{"id":4153,"date":"2020-01-31T10:52:00","date_gmt":"2020-01-31T10:52:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/arvind_krishna_ibm_ceo_013120\/"},"modified":"2021-12-03T09:40:40","modified_gmt":"2021-12-03T09:40:40","slug":"arvind_krishna_ibm_ceo_013120","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/arvind_krishna_ibm_ceo_013120\/","title":{"rendered":"IBM changes leadership just in time to survive in today\u2019s punishing IT services market"},"content":{"rendered":"
Gini Rometty, the queen of Big Blue is stepping down after a turbulent few years at the helm, where her “imminent” retirement has been one of the industry’s most discussed topics since the failure of Watson to reach its early potential. However, the rapid shift in direction towards hybrid cloud – with the Red Hat acquisition<\/a> just over a year ago – has rapidly paved a new direction for Big Blue and, perhaps, leaves Gini with a lasting legacy that won’t be all about her supercomputer that found fame on Jeopardy!<\/p>\n The appointment of Arvind Krishna, the architect of IBM \/ Red Hat, signified its full-throttle scramble to take the Global 2000 into the hybrid cloud<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n And in here place steps up the head of the firm’s cloud business, with Jim Whitehurst, the CEO of Red Hat, moving in as president, but more significantly, Arvind Krishna, IBM’s architect behind the deal, being voted in as the new CEO. With Krishna being the brain behind the Red Hat double-down, he knows how to take the calculated risks which IBM must take if it’s going to turn the aircraft carrier around. Moreover, he can move fast, with the Red Hat play being barely more than a year old and the emerging IBM cloud business quickly becoming the most coherent and unified of all its business units that HFS has encountered.<\/p>\n This speed and clarity of direction speak to Krishna’s ability to pull what was a rapidly evolving team together with a clear mission and vision. Again, if he can replicate this at scale across IBM, it might be able to solve the firm’s biggest challenge – rationalising a sprawling estate that has been left to grow wild for almost a decade.<\/p>\n