UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 8-K

 

CURRENT REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15 (d)
OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

Date of Report:  May 20, 2005

(Date of earliest event reported)

 

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

New York

 

1-2360

 

13-0871985

(State of Incorporation)

 

(Commission File Number)

 

(IRS employer Identification No.)

 

 

 

 

 

ARMONK, NEW YORK

 

10504

(Address of principal executive offices)

 

(Zip Code)

 

914-499-1900

(Registrant’s telephone number)

 

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:

 

o  Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)

 

o  Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)

 

o  Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

 

o  Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

 

 



 

Item 7.01 (Regulation FD Disclosure)

 

Attachment I contains presentation materials for IBM’s May 20, 2005 Investors’ Briefing by IBM’s Chairman and CEO and other senior IBM executives.  This information is hereby furnished.

 

IBM’s web site (www.ibm.com) contains a significant amount of information about IBM, including financial and other information for investors (www.ibm.com/investor/).  IBM encourages investors to visit its various web sites from time to time, as information is updated and new information is posted.

 

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SIGNATURE

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, hereunto duly authorized.

 

 

Date:  May 20, 2005

 

 

 

By:  

/s/

Andrew Bonzani

 

 

 

 

(Andrew Bonzani)

 

 

 

Assistant Secretary &

 

 

Associate General Counsel

 

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ATTACHMENT I

 

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Exhibit 99.1

 

 

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Good morning.  I’d like to welcome you to this briefing for IBM investors.

 

I’m joined today by Mark Loughridge, our CFO, and the senior leaders of our major business units.  Together, we’ll provide a perspective on IBM’s strategy and operations.

 

This is an important time for the industry and for IBM.  It’s also a potentially confusing time for investors.  It’s easy to intermix near-term issues with longer-term shifts, cyclical effects with more fundamental change.

 

That’s why we changed the agenda for today’s meeting.  In previous years, you will recall that we used to separate these two sets of issues.  We would give you a strategic update at the spring meeting, and focus on operational issues in the fall.

 

This year, we have combined the two.  I will cover our long-term, strategic business model with you.  Then the leaders of our business units will cover the  executional actions we are taking to improve our performance and address opportunities going forward.

 

So before I turn it over to my colleagues, I’d like to provide some context.  I think it would be helpful in understanding what we’ve been doing at IBM and why.

 

All of the major moves we’ve made at IBM over the past three or four years have been based on a small number of strategic choices ...

 

                                          choices that were made based on our understanding of where technology, client requirements, and global business were headed ...

 

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                                          choices designed to maintain IBM’s leadership of a rapidly changing industry ...

                                          and to continue to generate consistent, high returns on invested capital for our owners.

 

Let me briefly review and comment on the major strategic choices.  There are three.

 

First, we decided that IBM would lead the IT industry shift to the era of on demand business.

 

As we have discussed with you before, on demand business is our way of describing a fundamental industry shift in computing architecture and how it is applied to business.  Others have referred to this as the “organic enterprise” or “adaptive enterprise.”

 

Whatever name you choose, it represents a shift in enterprise client buying behavior toward integrated solutions that draw on point products, and a shift toward providing quantifiable business value, not just technology features and functions.  These shifts are well underway.

 

As you know, over many years the IT industry has progressively automated distinct operations and processes within companies — the back office, the factory floor, the desktop, the supply chain.  Now, technology can enable — and our clients’ business demands require — a more integrated, end-to-end approach.

 

At the business process level, this means breaking down the silos that segregate one business operation from another, and creating common, optimized, and integrated processes that operate horizontally, across the enterprise.

 

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This may sound simplistic, but implementing this kind of operating model requires extensive business transformation.  And that, in turn, requires process-specific and industry-specific expertise.

 

The goal:  Fusing advanced technology with business design to create an integrated, more flexible and responsive enterprise.

 

This is a change in how the IT industry engages with enterprise customers and in how it applies technology.  This shift is reflected in market opportunity, which Mark Loughridge will show you in more detail.

 

The bottom line is that these business value opportunities are growing faster than traditional point products, and they give us a much stronger relationship with enterprises.

 

You know what we have done in recent years to strengthen our capability in business process and industry expertise — not just consulting skills, but also software and delivery capability specific to business processes and industry requirements.

 

Enabling these new business designs requires a different computing infrastructure.

 

                                          Instead of islands of computing distributed throughout the enterprise, it is more integrated.

                                          Instead of proprietary architectures, which impede integration and interoperability, it is based on open standards.

                                          And it exploits powerful new technologies like self-management and virtualization, which lower the cost of computing, while improving resiliency and security.

 

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We have made significant investments in the strategic technologies to build out this new computing infrastructure.

 

It is well known that IBM is committed to open standards.  This was recently confirmed when we announced our intent to acquire Gluecode, an open-source software company.

 

We have also substantially strengthened our middleware business, and — after years of R&D — brought to market game-changing technologies.

 

One example is the more than $1 billion we have invested in our Power 4 and 5 architectures.  This has enabled our servers to gain 10 points of share over the last four and a half years.

 

It has also put IBM at the core of future video game consoles, where Power is the technology of choice for the top three players in this market.

 

Steve Mills and Bill Zeitler will expand upon what we’ve done to strengthen our software and hardware businesses today.

 

At our session with investors last year, I described a substantial growth opportunity stemming from the shift to on demand business.

 

We call it business performance transformation services, or BPTS.  It involves the application of technology to transform a client’s business processes and, in some cases, operate those processes for them.

 

Although BPTS draws on the full breadth of IBM’s capabilities in services, software and systems, we focus on four specific parts of the portfolio when we report our BPTS revenues — strategy and change consulting, business performance management software,

 

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engineering and technology services, and business transformation outsourcing.

 

This portfolio already represents a $3 billion business for us.  It grew 45% last year, and another 40% in the first quarter.

 

In BPTS, we work with clients in a variety of ways.

 

                                          We provide clients the counsel and technologies they need to transform their operations themselves.

                                          Our work with the German retailer Metro Group is a good example of this.

                                          IBM’s strategy consultants redesigned the supply chain and inventory management system for Metro’s “future store,” a prototype supermarket that integrates IBM’s business performance management software with RFID and wireless technologies.

 

                                          Other clients want to collaborate with us.

                                          Yesterday, we signed a strategic agreement with Nortel to establish a joint development center in Research Triangle Park, where IBM will collaborate in the research, design and development of Nortel’s “Next Generation Networks” products and services.

                                          An initial project will be a new class of blade servers for telecommunications networks.  This project will combine IBM’s server technology and software with Nortel’s communications expertise.

 

                                          In some cases, we transform and actually manage the operations for the client.

                                          With Nextel, we worked with the client as it transformed its customer care processes, and we now manage that operation for them.  Over the course of this engagement, Nextel’s customer satisfaction ratings

 

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have improved, customer churn has declined, and we are on target to achieve $1 billion in cost savings for Nextel over eight years.

                                          With BP, where we recently extended our engagement, we transformed and manage their finance and accounting operations.  We have accelerated BP’s ability to integrate new acquisitions and reduced F&A costs by a third.

                                          And we are among a group of partners managing the networks and IT infrastructure for Bharti Tele-Ventures, the largest private-sector telecommunications provider in India.

 

As I hope you can see from these examples, we will work with clients in whatever way they want to work with us — assist them, collaborate with them, or manage it for them.

 

Virtually every core process or operation has the potential for this kind of transformation — from supply chain management and customer care, to finance and administration, human resources management and, of course, information technology.

 

So this first strategic choice — to lead the era of on demand business — draws upon and leverages the entire IBM portfolio — services, software, hardware, technology and research.

 

The emphasis is on pulling together the right combinations of our technologies and services into business solutions for clients, which is increasingly how they want to buy and apply IT.

 

The second strategic choice was our decision to be the leader in high-value, innovation-based technologies and services.

 

Again, this is familiar to you.  For several years I’ve talked about the bifurcation of the industry — between companies that create

 

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and monetize intellectual capital in all its forms, and those that efficiently market and distribute other people’s innovations.

 

The cycle of innovation and commoditization that drives this bifurcation has never been faster or, I would say, more unforgiving than it is today.

 

IBM, as you know, has chosen to lead in the high-value, innovation space.  And the changes in our business mix over the last several years reflect this strategic choice.

 

Through acquisitions and organic investments, we have strengthened our capabilities in software, high-value services and advanced technology.  Since 2002, and through the first quarter of this year, we have acquired 38 companies, primarily in these spaces.

 

At the same time, we have exited low-margin businesses whose differentiating value was declining — hard disk drives, displays, memory chips and, most recently, PCs, through our alliance with Lenovo.

 

But it’s important to understand that, while highly visible, acquisitions and divestitures represent only one way that we continuously re-invent the company to stay in the high-value spaces.

 

The primary way we do this is by capitalizing on innovation to constantly move our hardware, software, services and core technology businesses into high growth and more profitable segments.

 

Our efforts in BPTS and integrating middleware to high-performance servers and the expansion of our Power architecture into the home market — are all examples of this.

 

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It requires constant reinvention of the base business, investments in emerging business opportunities and extending our core franchises into adjacent spaces.

 

Our engineering and technology services business, which is only two and a half years old, is an example of how we’ve leveraged an important franchise — in this case, our core technologies and engineering tools and expertise — into wholly new spaces.

 

We are working with companies in aerospace, consumer electronics, defense and telecommunications to help them create advanced products.  In many cases, they are using our technologies, such as Power, and open standard software like Linux, which provide compelling economic and speed of deployment advantages to these companies.

