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D2iQ main competitors are VMware, Fortinet, and F5.

Competitor Summary. See how D2iQ compares to its main competitors:

  • VMware has the most employees (31,000).
  • Employees at VMware earn more than most of the competitors, with an average yearly salary of $126,075.
  • The oldest company is Quest Software, founded in 1987.
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D2iQ vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
-
4.1
San Francisco, CA1$7.5M163
1999
4.4
Brisbane, CA3$56.0M750
1989
4.6
Fort Lauderdale, FL11$3.2B9,000
1993
4.6
Raleigh, NC15$3.4B13,400
1991
4.7
Dublin, CA1-3,576
1987
4.8
Aliso Viejo, CA3$857.4M3,850
1993
4.9
Redwood City, CA12$1.6B5,249
1996
4.2
Sunnyvale, CA16$5.1B9,400
2000
4.8
Sunnyvale, CA10$6.0B9,700
1998
4.8
Palo Alto, CA29$13.4B31,000
1998
4.2
Clifton, NJ1$28.9M1,201
2011
4.5
Mountain View, CA2$84.0M35
1996
4.6
Seattle, WA9$2.8B6,550
1996
4.8
Burlington, MA3$65.2M3,600
2005
4.6
Redwood City, CA5$1.1B1,934

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D2iQ salaries vs competitors

Among D2iQ competitors, employees at VMware earn the most with an average yearly salary of $126,075.

Compare D2iQ salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
D2iQ
$131,936$63.43-
Collabnet
$108,951$52.38-
Citrix
$114,526$55.06-
Red Hat
$95,515$45.92-
Sybase
$97,149$46.71-
Quest Software
$67,808$32.60-

Compare D2iQ job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
D2iQ
$189,126$90.93
VMware
$199,498$95.91
F5
$195,335$93.91
Juniper Networks
$191,019$91.84
Sophos
$184,276$88.59
Box
$182,881$87.92
Collabnet
$179,312$86.21
Citrix
$176,928$85.06
Fortinet
$176,624$84.92
Redis Labs
$176,008$84.62
Informatica
$169,780$81.62
Quest Software
$155,962$74.98
Sybase
$150,601$72.40
Red Hat
$149,220$71.74
Comodo
$146,156$70.27

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D2iQ demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at D2iQ vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
Box61%39%
Red Hat62%38%
Citrix66%34%
Juniper Networks68%32%
F570%30%
D2iQ--
Male
Female
100%
75%
50%
25%
0%
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%

Compare race at D2iQ vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
58%20%11%8%3%
9.6
50%17%11%17%5%
9.8
60%13%6%16%5%
9.6
45%15%7%28%6%
9.8
57%12%13%13%5%
9.5
47%16%8%23%6%
9.7

D2iQ and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio
Aaron Levie
Box

Aaron Winsor Levie (born December 27, 1985) (pronounced) is an American entrepreneur. He is the co-founder and CEO of the enterprise cloud company Box.

Robert M. Calderoni
Citrix

François Locoh-Donou
F5

Mr. Locoh-Donou has nearly two decades of enterprise technology experience, building a wide range of product teams, and operations around the world. He is well known for his ability to envision where industries are going and inspire organizations to identify and execute on future growth opportunities - especially in the areas of cloud, software, analytics, and security. In April 2017, Mr. Locoh-Donou was hired as the President and Chief Executive Officer of F5 Networks, where he has refocused the company on Applications Services Software (including Security) for Multi-Cloud environments. He is also the only management member of the F5 Board of Directors. Prior to joining F5, Mr. Locoh-Donou held successive leadership positions at Ciena Corporation (from 2002 to March 2017), a network strategy and technology company, including Chief Operating Officer; Senior Vice President, Global Products Group; Vice President and General Manager, EMEA; Vice President International Sales; and Vice President and Marketing. Prior to joining Ciena, Mr. Locoh-Donou held research and development roles with Photonetics, a French opto-electronics company. Mr. Locoh-Donou is also the co-founder and Chairman of Cajou Espoir, a cashew-processing facility that employs several hundred people in rural Togo, 80 percent of whom are women.

