IBM blamed weak hardware sales for the poor start to its
year. The company turned in the lowest first quarter
revenue for five years. Sales
were US$22.5
billion. Significantly hardware sales fell 23 percent
to US$2.4 billion. IBM has struggled with hardware as it
attempts to move into more lucrative markets such as cloud
computing and big data. The company's
The news is a worry for the wider technology industry. IBM is an industry barometer, where it goes, others follow.
Most of the enterprising computing old guard trailing in IBM's wake, including Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, Cisco and EMC face equally difficult transitions away from depending on now-commoditised hardware towards cloud and similar services.
Enterprise computing spending continues to spiral down as companies shift more and more workloads to software-as-a-service and other cloud-based technologies as they wind-down in-house IT. When they make the shift, many of the larger companies choose newer partner companies.
There's also a move away from big projects towards smaller upgrades showing a quicker return on investment.
During the first quarter IBM sold its low-end
server business to Lenovo and talked openly of selling its
software defined network operation, although that didn't
happen. It also talked of investing US$1.2 billion in cloud
computing.