 

Engineering & Technology Services demonstrates how we monetize our R&D in ways that extend far beyond patent licensing.

 

I think you’d agree that companies like Honeywell, Lockheed Martin, Cisco and Sony would not simply outsource elements of their engineering and development operations to the lowest bidder.  These are high-value engagements that draw on our recognized innovation capabilities.

 

We have essentially created a new services business around a set of technology assets.  And it is allowing us to move into important adjacent spaces.  Bill Zeitler will build on this.

 

So, we’ve decided that IBM will lead in identifying, creating and capturing the profit zones of our industry, and that we would differentiate IBM by our ability to give clients value and capability they cannot get from others.

 

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This has compelled us to make many changes in our businesses.  Some of those changes are already paying off; others are underway.

 

And yes, this strategic shift can lead to short-term performance issues.  But this is what you do if you want to stay ahead of commoditization, and it’s what is required to deliver sustainable, high returns on invested capital for our owners.

 

As Mark will discuss with you in a moment, shifts that we have made in the model can have significant impact on our business profile.  As we’ve pointed out to you before, eliminating the lower-margin PC business improves our profitability by one point.

 

At the same time, we are increasing the investments required for business value and solutions selling.

 

The third strategic choice we have made is to globally integrate the company.

 

This may sound surprising, given that IBM has been an international company since its founding.  There are two aspects to this.

 

First, we are extending our reach into local markets around the world, particularly in high-growth economies such as China, India, Brazil and Russia.  Last year, our business in these four countries grew more than 25%.

 

We are fueling our investments in these high-growth markets by reallocating resources from slower-growing, maturing markets.  Over the past two years, we have increased our investment in these high-growth, developing markets by 40%, and expanded our work force by 30%.

 

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This is a phenomenon that goes beyond cyclical economics.

 

We’re all aware that populations in western Europe and Japan are shrinking and also aging.  Last week I heard that in 15 years, Italy will have just one worker supporting every retiree.  In Germany and France, the ratio will be fewer than three workers for every retiree by the year 2025.

 

This will radically change the economics of these markets, with investments increasingly going to support the aging populations.

 

Also, consider that over the next five years, emerging parts of Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America will grow to become more than one-fifth of the global GDP.  This represents an economic gain of $2.5 trillion.  These regions will account for 35% of global GDP growth in this period.

 

IBM’s share position in these markets is strong, and we are making the investments to strengthen it.  We are number one in Brazil and China, and number two in India and eastern Europe.

 

The implications of this are clear — IBM is growing as fast or faster than the markets in these emerging nations, and we are reprioritizing our investments to continue to grow with them.

 

You see this in the restructuring of our operations in Europe, which we announced earlier this month.

 

This is freeing up resources that we can reinvest in higher-growth markets.  It will also enable us to reduce overhead, eliminate layers of hierarchy, and deploy more resources out in the field, where they can execute closer to our clients.

 

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But we are not lowering the center of gravity in Europe only to build it up again in places like China and India.  Rather, we are moving to a new model, which is the second aspect of globally integrating IBM.  Let me explain what I mean.

 

During the first half of the 20th century, IBM was the prototypical international enterprise.  We set up sales offices overseas and exported our products to customers around the world.  We did some customizing for local markets, but by and large our intellectual capital was created and managed in the U.S.

 

In the second half of the century — when Germany, France, the UK, Italy and Japan were in recovery — a new strategy emerged.  To capitalize on the human resources available in those countries, and to make a stronger contribution to rebuilding their economies, we built largely self-contained and self-sufficient IBMs in each national market.

 

IBM Japan, IBM U.K., IBM Germany — each had its own headquarters, its own support operations and, in many cases, its own labs and plants.  The result: a multinational IBM.

 

Today, we are evolving to a new model — the globally integrated company.  It’s made possible by the emergence of skills in new parts of the world, high-growth markets in developing nations, the WTO and free trade agreements, and the rise of a global networked infrastructure.

 

We no longer have to replicate IBM from floor to ceiling in every country.  We are optimizing key operations in the right places in the world — eliminating the redundancies and excess overhead — and integrating those operations horizontally and globally.

 

We’ve been working toward this for several years.

 

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                                          We used to process purchase orders in 300 places around the world.  Today, it’s three — Shanghai, Bangalore and Budapest.

                                          In customer support, we’ve moved certain functions closest to the client, and others we’ve consolidated into shared service centers in Malaysia, Slovakia, Spain and Brazil.

 

These moves are not just about lower labor cost.  They’re about doing the right tasks, with the right skills, in the right places.

 

                                          We’ve centralized strategic sourcing for our procurement BTO practice in Greenock, Scotland ...

                                          Consolidated services operations for financial management and accounting in, among other places, Tulsa, Oklahoma ...

                                          And created a center of excellence for the shipping industry in Scandinavia and New York City.

                                          Our primary software development centers are in Toronto, San Jose, Texas and England.

                                          Our research labs are in New York, Austin, Silicon Valley, Switzerland, Israel, Japan, China and India.

 

Why?  Because that’s where the right skills and the right business conditions exist.

 

Creating a globally integrated IBM — an “on demand IBM” — will result in a flatter operating model with more resources working with clients in the field.

 

This will drive productivity, as Bob Moffat will discuss.  And importantly, it will improve our ability to execute at the point of contact with the client, which Doug Elix will describe for you.

 

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As we execute each of these strategies — leading the industry shift we describe as on demand business; reinventing our portfolio to be the innovation, high-value leader, and creating a globally integrated company — there will be bumps along the way.

 

Some will be due to exogenous factors — recessions, market corrections and the like — and some to execution missteps.

 

We hit a bump in the first quarter.  We understand the issues and have taken corrective action.  The issues mostly involve transitions of one type or another.

 

In services, for instance, our revenue mix is shifting away from the large, long-term engagements toward smaller, shorter-term contracts.  In just the last two years, short-term contracts as a share of total signings have grown from 38% to 47%.

 

John Joyce will tell you about the actions he has taken to address this shift, including sales incentives and the deployment of sales resources to go after more of this opportunity.

 

Another transition reflects the changing interplay of customized and standardized capabilities.  Traditionally in our services business, standardized capabilities referred to infrastructure assets — data centers, parts inventories, tools and the like.

 

Through increased automation techniques, we are able to manage these types of assets with fewer people.  As a result, a greater share of our people are now focused on strategic consulting and business transformation.

 

Many of our top minds in IBM Research are collaborating with business consulting teams through our On Demand Innovation Services practice and the Center for Business Optimization, the

 

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unit that deploys all of the deep, mathematical and analytic capability of IBM to solve some of our clients’ hardest problems.

 

Of course, not every client needs a high-end, custom-built solution.  So we are translating more of our intellectual capital into replicable, software-based designs that are scalable to multiple clients, faster to deploy, and deliver faster time to value for the client.

 

For example, we have documented our methodology and standardized many of the processes and technologies involved in building wireless broadband infrastructures.  These kinds of services packages are helping us keep ahead of the explosive growth in demand for such technologies as WiFi and RFID.

 

We are also expanding our capabilities to deliver standardized processes and applications as a service to our clients.

 

                                          Our acquisition of Corio, which we completed in March, gives us a global platform to deliver hosted applications like SAP, Oracle and Siebel to both our SMB and enterprise clients.

                                          We are integrating IBM’s custom hosted capabilities into Corio’s platform for faster deployment of these services.  We can also use this platform to provide related capabilities, such as application deployment and automated application management.

 

Each of these examples represents a shift from custom services to more cost-efficient, scalable offerings.

 

This shift, as well as the steps we have taken to drive down cost in our strategic outsourcing business, will help us to improve our services margins and penetrate new market opportunities.

 

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The other transitions you will hear about today involve our other two units — systems and software.

 

In systems, Bill will talk about transitions in some key products — specifically in our server and storage lines, where late availability of our some new offerings dampened our first-quarter performance.  But we’ll now have the benefit of a full quarter of availability of these products.

 

These kinds of transitions are not unusual, and the effects are often short-lived.  As you may remember, the Regatta and the T-Rex products also went through short, somewhat rocky transition periods before ultimately delivering significant growth.

 

After Bill, Steve Mills will describe to you the progress we’ve made to re-mix our software portfolio to capture the high-growth middleware opportunity.

 

During the course of the day you will hear — in much greater detail — about all of the issues I just laid out for you.

 

As I said at the beginning, we are talking about two sets of issues here.

 

The first are the long-term, strategic actions we are taking to capitalize on the shifts we see in client demand, technology and global economics.  These areas are the fastest-growing segments in the IT industry.

 

The second set of issues involves the actions we are taking to improve business performance in the near term.  We know what the executional issues are.  We are managing through them.  And we are confident that they will get IBM back on track.

 

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But I think it’s more important to keep the overall game plan in mind.

 

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[LOGO]

 

Agenda

 

9:00 AM

 

Strategy Overview

 

Sam Palmisano

9:20

 

Business Model

 

Mark Loughridge

9:50

 

Global Services

 

John Joyce

10:20

 

Systems and Technology

 

Bill Zeitler

 

 

 

 

 

10:40

 

Break

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11:00

 

Software

 

Steve Mills

11:20

 

Global Integration

 

Bob Moffat

11:40

 

Sales and Distribution

 

Doug Elix

12:00 PM

 

Q&A

 

All

 

 

 

 

 

Lunch / Breakouts

 



 

Certain comments made in this presentation may be characterized as forward looking under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

 

Those statements involve a number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially.

