceptional execution. So in general, I think it's been the execution of that team that's enabled that. All right. So one of the questions, so I'm going to come back to supply chain to answer the memory question. Mike did do a great job, by the way, of explaining that we have the fuel costs. We've got metals, we've got 232 costs. All of these, what I believe, are transitory inflationary pressures. And we have, as Jay mentioned, worked with transparency and sharing this information and working with our customers to -- that we've had to pass this on. And that how we're passing that on is over this next quarter, we've already communicated these price increases. They're going into effect, there will be a bit of a lag, but they're all set up to execute and we've had no pushback on that. But the bigger question, how do we know we're in the correct position related to memory? That supply chain team, I was mentioning, they've been working on this since last year as we saw the first indicators that there was going to be a memory squeeze. And they worked with all of our suppliers to make sure that we had allocation commitments for all of 2026, but that's the allocation. On the pricing, there was also some pull forward in pricing and the engineering, product and supply chain have worked on other means of addressing this. Our products only a minority have memory in them. And when we use memory, it's typically smaller capacity, so less amount of memory, and it's not the cutting-edge technology that's in such high demand at the data centers. So there's a little bit less pressure on that. But we've also tried to do whatever we can to try to maximize that value to customers by trying to see if there's ways we can reduce some of the memory or change how we execute but there is some cost to our customers that we are passing it was described as nonmaterial, and we feel comfortable that we have received the allocations we need to be able to execute in 2026.