Following from my post last week, Bloomberg had an interesting panel yesterday that echoed a lot of Friday's entry:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2015-10-27/ibm-looks-to-cloud-strategy-for-old-tech-reinvention
Odds are against some Jr. producer somewhere reading my blog, so it's much more interesting to see smarter people than I drawing nearly the same conclusions from last week's news.
"Go talk to any CTO or CIO under the age of 35...and their consideration for IBM is they're not even sure it exists."
Along these lines, my post from Friday: http://storyboardin.blogspot.com/2015/10/amazons-gasp-profits-and-spiral-of-ibm.html
***out***
Equal parts insight, rant, and personal (mis)adventure. Schooled in politics, communicator by day, MBA handy, husband/dad 24-7.
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
Friday, October 23, 2015
Amazon’s “gasp” profits and the spiral of IBM. Correlation??? High…
Most of you know that I work at Lenovo and in the communications
side of things, so watching the tech world is kind of what I do. And this week
has been interesting, perhaps even more so than last week’s historical
announcement (Dell/EMC).
Let’s take a look:
- IBM announced earnings this week and definitely missed the marks (kind of already negative marks) Wall St. was expecting. Their stock gets hammered.
- Amazon announced earnings this week, and they reported a profit (I believe for the second quarter in a row…which is unusual for a company that has been notorious for no profits as they absolutely pour money into growth). Most noticeable is that their Web Services (let’s call it “cloud stuff”) unit is booming, even while they are pouring money into the group.
As you can guess, IBM is a pretty important client of
Lenovo’s, so tracking troubles at the company isn’t what I’d call fun. And the
growth of Amazon’s Web Services? Well, let’s assume at the end of the day Lenovo
is interested in basically selling hardware to every segment of the world’s 7b people and
remove my company from the mix.
As a guy in his mid-thirties and someone who works for a
technology giant, it’s really interesting to see two different worlds. One
world is where a lot of my friends are in tech start ups, steering their own
companies, at boutique agencies, etc. The other one is SAP needs XXX hundred
thousand units of ______. The gap here is HUGE and growing – and I’m sure I don’t
need to tell you who is using what.
Fast forward 10-15 years from now and it’ll be really
interesting to see if Cisco, EMC (now Dell), and even IBM are competing in this
arena. To me Amazon, Facebook, Google, and yes even Twitter are and will be the new tech
giants. Sure 80 years from now we’ll all celebrate 100 years of Amazon just
like we recently did with IBM, but someone newer (b/c newer is better right?) will
be pushing them out of their space.
WIRED has a really good read on this, and I agree with
their outlook 100%. If you have a few minutes, give it a whirl: Dell.
EMC. HP. Cisco. These Tech Giants Are the Walking Dead
Now toss in Dell’s buy of server giant EMC (and
subsequently their IaaS VMware) and you understand the move. But can a huge…sorry…GIANT,
tech conglomerate really be quicker than Facebook engineers locked in a room
with pizza and Mt. Dew?
We’ll see.
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