Close Menu
  • Home
  • Celebrity Gossip
  • Entertainment News
  • Featured
  • Photo News
  • Advertise with Us
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube WhatsApp
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube WhatsApp TikTok
BigEye.UG
Subscribe
  • HOME
  • CELEBRITY GOSSIP
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • PHOTO NEWS
  • VIDEO NEWS
  • MONEY
    • Money
    • Features
BigEye.UG
Home»Tech and Gadgets»IBM Faces a Crisis in the Cloud
Tech and Gadgets

IBM Faces a Crisis in the Cloud

BigEyeUg3By BigEyeUg3November 16, 2013
Share
Facebook Twitter Telegram WhatsApp

Ibm1IBM is having an identity crisis, and it sure is something to watch.

You may have heard about Big Blue’s recent ad campaign that takes a dig at Amazon.com. In its marketing material, IBM claims to power 270,000 more websites than Amazon, via its cloud computing service. It’s a flimsy jab at Amazon because IBM has been a major laggard in the cloud rental market, having bought its way into the business in July with its acquisition of SoftLayer Technologies.

Far from being a cloud pioneer, IBM has spent most of the past few years downplaying services such as Amazon’s as insecure, low-margin businesses of little interest to a serious computing company. “You can’t just take a credit card and swipe it and be on our cloud,” IBM executive Ric Telford told Businessweek in early 2011. The company’s pitch to customers was that it knew them intimately and its cloud system was safer. But thousands of startups, including Dropbox and Netflix, were more than happy to swipe their credit cards and get going on Amazon.

IBM’s cloud strategy has been complicated by questions about its accounting. The company disclosed in July that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating IBM’s cloud-revenue figures. More recently, IBM lost out to Amazon — twice — in a bid for a CIA cloud contract. With the CIA using Amazon, IBM’s security pitch is a much tougher sell. Its $2 billion purchase of SoftLayer, and its use of SoftLayer’s cloud tech instead of its own, appears to strike a final blow to IBM’s old cloud strategy.

IBM’s reluctance to enter the credit card-swiping end of the cloud business was in keeping with its shift away from low-margin disk drives, PCs, and networking geared toward higher-profit software and services. The company wanted to sell cloud services to large corporate users willing to pay a premium for some hand-holding, not retreat into by-the-hour computer rentals. Unfortunately for IBM, the market and equipment have matured so much that fewer and fewer customers need much hand-holding these days. Even the most arcane data-center equipment is getting easier and easier to use.

Let’s be clear: There’s plenty of work left for an IBM to do. The healthcare.gov debacle shows just how awful some technology projects can still get. But IBM’s revenue will keep falling with this strategy in place, as other companies turn to it less and less.

In its most recent quarter, IBM’s hardware sales fell 17%, its services sales dropped 4% and its total revenue fell 4% to $23.7 billion. Sales in what IBM defines as “growth markets” fell 9%. The company didn’t have the courage to break out sales in nongrowth markets.

The acquisition of SoftLayer shows that IBM knows it needs to engage in some hand-to-hand industry combat if it wants to remain relevant. Having sold its disk drive business to Asia, IBM is now renting disk drives by the hour for pennies. If you want to be a technology company in 2013, that’s the sort of thing you must do.

Source: Mashable

“[katogoaward]”

Related

Share. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Email
Previous ArticleBBM update for Android, iOS brings new features
Next Article MTN Uganda adds the most affordable insurance to Mobile Money services in partnership with AON and Jubilee Insurance

Related Articles

TECNO unveils thinnest tri-fold smartphone – the PHANTOM Ultimate G Fold

TECNO Unveils SPARK 40 Series: Ultra-Slim, Ultra-Strong Built for the Long Run

UN Women Launches Coding Hub in Jinja to Empower Uganda’s Next Generation of Female Tech Leaders

TECNO CAMON 40 Series now available in Uganda

TECNO Phantom V Fold2 5G and Phantom V Flip2 5G honored for their product design excellence at German Design Awards

IUEA Hosts Youth Fest 2024: Young People Leading the Charge in Technology, Energy, and Global Business

Latest News

Political Interference in Emin Pasha Loan Dispute Threatens Uganda’s Credit Stability

July 31, 2025

Promoter Abtex Labels Eddy Kenzo as the Most Selfish Artist in the Industry

July 31, 2025

A Fairytale at Dromoland Castle: Lubwama Eric Michael and Nantongo Irene Catherine’s Wedding of the Year

July 31, 2025

Ssegirinya’s Widow Fatuma Nanfuka Cries Out for Help Amid Kidney Illness

July 31, 2025

Aaronx Rules Out Collaboration with Gloria Bugie, Cites Leaked Video Scandal — Says His Brand Is Meant for “Classic” Audiences

July 31, 2025
Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
BigEye.UG
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube WhatsApp TikTok
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
© 2025 BigEye.UG | All Rights Reserved

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.