IBM is a company in massive transition. They are managing a seismic shift in from being the leader in the metal inside the datacenter to becoming a cloud based datacenter provider. The transformation has been significant with swathes of their traditional hardware business sold off to Lenovo and at the same time transforming their business behind SoftLayer or IBM Cloud.
In the last 18 months we have also seen IBM getting vocal about Watson’s machine learning platform that is joined at the hip with the Big Data revolution. The sheer investment in Watson (which we suspect will take some time to recoup) alone is evidence that IBM have been taking a long term view on the Big Data Revolution.
Somewhat hidden in the big headlines, is how IBM have been building skills experience and IP in Big Data for the best part of a decade. Back in 2011, they announced what at the time were far sighted and very ambitious plans to start educating and training people in Data Science in a project which eventually became known as the Big Data University.
The really interesting part to me about their strategy has been the acquisition trail. Just since 2010 alone, IBM has acquired 16 Big Data or Analytics related companies, most recently spending $2.6 billion to acquire Truven Health Analytics to incorporate into their Watson platform.
Here is a full list of all IBM’s Big Data and Analytics Acquisitions since 2010
February 18, 2016 | Truven Health Analytics | cloud-based healthcare data, analytics and insights |
January 15, 2016 |
Iris Analytics |
Real time transaction fraud detection |
November 6, 2015 |
Cleversafe |
Object-based storage software |
October 28, 2015 | The Weather Company | Weather data sources and analytics. |
April 13, 2015 | Explorys | Healthcare analytics |
March 4, 2015 |
AlchemyAPI | Natural language processing, big data |
December 19, 2013 | Aspera Inc | Data Transfer Technology |
October 1, 2013 | The Now Factory | Mobile Networks Big Data Analytics |
December 19, 2012 | StoredIQ | Big Data Analysis |
September 24, 2012 |
Butterfly Software Ltd. | Data Analysis and Migration Software |
May 2, 2012 |
Tealeaf Technology |
Customer Experience Analytics Software |
December 15, 2011 | Emptoris | Supply Chain Analytics |
December 8, 2011 | DemandTec | Cloud-based Retail Analytics |
August 31, 2011 |
i2 Limited |
Intelligence Analytics |
September 20, 2010 | Netezza | Data warehousing and analytics |
June 15, 2010 | Coremetrics | Web Analytics |
What do we glean from this? Clearly IBM have had a consistent strategy to build their Big Data and Analytics capability.
However more than that, a company like IBM is often masked by its old and traditional image.
We get excited by the creative individuals in the vibrant startup scene, and can be fooled into thinking that all the creativity is coming from the startup culture, not old dinosaurs like IBM. The reality is that IBM has bought into this creativity through these acquisitions. Bigger than the technology and the IP, what they have inherited are the individuals who are NOT IBMers but innovators in the Big Data space who are now under the IBM umbrella.
Peeling back the layers of the onion can be a difficult thing to do especially in a company of the size of IBM. Even employees within IBM struggle to understand the depth and breadth of skills and technology within their own organization.
Working with IBM is not for everyone that’s for sure, but as you short list companies that may be able to help you on your own Big Data strategy – tapping into the pedigree that IBM has built has to be considered.
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