The COVID-19 pandemic has been a “turning point” for many companies, as the disruption and uncertainty caused by the crisis has accelerated the digital transformation that for many was already underway.
This was the message from IBM CEO Arvind Krishna in his keynote presentation that kicked off the company’s Think Digital conference earlier this week.
“There is no question that this pandemic is a powerful force of disruption and an unprecedented tragedy,” Krishna said. “But it is also a critical turning point. It’s an opportunity to develop new solutions, new ways of working and new partnerships that will benefit your company and your customers, not just today, but for years to come.”
Krishna spoke in an online presentation at Think. The annual IBM conference had originally been scheduled as an in-person event in San Francisco, but in response to the pandemic, this year it was a two-day virtual conference, with more than 90,000 registrants.
The COVID-19 crisis has exposed many enterprises’ vulnerabilities, Krishna said. In response, companies are fast adopting artificial intelligence (AI) and hybrid cloud-based IT architectures. That is both enabling them to build agility and resiliency into their networks now, and preparing them to embrace emerging technologies like 5G and edge computing, he said.
“I’m predicting today that every company will become an AI company—not because they can, but because they must,” Krishna said in his inaugural keynote address as IBM’s CEO.
For enterprises, Krishna explained, digital transformation means putting AI at the centre of workflows, and using the insights generated from that process to constantly improve products and services. This transformation is powered by a hybrid cloud architecture using open source software that makes companies more secure, and enables them to quickly adapt to shifting customer demands and changing market conditions.
Krishna cited the giant health insurer AnthemInc, as a company successfully making the transition.
He pointed out that the hybrid cloud model has distinct advantages over other IT architecture—advantages he called the hybrid cloud “imperative.”
Unlike existing IT networks, he said, hybrid cloud adapts to the infrastructure that enterprises already have, while also freeing them from being locked into any one vendor’s offerings. Hybrid architectures, which can involve a combination of public and private clouds and on-premises networks, have the flexibility to process workloads closest to where the data is generated—a necessity in high-tech factories—and also make it easier to comply with different regional regulations on data use, Krishna said.
He also unveiled a number of new IBM offerings designed to help companies accelerate their digital transformations.
The first—”AI for IT”—gives CIOs the ability to automate IT infrastructures, which immediately reduces cost and makes the network more resilient, he said. It uses Watson AIOps to diagnose and respond to IT anomalies in real time.