 

Additional information concerning these factors is contained in the Company’s filing with the SEC.  Copies are available from the SEC, from the IBM web site, or from IBM Investor Relations.

 

See IBM’s Form 8-K dated May 20, 2005 for reconciliation and other information in connection with certain non-GAAP financial measures in this presentation.

 



 

Strategy Overview

 

Sam Palmisano

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

 



 

 

Good morning.  I’d like to welcome you to this briefing for IBM investors.

 

I’m joined today by Mark Loughridge, our CFO, and the senior leaders of our major business units.  Together, we’ll provide a perspective on IBM’s strategy and operations.

 

This is an important time for the industry and for IBM.  It’s also a potentially confusing time for investors.  It’s easy to intermix near-term issues with longer-term shifts, cyclical effects with more fundamental change.

 

That’s why we changed the agenda for today’s meeting.  In previous years, you will recall that we used to separate these two sets of issues.  We would give you a strategic update at the spring meeting, and focus on operational issues in the fall.

 

This year, we have combined the two.  I will cover our long-term, strategic business model with you.  Then the leaders of our business units will cover the  executional actions we are taking to improve our performance and address opportunities going forward.

 

So before I turn it over to my colleagues, I’d like to provide some context.  I think it would be helpful in understanding what we’ve been doing at IBM and why.

 

All of the major moves we’ve made at IBM over the past three or four years have been based on a small number of strategic choices ...

 

                                          choices that were made based on our understanding of where technology, client requirements, and global business were headed ...

 

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                                          choices designed to maintain IBM’s leadership of a rapidly changing industry ...

                                          and to continue to generate consistent, high returns on invested capital for our owners.

 

Let me briefly review and comment on the major strategic choices.  There are three.

 

First, we decided that IBM would lead the IT industry shift to the era of on demand business.

 

As we have discussed with you before, on demand business is our way of describing a fundamental industry shift in computing architecture and how it is applied to business.  Others have referred to this as the “organic enterprise” or “adaptive enterprise.”

 

Whatever name you choose, it represents a shift in enterprise client buying behavior toward integrated solutions that draw on point products, and a shift toward providing quantifiable business value, not just technology features and functions.  These shifts are well underway.

 

As you know, over many years the IT industry has progressively automated distinct operations and processes within companies — the back office, the factory floor, the desktop, the supply chain.  Now, technology can enable — and our clients’ business demands require — a more integrated, end-to-end approach.

 

At the business process level, this means breaking down the silos that segregate one business operation from another, and creating common, optimized, and integrated processes that operate horizontally, across the enterprise.

 

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This may sound simplistic, but implementing this kind of operating model requires extensive business transformation.  And that, in turn, requires process-specific and industry-specific expertise.

 

The goal:  Fusing advanced technology with business design to create an integrated, more flexible and responsive enterprise.

 

This is a change in how the IT industry engages with enterprise customers and in how it applies technology.  This shift is reflected in market opportunity, which Mark Loughridge will show you in more detail.

 

The bottom line is that these business value opportunities are growing faster than traditional point products, and they give us a much stronger relationship with enterprises.

 

You know what we have done in recent years to strengthen our capability in business process and industry expertise — not just consulting skills, but also software and delivery capability specific to business processes and industry requirements.

 

Enabling these new business designs requires a different computing infrastructure.

 

                                          Instead of islands of computing distributed throughout the enterprise, it is more integrated.

                                          Instead of proprietary architectures, which impede integration and interoperability, it is based on open standards.

                                          And it exploits powerful new technologies like self-management and virtualization, which lower the cost of computing, while improving resiliency and security.

 

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We have made significant investments in the strategic technologies to build out this new computing infrastructure.

 

It is well known that IBM is committed to open standards.  This was recently confirmed when we announced our intent to acquire Gluecode, an open-source software company.

 

We have also substantially strengthened our middleware business, and — after years of R&D — brought to market game-changing technologies.

 

One example is the more than $1 billion we have invested in our Power 4 and 5 architectures.  This has enabled our servers to gain 10 points of share over the last four and a half years.

 

It has also put IBM at the core of future video game consoles, where Power is the technology of choice for the top three players in this market.

 

Steve Mills and Bill Zeitler will expand upon what we’ve done to strengthen our software and hardware businesses today.

 

At our session with investors last year, I described a substantial growth opportunity stemming from the shift to on demand business.

 

We call it business performance transformation services, or BPTS.  It involves the application of technology to transform a client’s business processes and, in some cases, operate those processes for them.

 

Although BPTS draws on the full breadth of IBM’s capabilities in services, software and systems, we focus on four specific parts of the portfolio when we report our BPTS revenues — strategy and change consulting, business performance management software,

 

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engineering and technology services, and business transformation outsourcing.

 

This portfolio already represents a $3 billion business for us.  It grew 45% last year, and another 40% in the first quarter.

 

In BPTS, we work with clients in a variety of ways.

 

                                          We provide clients the counsel and technologies they need to transform their operations themselves.

                                          Our work with the German retailer Metro Group is a good example of this.

                                          IBM’s strategy consultants redesigned the supply chain and inventory management system for Metro’s “future store,” a prototype supermarket that integrates IBM’s business performance management software with RFID and wireless technologies.

 

                                          Other clients want to collaborate with us.

                                          Yesterday, we signed a strategic agreement with Nortel to establish a joint development center in Research Triangle Park, where IBM will collaborate in the research, design and development of Nortel’s “Next Generation Networks” products and services.

                                          An initial project will be a new class of blade servers for telecommunications networks.  This project will combine IBM’s server technology and software with Nortel’s communications expertise.

 

                                          In some cases, we transform and actually manage the operations for the client.

                                          With Nextel, we worked with the client as it transformed its customer care processes, and we now manage that operation for them.  Over the course of this engagement, Nextel’s customer satisfaction ratings

 

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have improved, customer churn has declined, and we are on target to achieve $1 billion in cost savings for Nextel over eight years.

                                          With BP, where we recently extended our engagement, we transformed and manage their finance and accounting operations.  We have accelerated BP’s ability to integrate new acquisitions and reduced F&A costs by a third.

                                          And we are among a group of partners managing the networks and IT infrastructure for Bharti Tele-Ventures, the largest private-sector telecommunications provider in India.

 

As I hope you can see from these examples, we will work with clients in whatever way they want to work with us — assist them, collaborate with them, or manage it for them.

 

Virtually every core process or operation has the potential for this kind of transformation — from supply chain management and customer care, to finance and administration, human resources management and, of course, information technology.

 

So this first strategic choice — to lead the era of on demand business — draws upon and leverages the entire IBM portfolio — services, software, hardware, technology and research.

 

The emphasis is on pulling together the right combinations of our technologies and services into business solutions for clients, which is increasingly how they want to buy and apply IT.

 

The second strategic choice was our decision to be the leader in high-value, innovation-based technologies and services.

 

Again, this is familiar to you.  For several years I’ve talked about the bifurcation of the industry — between companies that create

 

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and monetize intellectual capital in all its forms, and those that efficiently market and distribute other people’s innovations.

 

The cycle of innovation and commoditization that drives this bifurcation has never been faster or, I would say, more unforgiving than it is today.

 

IBM, as you know, has chosen to lead in the high-value, innovation space.  And the changes in our business mix over the last several years reflect this strategic choice.

 

Through acquisitions and organic investments, we have strengthened our capabilities in software, high-value services and advanced technology.  Since 2002, and through the first quarter of this year, we have acquired 38 companies, primarily in these spaces.

 

At the same time, we have exited low-margin businesses whose differentiating value was declining — hard disk drives, displays, memory chips and, most recently, PCs, through our alliance with Lenovo.

 

But it’s important to understand that, while highly visible, acquisitions and divestitures represent only one way that we continuously re-invent the company to stay in the high-value spaces.

 

The primary way we do this is by capitalizing on innovation to constantly move our hardware, software, services and core technology businesses into high growth and more profitable segments.

 

Our efforts in BPTS and integrating middleware to high-performance servers and the expansion of our Power architecture into the home market — are all examples of this.

 

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It requires constant reinvention of the base business, investments in emerging business opportunities and extending our core franchises into adjacent spaces.

 

Our engineering and technology services business, which is only two and a half years old, is an example of how we’ve leveraged an important franchise — in this case, our core technologies and engineering tools and expertise — into wholly new spaces.

 

We are working with companies in aerospace, consumer electronics, defense and telecommunications to help them create advanced products.  In many cases, they are using our technologies, such as Power, and open standard software like Linux, which provide compelling economic and speed of deployment advantages to these companies.

 

Engineering & Technology Services demonstrates how we monetize our R&D in ways that extend far beyond patent licensing.

 

I think you’d agree that companies like Honeywell, Lockheed Martin, Cisco and Sony would not simply outsource elements of their engineering and development operations to the lowest bidder.  These are high-value engagements that draw on our recognized innovation capabilities.

 

We have essentially created a new services business around a set of technology assets.  And it is allowing us to move into important adjacent spaces.  Bill Zeitler will build on this.

 

So, we’ve decided that IBM will lead in identifying, creating and capturing the profit zones of our industry, and that we would differentiate IBM by our ability to give clients value and capability they cannot get from others.

 

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This has compelled us to make many changes in our businesses.  Some of those changes are already paying off; others are underway.

 

And yes, this strategic shift can lead to short-term performance issues.  But this is what you do if you want to stay ahead of commoditization, and it’s what is required to deliver sustainable, high returns on invested capital for our owners.