Ken Xie
Fortinet

Ken Xie is an American billionaire businessman who founded Systems Integration Solutions (SIS), NetScreen, and Fortinet. He is CEO of Fortinet, a cybersecurity firm based in Silicon Valley. Xie was previously the CEO of NetScreen, which was acquired by Juniper Networks for $4 billion in 2004. He built the first ASIC-based firewall/VPN appliance in 1996.

Rami Rahim is Chief Executive Officer of Juniper Networks and a member of the company's Board of Directors. Rahim was appointed CEO in November 2014. Rahim began his Juniper career in early 1997, as employee No. 32, and worked as an engineer on Juniper's first breakthrough product, the M40 core router. Rahim has progressed through a series of technical and leadership roles at Juniper, applying his engineering acumen to the design and development of Juniper's industry-leading product portfolio. He most recently served as Executive Vice President and General Manager of the Juniper Development and Innovation (JDI) organization, overseeing the company's entire product and technology portfolio. His responsibilities included driving strategy, development and business growth for routing, switching, security, silicon technology, and the Junos operating system. Other leadership positions held over the years include: Executive Vice President and General Manager of Platform Systems Division for routing and switching, Senior Vice President of the Edge and Aggregation Business Unit (EABU), and Vice President and General Manager of EABU. Rahim earned a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from the University of Toronto and a Master of Science degree in electrical engineering from Stanford University. He completed an intensive six-week executive program at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business. Rahim holds 17 U.S. Patents in networking technologies and is a member of IEEE.

Paul J. Cormier
Red Hat

Since joining Red Hat in 2001, Cormier's leadership and vision have driven major strategy shifts and expansion of the company’s portfolio of products and services. Cormier is credited with pioneering the subscription model that transformed Red Hat from an open source disruptor to an enterprise technology mainstay, moving Red Hat Linux from a freely downloadable operating system to Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the industry’s leading enterprise Linux platform that today powers more than 90% of Fortune 500 organizations. Cormier has driven more than 25 acquisitions at Red Hat, moving the company well beyond its Linux roots and helped create a full, modern IT stack based on open source innovation that disrupted the IT industry. The availability of true enterprise-grade open source products across the technology stack and changing business models have made open source a de facto source of innovation in the software industry, resulting in faster progress than proprietary vendors could provide alone. For more than a decade, Cormier has championed a vision for open hybrid cloud, giving customers the flexibility to deliver any app, anywhere on any infrastructure from the edge and bare metal to multiple public clouds in a common, consistent manner. That vision helped establish Red Hat OpenShift, the industry’s most comprehensive enterprise Kubernetes platform, as a backbone of hybrid cloud deployments across industries. Cormier has also forged industry-changing partnerships, including a landmark partnership with Microsoft to bring broader choice to hybrid cloud deployments. He has been instrumental in Red Hat’s structural combination with IBM, focused on scaling and accelerating Red Hat while maintaining its independence and neutrality.

Raghu Raghuram
VMware

Amit Walia
Informatica

Senior executive with consistent record driving revenue growth and operational performance improvement. Unique blend of general management, cutting edge technology development, business development and leading global organizations.Specialties: Cloud/SaaS, Product Management, Managing technical teams, Business Development, New Venture Formulation, and leading large teams.

Patrick Nichols
Quest Software

Patrick Nichols is a St. Andrew's Endowment Committee at ST ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL SCHOOL and Chief Executive Officer at Quest Software and is based in Austin, Texas. He has worked as Chief Executive Officer at Corel and President:Winzip Computing at Corel. Patrick works or has worked as General Manager at Trilogy. He attended Cornell between 1993 and 1997.

Kristof Hagerman
Sophos

Kris Hagerman joined Sophos in 2012 as CEO. He is responsible for all aspects of Sophos’ strategic direction and business operations. Prior to Sophos, Kris was CEO of Corel Corporation. Previously, Kris served as group president, data center management at Symantec, where he led a business of more than $1.5 billion that represented nearly 30 percent of Symantec’s global revenue. Prior to Symantec, Kris was executive vice president and GM, storage and server management at Veritas Software where during his tenure, the company grew from $1.0 billion in revenue to more than $2.0 billion, prior to its acquisition by Symantec. Earlier in his career, Kris was founder and CEO of BigBook, an online yellow pages service and founder and CEO of Affinia, an online contextual advertising network. Kris also held positions at Silicon Graphics and McKinsey & Company.

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