
As Docker’s VP of enterprise marketing David Messina noted when I talked to him earlier this week, it’s interesting to see the support from financial services companies in this round. This somewhat atypical investment, he believes, speaks to the support Docker has from developer teams in all kinds of organizations and how these companies now look at Docker as a key platform for their teams.
“When our engineers discovered and started using Docker’s open source platform, they were immediately impressed by the portability it provides applications,” Goldman Sachs global co-head of its Technology Division Don Duet said in a statement today. “It inspired us to move towards a standardized infrastructure for packaging, shipping and running our applications based on Docker’s technology.”
Messina stressed that Docker did not have any immediate financial needs for the funding. Indeed, he told me that the company still hasn’t spent most of its Series B funding yet, but the Docker team decided to capitalize on its current momentum in order to be able to scale up as needed.
Messina also stressed that Docker decided to raise this round to make sure it can address enterprise demand going forward. He cited a recent Enterprise Technology Report that surveyed 685 enterprise CIOs. Among the respondents, Docker recorded the strongest buying intention score the researchers recorded in the six years they’ve run this survey. Messina also noted that about 50 percent of the companies in the current Docker Hub beta are Fortune 100 companies.