 

As Mark will discuss with you in a moment, shifts that we have made in the model can have significant impact on our business profile.  As we’ve pointed out to you before, eliminating the lower-margin PC business improves our profitability by one point.

 

At the same time, we are increasing the investments required for business value and solutions selling.

 

The third strategic choice we have made is to globally integrate the company.

 

This may sound surprising, given that IBM has been an international company since its founding.  There are two aspects to this.

 

First, we are extending our reach into local markets around the world, particularly in high-growth economies such as China, India, Brazil and Russia.  Last year, our business in these four countries grew more than 25%.

 

We are fueling our investments in these high-growth markets by reallocating resources from slower-growing, maturing markets.  Over the past two years, we have increased our investment in these high-growth, developing markets by 40%, and expanded our work force by 30%.

 

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This is a phenomenon that goes beyond cyclical economics.

 

We’re all aware that populations in western Europe and Japan are shrinking and also aging.  Last week I heard that in 15 years, Italy will have just one worker supporting every retiree.  In Germany and France, the ratio will be fewer than three workers for every retiree by the year 2025.

 

This will radically change the economics of these markets, with investments increasingly going to support the aging populations.

 

Also, consider that over the next five years, emerging parts of Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America will grow to become more than one-fifth of the global GDP.  This represents an economic gain of $2.5 trillion.  These regions will account for 35% of global GDP growth in this period.

 

IBM’s share position in these markets is strong, and we are making the investments to strengthen it.  We are number one in Brazil and China, and number two in India and eastern Europe.

 

The implications of this are clear — IBM is growing as fast or faster than the markets in these emerging nations, and we are reprioritizing our investments to continue to grow with them.

 

You see this in the restructuring of our operations in Europe, which we announced earlier this month.

 

This is freeing up resources that we can reinvest in higher-growth markets.  It will also enable us to reduce overhead, eliminate layers of hierarchy, and deploy more resources out in the field, where they can execute closer to our clients.

 

10



 

But we are not lowering the center of gravity in Europe only to build it up again in places like China and India.  Rather, we are moving to a new model, which is the second aspect of globally integrating IBM.  Let me explain what I mean.

 

During the first half of the 20th century, IBM was the prototypical international enterprise.  We set up sales offices overseas and exported our products to customers around the world.  We did some customizing for local markets, but by and large our intellectual capital was created and managed in the U.S.

 

In the second half of the century — when Germany, France, the UK, Italy and Japan were in recovery — a new strategy emerged.  To capitalize on the human resources available in those countries, and to make a stronger contribution to rebuilding their economies, we built largely self-contained and self-sufficient IBMs in each national market.

 

IBM Japan, IBM U.K., IBM Germany — each had its own headquarters, its own support operations and, in many cases, its own labs and plants.  The result: a multinational IBM.

 

Today, we are evolving to a new model — the globally integrated company.  It’s made possible by the emergence of skills in new parts of the world, high-growth markets in developing nations, the WTO and free trade agreements, and the rise of a global networked infrastructure.

 

We no longer have to replicate IBM from floor to ceiling in every country.  We are optimizing key operations in the right places in the world — eliminating the redundancies and excess overhead — and integrating those operations horizontally and globally.

 

We’ve been working toward this for several years.

 

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                                          We used to process purchase orders in 300 places around the world.  Today, it’s three — Shanghai, Bangalore and Budapest.

                                          In customer support, we’ve moved certain functions closest to the client, and others we’ve consolidated into shared service centers in Malaysia, Slovakia, Spain and Brazil.

 

These moves are not just about lower labor cost.  They’re about doing the right tasks, with the right skills, in the right places.

 

                                          We’ve centralized strategic sourcing for our procurement BTO practice in Greenock, Scotland ...

                                          Consolidated services operations for financial management and accounting in, among other places, Tulsa, Oklahoma ...

                                          And created a center of excellence for the shipping industry in Scandinavia and New York City.

                                          Our primary software development centers are in Toronto, San Jose, Texas and England.

                                          Our research labs are in New York, Austin, Silicon Valley, Switzerland, Israel, Japan, China and India.

 

Why?  Because that’s where the right skills and the right business conditions exist.

 

Creating a globally integrated IBM — an “on demand IBM” — will result in a flatter operating model with more resources working with clients in the field.

 

This will drive productivity, as Bob Moffat will discuss.  And importantly, it will improve our ability to execute at the point of contact with the client, which Doug Elix will describe for you.

 

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As we execute each of these strategies — leading the industry shift we describe as on demand business; reinventing our portfolio to be the innovation, high-value leader, and creating a globally integrated company — there will be bumps along the way.

 

Some will be due to exogenous factors — recessions, market corrections and the like — and some to execution missteps.

 

We hit a bump in the first quarter.  We understand the issues and have taken corrective action.  The issues mostly involve transitions of one type or another.

 

In services, for instance, our revenue mix is shifting away from the large, long-term engagements toward smaller, shorter-term contracts.  In just the last two years, short-term contracts as a share of total signings have grown from 38% to 47%.

 

John Joyce will tell you about the actions he has taken to address this shift, including sales incentives and the deployment of sales resources to go after more of this opportunity.

 

Another transition reflects the changing interplay of customized and standardized capabilities.  Traditionally in our services business, standardized capabilities referred to infrastructure assets — data centers, parts inventories, tools and the like.

 

Through increased automation techniques, we are able to manage these types of assets with fewer people.  As a result, a greater share of our people are now focused on strategic consulting and business transformation.

 

Many of our top minds in IBM Research are collaborating with business consulting teams through our On Demand Innovation Services practice and the Center for Business Optimization, the

 

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unit that deploys all of the deep, mathematical and analytic capability of IBM to solve some of our clients’ hardest problems.

 

Of course, not every client needs a high-end, custom-built solution.  So we are translating more of our intellectual capital into replicable, software-based designs that are scalable to multiple clients, faster to deploy, and deliver faster time to value for the client.

 

For example, we have documented our methodology and standardized many of the processes and technologies involved in building wireless broadband infrastructures.  These kinds of services packages are helping us keep ahead of the explosive growth in demand for such technologies as WiFi and RFID.

 

We are also expanding our capabilities to deliver standardized processes and applications as a service to our clients.

 

                                          Our acquisition of Corio, which we completed in March, gives us a global platform to deliver hosted applications like SAP, Oracle and Siebel to both our SMB and enterprise clients.

                                          We are integrating IBM’s custom hosted capabilities into Corio’s platform for faster deployment of these services.  We can also use this platform to provide related capabilities, such as application deployment and automated application management.

 

Each of these examples represents a shift from custom services to more cost-efficient, scalable offerings.

 

This shift, as well as the steps we have taken to drive down cost in our strategic outsourcing business, will help us to improve our services margins and penetrate new market opportunities.

 

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The other transitions you will hear about today involve our other two units — systems and software.

 

In systems, Bill will talk about transitions in some key products — specifically in our server and storage lines, where late availability of our some new offerings dampened our first-quarter performance.  But we’ll now have the benefit of a full quarter of availability of these products.

 

These kinds of transitions are not unusual, and the effects are often short-lived.  As you may remember, the Regatta and the T-Rex products also went through short, somewhat rocky transition periods before ultimately delivering significant growth.

 

After Bill, Steve Mills will describe to you the progress we’ve made to re-mix our software portfolio to capture the high-growth middleware opportunity.

 

During the course of the day you will hear — in much greater detail — about all of the issues I just laid out for you.

 

As I said at the beginning, we are talking about two sets of issues here.

 

The first are the long-term, strategic actions we are taking to capitalize on the shifts we see in client demand, technology and global economics.  These areas are the fastest-growing segments in the IT industry.

 

The second set of issues involves the actions we are taking to improve business performance in the near term.  We know what the executional issues are.  We are managing through them.  And we are confident that they will get IBM back on track.

 

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But I think it’s more important to keep the overall game plan in mind.

 

16



 

Business Model

 

Mark Loughridge

Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

IBM Corporation

 



 

The Traditional View of the Technology Sector Opportunity Reflects Moderate Growth

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IBM analysis based on Industry Reports / Market Research

 



 

Within the Traditional IT Market Opportunity, Solutions Will Grow Significantly Faster than Point Products

 

[CHART]

 

Source:  IBM Market Intelligence

 



 

Business Performance Transformation Provides Market Expansion Opportunity at a High Growth Rate

 

[CHART]

 

Source:  IBM Market Intelligence

 



IBM’s 1990’s Business Model was Weighted Towards Commoditizing Business Lines with Eroding Profit Margins

 

Business Mix 1996

 

[CHART]

 

Transaction Mix 1996

 

[CHART]

 

Financial Trends*

 

[CHART]

 


*  Does not include Equity Compensation; 1995-1996 As Reported; 1997-2000 Continuing Operations

** Excludes Special Actions

 



 

IBM’s Response:  Divest Low Growth, Low Margin, Commoditizing Product Lines…

 

Major Divestiture / Exit

 

DRAM

 

1999

 

Network

 

1999

 

Flat Panel Displays

 

2001

 

HDD

 

2002

 

PCs

 

2005

 

 

5-Year Performance Trend

Prior to Exit

 

Revenue

 

Declining

 

 

 

Profit Impact

 

Eroding

 

 

 

Cash Flow

 

Significant CapEx Requirements

 



 

and Acquire Value Opportunities

 

IT Industry Landscape

 

Business Value

 

Infrastructure Value

 

Services

 

Software

 

Hardware

 

Component Value

 

Acquisitions

 

Leadership

 

Capabilities

 

Leverage
Infrastructure

 

New Market
Entry

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PwCC

 

Corio

 

Maersk IT

 

Daksh

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Logical Networks

 

 

 

 

 

Rational

 

KeyMRO

 

Candle

 

Lotus

 

Tivoli

 

Healthlink

 

Schlumberger

 

Equitant

 

 

 

Sector7

 

 

 

Liberty Ins Svcs

 

 

 

Trigo Tech

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cyanea

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alphablox

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Venetica

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SystemCorp

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SRD

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ascential

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gluecode

 

 

 

 

 

 

Divestitures / Exits

 



 

We Have Shifted Our Business from Commoditizing Business Lines to Higher Value

 

Business Mix 1996

 

[CHART]

 

Business Mix Today*

 

[CHART]

 


* Post PC divestiture

 



 

We are Using Cash from Low-growth Annuity to Fund Investments in Higher Value Solutions

 

Transaction Mix 1996

 

[CHART]

 

Transaction Mix Today*

 

[CHART]

 


* Post PC divestiture

 



 

This Shift in the Model Results in Higher Gross Profit Margins While Increasing Investments Required for Higher Value Solution Selling

 

Financial Trends Late 90s*

 

[CHART]

 

Financial Trends Today*

 

[CHART]

 


*                                         1995-1996 As Reported; 1997-2004 Continuing Operations; 2001-2005 includes Equity Compensation

**                                  Excludes Special Actions

***                           Estimate based on PCs historical performance

 



 

Acquisitions are Delivering Results

 

Acquisitions Performance

 

[CHART]

 

      Sound acquisition strategy

 

      Strong management focus

 

      Active pipeline

 

      Demonstrated competence in post acquisition integration

 



 

Financial Objectives

 



 

Our Objective is to Deliver Double-digit EPS Growth Over the Long-term

 

                  Drive organic revenue growth 1.5X - 2.0X GDP

 

                  Leverage our portfolio via financially sound acquisitions for additional 1-2 pts of revenue

 

                  Focus on productivity to improve margin

 

                  Deploy cash to fund growth and provide shareholder returns via dividend / buybacks

 



 

2004 Revenue Grew 8% (3.4% @ CC)

 

Revenue Growth Drivers

 

Business Performance

 

1pt

Transformation Services

 

 

Emerging Countries

 

1pt

Acquisitions

 

1pt

Services/Software

 

3pts

Systems / PCs

 

2pts

Total

 

8pts

 

Emerging Countries

 

China

 

 

 

 

 

India

 

 

 

 

$4.2B

Russia

 

+25% YTY

 

 

 

Brazil

 

 

 

New Markets: BPTS

 

Business Transformation

 

 

 

 

 

Strategy & Change

 

 

 

 

$3.0B

Engineering &Technology

 

+45% YTY

 

 

 

Bus Perf Mgmt SW

 

 

 

Key Industry Sales Units

($B)

 

 

 

2004

 

Growth

 

% of
FY Rev

 

Fin Services

 

24.3

 

9

%

25

%

Public

 

14.8

 

6

%

15

%

Industrial

 

12.6

 

6

%

13

%

Distribution

 

8.8

 

8

%

9

%

Communications

 

8.9

 

10

%

9

%

SMB

 

21.2

 

8

%

22

%

 



 

The Productivity Objective is to Drive Margin Improvements through Efficiencies across an $80B Spending Profile

 

Objective:

$300M - $400M annually

 

0.5% of total spending base

 

Supply Chain Management

      Process automation and redesign

      Supplier relationships

      Global sourcing

      Leverage industry cost takedowns

 

Labor Cost Management

      Redesigned equity compensation

      Redesigned employee benefits

      Productivity based incentives

      Leverage subcontractor workforce

 

IBM Productivity Initiatives

      Standardized scalable offerings

      Coverage model enhancements

      Centers of Excellence

      Service delivery transformation

 



 

US Pension – “The Perfect Storm”

 

U.S. Return on Assets (ROA)

 

[CHART]

 

U.S. Discount Rate (%)

 

[CHART]

 

2000 Assets / Liabilities

 

[CHART]

 

2002 Assets / Liabilities

 

[CHART]

 



 

Worldwide Retirement-Related Income / (Expense)

 

      This forecast is based on Y/E 2004 assumptions

 

[CHART]

 

Inc/(Exp) $B

 

0.3

 

0.4

 

0.2

 

(0.4

)

(1.1

)

(2.2

)

(2.7

)

(2.8

)

(2.4

)

B/(W) Yr/Yr

 

(0.0

)

0.1

 

(0.3

)

(0.5

)

(0.8

)

(1.0

)

(0.5

)

(0.1

)

0.4

 

 


* Excludes one-time $320M charge for settlement

 



 

[CHART]

 

$1B Yr/Yr Impact

 

Productivity Initiatives

Centers of Excellence

Coverage Model

Shared Services

 

Labor Cost Management

Equity Compensation

Benefits Redesign

Subcontractors

 

Inc/(Exp) $B

 

0.3

 

0.4

 

0.2

 

(0.4

)

(1.1

)

(2.2

)

B/(W) Yr/Yr

 

(0.0

)

0.1

 

(0.3

)

(0.5

)

(0.8

)

(1.0

)

 


* Excludes one-time $320M charge for settlement

 



 

Our Model is to Fund Growth and Provide Shareholder Returns via Dividends / Buybacks

 

Cash Flow ($B)

Sources

 

Cash from Operations*

 

12-14

 

 


* Excludes GF receivables

 

Uses

 

Capital Investments

 

(4-5)

 

Acquisitions

 

(2-4)

 

Buyback / Dividends

 

(5-9)

 

 

Portfolio Management

 

BUILD

 

 

LEADERSHIP

 

CAPABILITIES

 

 

 

LEVERAGE

 

NEW

INFRASTRUCTURE

 

MARKET

 

 

ENTRY

 

Capital Investments

 

                  Server & Technology

•  $1.0 - $2.0B / year @ ~20% ROIC

 

                  SO & BTO Contracts

•  $1.5B - $2.0B @ ~20% ROIC

 

                  IGF Operating Leases

•  $1.0B @ ~18% IGF ROE

 

Stock Repurchase / Dividend Strategy

 

                  $4 to $8B Stock Repurchase

   Over $60B in the last 10 years

 

      Dividend increased in each of the last 9 years

•  Funded by earnings growth and strong cash flows

 



 

First Quarter Overview

 



 

1Q Performance was Impacted by Late Quarter Softening in Some Regions and Execution Shortfalls

 

      Performance strong through mid-March

 

      Late March impacted by:

•      Services shortfall in short term signings

•      Product transition to new Storage Products

 

•     Growth initiatives continue strong performance

•      Emerging countries

       BPTS

 

IBM 1Q Revenue Growth 3% (1% @CC)

 

[CHART]

 



 

We Continue to Show Progress in Key Growth Initiatives

 

Revenue Growth Drivers

 

Business Performance

 

1

pt

Transformation Services

 

 

 

Emerging Countries

 

1

pt

Acquisitions

 

1

pt

Services/Software

 

1

pts

Systems / PCs

 

(1

pts)

Total

 

3

pts

 

Emerging Countries

 

China

 

 

 

 

 

India

 

 

 

 

$1.0B

Russia

 

+18% YTY

 

 

 

Brazil

 

 

 

New Markets: BPTS

 

Business Transformation

 

 

 

 

 

Strategy & Change

 

 

 

 

$0.9B

Engineering &Technology

 

+40% YTY

 

 

 

Bus Perf Mgmt SW

 

 

 

Key Industry Sales Units

($B)

 

 

 

1Q05

 

Growth

 

% of
1Q Rev

 

Fin Services

 

5.7

 

4

%

25

%

Public

 

3.4

 

4

%

15

%

Industrial

 

3.0

 

(1

)%

13

%

Distribution

 

2.2

 

5

%

10

%

Communications

 

2.1

 

1

%

9

%

SMB

 

5.1

 

7

%

22

%

 



 

We’ve accelerated and expanded actions to drive productivity and efficiency

 

                  Improve the speed and execution of our client-facing teams

 

                  Maintain and enhance our competitiveness – primarily in Services

 

                  Eliminate 10,000 – 13,000 positions worldwide

 

                  Pre-tax charge between $1.3B - $1.7B in 2Q

 

                  Estimated yield $300M - $500M spending reductions in second half

 

                  Estimated yield 2-3X in 2006

 



 

Summary

 

      Strong financial profile

 

      Investments in new products, new offerings and new markets

 

      Strategy that maintains leadership

 

      Committed to deliver double digit EPS growth over the long-term

 



 

[LOGO]

 



 

Global Services

 

John Joyce

Senior Vice President and Group Executive

IBM Global Services

 



 

Global Services 1Q05 Performance

 

Revenue $11.7B, +6%; 3% @CC

($B)

 

 

 

1Q05

 

Yr/Yr

 

Revenue

 

11.7

 

6

%

PTI Margin

 

7.6

%

(0.8

pts)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Revenue

 

 

 

 

 

Strategic Outsourcing

 

 

 

8

%

Business Consulting Services

 

 

 

5

%

Integrated Tech Services

 

 

 

4

%

Maintenance

 

 

 

2

%

 

IGS WW Contract Signings

 

[CHART]

 

1Q05 Signings

 

Yr/Yr

 

 

 

 

 

SO

 

(4

)%

ITS

 

(14

)%

BCS

 

1

%

CSI

 

(9

)%

BTO

 

87

%

E&TS

 

96

%

 



 

Revenue & Signings Year-to-Year Change

 

[CHART]

 



 

1Q05 Strengths and Weaknesses

 

Strengths

 

      Americas Competitiveness

•      Signings Growth

 

      BTO Growth

 

      Asia Growth (w/o Japan)

 

Weaknesses

 

      Short-term Signings, Revenue, and Profitability (in March)

 

      Europe Performance

 

      Japan Performance

 



 

What Happened?

 

                  Problems in Germany, Italy and Japan

 

 

 

 

1Q Year-to-Year
Revenue Growth As Reported

 

 

 

 

 

Total Global Services

 

6

%

Germany

 

(4

)%

Italy

 

(5

)%

Japan

 

(2

)%

Rest of World

 

10

%

 

Why?

 

Impacted Short-term Transactions

 

                  Deal Execution

 

                  Market Weakness

 

                  “Fixed” Cost Base in Europe

 

                  Organizational Changes

 



 

Competitiveness Actions

 

                  Resource actions in Europe:  approximately 7K

 

                  Resource actions in Asia Pacific:  approximately 1K

 

                  Reorganization to move resources closer to clients

 

                  Globally integrate service delivery

 

                  Infrastructure consolidation

                  10 data centers

                  3 in Nordics

                  2 in the U.K.

                  2 in Italy

                  1 in France

                  1 in the U.S.

                  1 in Canada

 

                  50 offices throughout Europe

                  9 offices in the U.S.

 

                  Rapid expansion of resources in emerging markets

                  Western to Eastern Europe and India

 

                  Deployed SWAT teams to underperforming regions

 



 

Business Line Actions

 

Integrated Technology Services & Consulting

 

                  Coverage

 

                  Increased coverage and technical sales resources

 

                  Business Partners:

                  Aggressively recruiting smaller, regional IT systems integrators

                  Investing $300 million in new programs, consulting and education for Business Partners

 

                  300+ consultants redeployed to client-facing work

 

                  Incentives

                  Increased incentives on short-term contracts

 

                  Offerings

                  IT infrastructure services:  wireless, security, networking/Voice Over IP, and storage

                  New “Express” offerings targeted at fastest-growing segment of SMB

 

Strategic Outsourcing & Business Transformation Outsourcing

 

                  Added experienced deal makers

                  Increased incentives and resources to drive account growth

                  Pipeline development initiatives and incentives

                  Dedicated global management for BTO

 



 

Short-term Impacts

 

        More competitive pricing

 

        Improved pipeline

 

        Higher win rates

 



Services Market Growth Trends

 

    Ongoing transition

 

Market Growth
(@CC)

 

BTO

 

SO

 

C&SI

 

ITS

 

Maint

 

Total

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2002

 

6

%

5

%

(6

)%

(1

)%

(6

)%

(1

)%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2003

 

6

%

5

%

(2

)%

(2

)%

(5

)%

1

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2004

 

9

%

7

%

1

%

4

%

(1

)%

4

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2004 – 2008
CAGR

 

10

%

8

%

5

%

6

%

(2

)%

6

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

% of Market
2004

 

17

%

27

%

37

%

15

%

4

%

100

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

% of Market
2008

 

20

%

28

%

34

%

15

%

3

%

100

%

 

Source: IBM market analysis

 



IT Services Market

 

“IBM grew both its IT services revenue and market share during 2004, increasing the gap between itself and its leading competitor, EDS.”          —Gartner Report, April 2005

 

 

 

 

2003
Revenue ($B)

 

2004
Revenue ($B)

 

2004 Market
Share

 

Annual Growth
Rate (AGR)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IBM

 

42.6

 

46.2

 

7.8

%

8.4

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EDS

 

20.6

 

20.7

 

3.5

%

0.5

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fujitsu

 

16.0

 

16.9

 

2.8

%

6.1

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hewlett Packard

 

13.1

 

14.2

 

2.4

%

8.0

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Accenture

 

12.2

 

14.1

 

2.4

%

16.4

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CSC

 

13.0

 

14.0

 

2.4

%

7.9

%

 

Source: Gartner, “Market Share: IT Services, Worldwide, 2004 (Preliminary Statistics)”,

April 2005, by Dean Blackmore, Kathryn Hale, Yuko Adachi, Twiggy Lo and Robert De Souza

 



Accelerating Standardized Asset Strategy in Services

 

      Entire company mobilizing

      Development of intellectual property, including business process frameworks, IT architectures, and thousands of software assets

      Top priority of technical community; standard scalable offerings

      Directing more of our $5.7B R&D investment toward services assets

 

      Assets from engagements

 

      Strategic acquisitions

 

[LOGO]

 

      Benefits

      Clients: decreased time to value, increase quality and predictability of delivery, lower total cost

      IBM: differentiated, higher-value offerings

      Investors: margin improvement, top-line growth

 



Business Performance Transformation Services Market

 

BPTS Market Opportunity

 

 

[CHART]

 



 

Summary

 

Short-term

 

      More competitive pricing

 

      Improved pipeline

 

      Higher win rates

 

Long-term

 

      Market growth

 

      Well positioned

 

      Will continue to grow

 

      Will improve profitability

 



Good Start in Second Quarter

 

[LOGO]

 



 

[LOGO]

 



 

Systems and Technology

 

Bill Zeitler

Senior Vice President and Group Executive

IBM Systems and Technology

 



Systems and Technology 1Q05 Performance

 

 

 

1Q Revenue

 

GP%

 

Share

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Systems & Technology

$3.9B

 

2

%

=

 

-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

zSeries

 

(16

)%

+

 

-

 

MIPS down 11%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

iSeries

 

1

%

-

 

=

 

Return to growth

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

pSeries

 

12

%

+

 

+

 

P5 transition complete

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

xSeries Servers

 

8

%

=

 

-

 

Strong blade growth

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Storage

 

5

%

-

 

=

 

Gaining share in Disk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Technology OEM

 

2

%

+

 

 

 

300mm stability

 

 



1Q05 Strengths and Weaknesses

 

      Strengths

                  pSeries share gains

                  iSeries return to growth

                  Blades 90% growth

                  E&TS 56% growth

 

•     Weaknesses

      Product transitions

                  Competitive response

                  Europe

 

Rolling 4 Quarter Average – by Geo

 

[CHART]

 

*At constant currency

 



Product Focus Area: High Volume

 

                  Complete X3 rollout

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

8-way Revenue Share

 

[CHART]

 

4-way Revenue Share

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IDC WW FY2004-Q4 Quarterly Server Tracker and STG MI

Rolling Four Quarter Average

 



                  Complete X3 rollout

 

                  Leverage BladeCenter

 

 

Blades Revenue Share

 

[CHART]

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

Open Spec

 

 

[LOGO]

 

Source: IDC WW FY2004-Q4 Quarterly Server Tracker and STG MI

Rolling Four Quarter Average

 



Product Focus Area: Storage

 

                  Ramp DS volumes

 

                  Differentiate with virtualization

 

                  Extend industry alliances

                  NetApp

                  Cisco

                  Brocade

                  LTO

 

[LOGO]

 

[GRAPHIC]

 



Storage Marketplace

 

                  IBM positioned for growth

 

                  Technology leadership

 

                  Client choice

                  Openness

                  Virtualization

 

                  End-to-end solutions

 

                  Alliances

 

FY 2004 External Disk Share

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IDC WW FY2004-Q4 Quarterly Storage Tracker and STG MI
Share trend calculations based on 2004 over 2003 WW factory revenue

 



Product Focus Area: zSeries

 

                  Security, resilience and integration

 

                  Drive new workload growth

 

                  Duplicate Linux success with Java

 

$250K+ Server Revenue Share+

 

[CHART]

 

Installed Capacity ++

 

[CHART]

 


+Source: IDC WW FY2004-Q4 Quarterly Server Tracker and STG MI, Rolling Four Quarter Average
++IBM Internal Data

 



 

                  Security, resilience and integration

 

                  Drive new workload growth

 

                  Duplicate Linux success with Java

 

Linux Engines

 

[CHART]

 

[LOGO]

 

Linux Engines = Integrated Facility for Linux

 



 

                  Security, resilience and integration

 

                  Drive new workload growth

 

                  Duplicate Linux success with Java

 

Java Engines

 

[CHART]

 

[LOGO]

 

Java Engines = zSeries Application Assist Processors

 



Opportunities

 

                  Innovation Solutions

                  STG OEM and Intellectual Property

                  Deep Computing

                  Engineering & Technology Services

                  Technology Assets

                  Open Collaboration

                  Expertise

 

[LOGO]

 



                  Innovation Solutions

                  STG OEM and Intellectual Property

                  Deep Computing

                  Engineering & Technology Services

 

                  Infrastructure Solutions

                  Linux

                  Grid

                  Virtualization

 

                  Technology

 

[LOGO]

 



Server Marketplace Momentum

 

IBM eServer Launch

 

[CHART]

 

[LOGO]

 

Source: IDC WW FY2004-Q4 Quarterly Server Tracker and STG MI

 



Summary

 

                  Execution focus

 

                  Leadership offerings

 

                  Positioned for growth

 



 

Software

 

Steve Mills

Senior Vice President and Group Executive

IBM Software

 



Software 1Q05 Performance

 

Revenue $3.6 B, +2%; flat @cc

 

[CHART]

 

Key Brands

 

YTY%

 

WebSphere Family

 

11

%

Information Management

 

5

%

Lotus

 

11

%

Tivoli

 

15

%

Rational

 

0

%

Other Middleware

 

(4

)%

 

 

 

1Q05

 

YTY

 

GP Margin

 

86.4

%

+0.5 points

 

 

      Strength in Americas

      Held or gained market share in several key segments

      Announced intention to acquire Ascential

 



Software Revenue

 

1996

 

2000

 

2004

 

Revenue = $11.4B

 

Revenue = $12.6B

 

Revenue = $15.1B

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

 


*Key Middleware classified based on 2004 presentation

 



Software

2004 Revenue = $15.1 B

 

[CHART]

 

Other

$0.7B  6% YTY

 

      Software Services

 

Key Middleware Brands

$7.3B  10% YTY

 

      WebSphere Family

                  Application Server

                  Business Integration

                  Portal

 

      Information Management

                  DB2 Family / Tools

                  Content Management

                  Business Intelligence

                  Information Integration

 

      Lotus Domino & Workplace

 

      Tivoli

                  Systems Management

                  Security Management

                  Storage Management

 

      Rational

 

Other Middleware

$4.7B  2% YTY

      Legacy Host Tools & Compilers

      Communication Servers

      Printer Software

      Storage Software

 

Operating Systems

$2.5B  1% YTY

 

•     System software for zSeries, pSeries, iSeries, and xSeries servers

 



1Q05 Strengths and Weaknesses

 

Strengths

 

                  Americas growth

 

                  Growth in key products

 

                  More pronounced mix to small transactions

 

Weaknesses

 

                  Country weakness – Germany, France, Italy, Japan

 

                  Deal slippage

 

                  Financial Services sector weakness after strong 4Q04

 



2005 Actions to Drive Sustained Growth

 

                  Increased specialist sales teams

                  Shifting 700+ sales resources to product specialty roles

                  400+ shifted in 1Q05

 

                  Increased competitive focus teams

                  Sales / technical sales / laboratory teams

 

                  Increased Lab Services teams

                  Proofs of concept

                  Deployment

                  Premium support

 

                  Refocused telesales teams

                  Opportunity identification for cross selling / upselling

                  Renewals, emphasizing the value of ongoing development

 



                  Improved partner programs / reach

                  Over 8,000 Business Partners

                  Supported by in-country IBM sales resources

 

                  Increased local marketing spending

                  40 – 50 events per week

                  Focused on lead generation, closings

                  Joint marketing with Business Partners

 

                  Improved industry focus

                  Industry alignment of solution teams across IBM

                  PartnerWorld Industry Networks

 



Evolution Towards Middleware

 

Business Processes

 

Customer
Relationship
Management

 

Enterprise
Resource
Management

 

Product
Lifecycle
Management

 

Procurement

 

Value
Chain
Management

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Applications

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Middleware

 

Human
Interaction &
Collaboration

 

Transactions
and
Messaging

 

Information
Management

 

Systems
Management
& Security

 

Software
Development

 

Lotus

 

WebSphere

 

DB2

 

Tivoli

 

Rational

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Systems
Environment

 

Linux

 

Unix

 

Windows

 

OS/400

 

z/OS

 

Servers

Storage

 



IBM Ranked #1 or #2 in the Majority of These Growth Segments

 

2004 Middleware
Opportunity = $ 75 B

’04 – ’08 CGR = 6%

 

[CHART]

 

2008 Market Mix

 

High Growth Product Segments

 

‘04 – ‘08
CGR

 

Mobile Middleware

 

13

%

Portals and Personalization

 

11

%

Information Integration

 

10

%

Content Management

 

10

%

Advanced Collaboration

 

9

%

Storage Management

 

9

%

Integration Server

 

8

%

Relational Database and Tools

 

8

%

AD Lifecycle Management Tools

 

7

%

Security / Identity Management

 

7

%

 


Source:  IBM analysis based on Industry Reports / Market Research, 5/05

 



Strategic Acquisitions to Drive Growth

 

Bold Market

+

Complementary

+

Opportunistic

+

Market

Entry

 

Point Products

 

Consolidations

 

Leadership

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

•     High profile entry

 

      Leverage IBM strengths

 

•     Highly complementary technology buys

 

      Gain time to market

 

      Leverage IBM channels

 

      Companies with significant revenue streams

 

      Retain customers and leverage install base

 

      Achieve cost and expense synergies

 

      Buy market leaders in growth segments

 

•     Strong ecosystems

 

      Large customer install bases

 

      Usually command premium valuations

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

      Lotus

 

      CrossWorlds

      Access360

•     ThinkDynamics

      Trigo

•     SRD

      Ascential

      Gluecode Software

 

 

      Informix

      Candle

 

 

      Tivoli

      Rational

 

 



 

Leverage Partner Ecosystem

 

      ISVs

      100+ Global ISVs

      2,000+ Regional ISVs

 

      System Integrators

      75+ Global SIs

      2,300+ Regional SIs

 

      Resellers

      2,500+ Value Added Resellers

      1,000+ Software Resellers

 

Influenced Software Revenue

 

[CHART]

 

[LOGO]

 



 

Customer

 

Requirement

 

Middleware

 

Benefits

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[LOGO]

Integrate multiple SAP

WebSphere

70% faster time-to-market

 

 

applications with legacy

 

 

99.7% availability

 

 

mainframe systems

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[LOGO]

Deploy new policy rating

WebSphere

98% of new applications

 

 

system

DB2

 

processed within 24hrs

 

 

 

Lotus Domino

48% higher productivity per

 

 

 

Rational

 

employee than national average

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[LOGO]

Build Web-based supply chain

WebSphere

Reduced cycle time by 2/3

 

 

management system

DB2

Reduced cost by 25%

 

 

 

Tivoli Security Mgmt.

 

 

 

 

 

IBM xSeries Servers

 

 

 



 

Summary

 

      Invest in Development

 

      Acquire

 

      Invest in Sales and Marketing

 

Result

      Profitable, well protected install base

      Renewal streams accelerating

      New placements continue to drive growth

 

$2B+ Annual Development

 

42 Acquisitions 1995 -2005

 

10,000+ Geo Sales Force 8,000+ Partners

 



 

Global Integration

 

Bob Moffat

Senior Vice President, Integrated Supply Chain

IBM Corporation

 



Global Integration:  Leveraging Our Multi-national Presence for Operational Advantage

 

Globally integrating operations of our company to:

 

      Capitalize on economies of expertise and scale

 

      Achieve greater levels of integration and efficiency

 

      Improve responsiveness

 



Benefits of Global Integration

 

Procurement

 

      Transformed administrative-intensive     value add

 

      Optimized sourcing for sustainable competitive advantage

 

      Common processes and enabling technologies

 

      Leveraging expertise in BTO engagements

 



Customer Fulfillment

 

      Consolidated operations worldwide for 10-15% synergies

 

      Consolidated administrative and transaction processing in global centers in Malaysia, Slovakia, Spain and Brazil

 

      Redirected resources to higher value client support roles that improved sales face-time 38%

 

      Common processes and enabling technologies

 



 

Supply Chain as a Key Indicator of Expected Productivity Benefits as We Globally Integrate More of Our Operations

 

Efficiency

 

      Steady state cost reductions; 2/3 of total IBM savings in 2004 from IGS

 

Productivity

 

      Sales force spending 38% more time with clients

 

Responsiveness

 

      Turning orders 36% faster

 

Flexibility

 

•     Executed Lenovo (2X) in half the time of Hitachi divestiture

 



Starting Now with These Processes to Achieve Productivity Targets; Opportunity 3X the Size of Supply Chain

 

 

 

Sales Operations

 

 

 

 

 

IT

 

 

 

Customer

 

Marketing

Fulfillment

Centers of

 

 

Excellence

Communications

Procurement

 

 

 

INTEGRATE

Finance

Global

AUTOMATE

 

Logistics

OPTIMIZE

Pricing

 

 

 

Manufacturing

 

HR

 

 

 

 

 

Legal

 

 

 

 

 

Real Estate

 



Extending to Global Services

 

Drive Productivity and Margin Improvements

 

      Reduce cost by optimizing sourcing for sustainable competitive advantage

 

      Globally integrate service delivery

 

      Optimize managing and deploying resources on a global basis

 



Globally Integrating Service Delivery

 

Application Management Services (AMS)

 

      Delivery model fosters a direct local relationship with client while leveraging a global skill base

 

      Balanced resources in 34 countries; nearly evenly split between low-cost delivery centers and locations close to client

 



Managing and Deploying Business Consulting Services Resources Faster and More Efficiently

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

      Full visibility of global talent pool; IBM and network of suppliers

 

•     Dynamic searches based on skill, availability and cost

 

      Engagements staffed 20% percent faster

 

      Ability to weigh staffing alternatives to improve profitability

 



Summary

 

Confidence in our ability to achieve productivity targets

 

                  Globally integrating the company

 

         Demonstrated traction in supply chain

 

         Rapidly applying to more processes

 

         Extending to delivery in Global Services

 

                  Managing and deploying global capabilities more effectively

 

                  Creating a flatter operating model with more resources working with clients

 



 

[LOGO]

 



Sales & Distribution

 

Doug Elix

Senior Vice President and Group Executive

IBM Sales and Distribution

 



IBM is Targeting Growth Where Technology Drives the Creation of Business Value

 

      Solutions (Business and Infrastructure)

 

                  Solves a client’s business or IT problem through a combination of technology and high-value services with one or more offerings from one or more companies

 

      Business Performance Transformation Services (BPTS)

 

                  Focuses on transforming clients’ business processes to drive business performance improvements

 

      Emerging Business Opportunities (EBOs)

 

                  Telecommunications, Retail, Information-Based Medicine

 

      Emerging Countries

 

                  China, India, Brazil, and Russia

 



Pursuing the Solutions Opportunity

 

Solutions are growing faster than the rest of the market.  While point products will remain an important part of our business, we need to focus on high-value solutions to meet clients’ needs and drive our growth

 

[GRAPH]

 

 

 

Source: IBM Market Intelligence,

 

 

Solutions Market View 2H2004

 



Crafting and Delivering Business and Infrastructure Solutions

 

Business Solutions:

 

      45 solutions currently deployed

 

      Industry Specific Solutions:

•   Targeted solely to a specific industry issue

 

•     Multi-Industry Solutions:

•   Issue that is common to multiple industries

 

      ISV Solutions:

•   Solve a client’s issue with a specific ISV solution

 

[LOGO]

 

Infrastructure Solutions:

 

      16 infrastructure “scenarios”

 

      Solutions for 9 of 16 scenarios now deployed

 

      Cross-industry:

•   Multiple industries/minimal tailoring

 

Address top customer needs:

•   Business Resilience, IT Optimization, Information Insights, and Business Flexibility

 

[LOGO]

 



 

Business and Infrastructure Solutions:

 

      440 business solution specialists deployed

 

•     110 infrastructure solution specialists deployed

 

      24,000 delivery professionals

 



 

With BPTS, We See an Opportunity to Broaden Our Addressable Market by up to $500 Billion

 

Business

Value

 

Infrastructure

Value

 

Component

Value

 

Business Transformation

Services Firms

 

BPTS

Opportunity:

$1.4T

‘04-’08 CAGR: 9-10 %

 

Existing IT Industry

Opportunity:

$1.2T

‘04-’08 CAGR of 5-6%

 

IT Firms

 

The BPTS Strategy:

Growing in existing BTO

 

      CRM

      Finance & Administration

      HR

      Procurement

      Insurance Administration/Banking Back Office

 

Source: IBM Market Intelligence

 



 

Business

Value

 

Infrastructure

Value

 

Component

Value

 

Business Transformation

Services Firms

 

BPTS

Opportunity:

$1.4T

‘04-’08 CAGR: 9-10 %

 

Existing IT Industry

Opportunity:

$1.2T

‘04-’08 CAGR of 5-6%

 

IT Firms

 

The BPTS Strategy:

Pioneering in new market areas

 

•     Service After Sales

•     Supply Chain Management Optimization

•     Road User Charging

•     Telco and Utility Billing

•     Engineering & Technology Services

•     Center for Business Optimization

•     Collaboration

 



 

Seizing Innovation to Grow

 

Telco Initiative:

 

            Take advantage of solutions trends in Telco marketplace, particularly around network transformation and order-to-cash

 

            Deploy resources into emerging countries

 

Market Opportunity

 

[CHART]

 

Retail EBO:

 

            Establish the IBM Store Integration Framework as the leading operating environment in the retail store

 

            Build ecosystem of Business Partners and establish IBM as the trusted advisor for store-based innovation and transformation

 

[CHART]

 

Information-based Medicine EBO

 

            Advance relationships with research institutions and policymakers shaping new healthcare agenda

 

            Develop solutions to integrate medical and clinical data

 

            Build ecosystem with medical imaging manufacturers and clinical information application providers

 

[CHART]

 



 

IBM Revenue has Grown More Rapidly in Emerging Countries than in Established Markets and Faster than the Opportunity

 

IBM Revenue

 

Market Opportunity

 

 

 

CAGR 02-04

 

 

 

 

 

CAGR 02-04

 

 

 

CAGR 02-04

 

France

 

2

%

Resource

 

Russia

 

59

%

Russia

 

26

%

Japan

 

-1

%

Allocation

 

India

 

49

%

India

 

18

%

Germany

 

-2

%

 

 

Brazil

 

21

%

Brazil

 

4

%

 

 

 

 

Resource

 

China*

 

15

%

China*

 

11

%

 

 

 

 

Allocation

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CAGR 02-04

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

US

 

4

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

UK

 

3

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: IBM Analysis; at constant currency

 

 

* 2002 excludes $642M of GKI OEM hardware revenue

 



 

Delivering Value in Emerging Countries

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

Addressing unique solution needs in priority industries

 

China

 

India

 

Brazil

 

Russia/CEE

 

      Banking

 

      Banking

 

      Banking

 

      Chemicals & Petroleum

 

      Telecom

 

      Automotive

 

      Government

 

      Banking

 

      Government

 

      Telecom

 

 

 

      Telecom

 

      Retail

 

      Government

 

 

 

      Government

 

 

 

      Healthcare

 

 

 

 

 

 

Investing in core capabilities

 

      Human Capital

      Solution and Infrastructure Platforms

      Offerings tailored to Emerging Market realities’

•     Domestic and Global Partner ecosystem

 

Differentiating through innovation and thought leadership

 

•     Open Industry Standards leadership

•     IBM Research Labs in India and China

      Government and Academic Partnerships to support the social agenda

 



 

Shifting Resources to Capture Growth

 

      Emerging Countries

 

      Global Resourcing

 

Headcount

 

[CHART]

 

      Emerging Business Opportunities

 

Headcount

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IBM Analysis

 



 

Shifting Resources to Capture Growth

 

      Business Performance Transformation Services

 

Headcount

 

[CHART]

 

      Solutions

 

Headcount

 

[CHART]

 



New Model Moves Critical Resources Closer to the Client, Lowers the IBM Integration Point and Enables Integration Where It Counts

 

[GRAPHIC]

 



Summary

 

            IBM is targeting growth where technology drives the creation of business value

 

            We have crafted business and infrastructure solutions that differentiate our ability to create value for our clients

 

                  We have heavily invested in new growth opportunities

 

•   Business and Infrastructure Solutions

 

•   Business Performance Transformation Services

 

•   Emerging Markets

 

    Emerging Business Opportunities

 

      We have increased our efficiency and effectiveness in how we go to market

 



 

[LOGO]

 



Non-GAAP Financial Measures

 

In an effort to provide investors with additional information regarding certain financial measures as determined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), the Company also discloses the following non-GAAP information which management believes provides useful information to investors:

 

                  Management refers to growth rates at constant currency or adjusting for currency so that the business results can be viewed without the impact of changing foreign currency exchange rates, thereby facilitating period-to-period comparisons of the Company’s businesses.  Generally, when the dollar either strengthens or weakens against other currencies, the growth at constant currency rates or adjusting for currency will be higher or lower than growth reported at actual exchange rates.

 

                  Management’s model with respect to cash from operations excludes the effect of Global Financing Receivables.  For a financing business, increasing receivables is the basis for growth.  Receivables are viewed as an investment and an income-producing asset. Therefore, management presents financing receivables as an investing activity, which has the effect of lowering cash from operations.  Management’s view is that this presentation gives the investor the best perspective of cash available for investment or for distribution to shareholders.

 



                  Management has presented historical and forecasted retirement related income/expense excluding a one-time charge recorded in 2004 for the partial settlement of certain legal claims related to IBM’s pension plan. Given the unique and non-recurring nature of this charge, management believes that presenting such financial items without the charge is useful to investors in better understanding the company’s business performance. Management further believes that investors’understanding is enhanced when the year-to-year dynamics associated with pension cost is rendered explicit.  Therefore, while giving appropriate prominence to the GAAP based financial measures, the Company believes it is appropriate and useful to investors to include these non-GAAP measures.

 



                  Management has presented certain financial results excluding the effects of special actions in 1999 and 2002. Given the unique and non-recurring nature of these items (both gains and losses), management believes that presenting certain financial results without the effects of such actions is more representative of the company’s operational performance and year-over-year dynamics.

 

                  Additionally, certain financial results have been restated to reflect the company’s adoption of expensing of stock based compensation in 2005. However, given certain data limitations, selected financial results (gross margin and expense to revenue ratio) from 1995 –2000 have been presented without the effects of equity compensation in those years.

 

                  Management uses return on invested capital (ROIC) as a measure of how effectively we allocate our capital and measure our profitability. Since ROIC is a measure of return on invested capital, interest expense is excluded to isolate the return earned on capital prior to payment (interest) to the debt holders.

 



 

Reconciliation Of Gross Profit Margin (Gpm) And Expense To Revenue Ratio (E:r), Excluding Special Actions

 

 

 

1999

 

2002

 

 

 

%

 

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

GPM, excluding effects of Special Actions

 

37.2

 

36.6

 

Effects of Special Actions

 

(0.2

)

 

GPM

 

37.0

 

36.6

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

E:R, excluding effects of Special Actions

 

26.4

 

26.7

 

Effects of Special Actions

 

(3.5

)

2.7

 

E:R

 

22.9

 

29.4

 

 



Reconciliation Of Retirement- Related Expense

 

 

 

2003
Actual

 

2004
Actual

 

2005
Estimated

 

 

 

$(B)

 

$(B)

 

$(B)

 

Retirement-Related Expense, excluding  One-time Pension Settlement Charge

 

0.4

 

1.1

 

2.2

 

One-Time Pension Settlement Charge

 

 

0.3

 

 

Retirement-Related Expense

 

0.4

 

1.4

 

2.2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

B/(W) Yr/Yr - Retirement-Related Expense, excluding One-time Pension Settlement Charge*

 

 

 

(0.8

)

(1.0

)

One-Time Pension Settlement Charge

 

 

 

(0.3

)

0.3

 

B/(W) Yr/Yr - Retirement-Related Expense*

 

 

 

(1.1

)

(0.7

)

 


*May not add due to rounding