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Home Archives for Mutable Thinking
Clarity, Cloud, and Culture Change at IBM

April 16, 2020 By David Terrar

Clarity, Cloud, and Culture Change at IBM

As we all know “business as usual” just changed for every person, team and organisation on the planet. In this “new normal” there are plenty of lessons to learn, unlearn and relearn. Essentially, we need to keep calm and carry on, at the same time as recognising the significant new opportunities this throws up alongside the common problems we are all facing. With that backdrop IBM just made a very significant change, the timing of which was prescribed before these new events overtook us. A new CEO, Arvind Krishna, took the reins on Monday 6 April. I’d like to comment on the new direction this signals, as well as the implications of the other management changes and strategic points that are described in the open letter he wrote to all employees on his first day in the job. I must disclose that I have a soft spot for the IBM company as I worked there and first learned about business for nine years straight out of University. I lived through a good CEO and a bad CEO, but that’s a story for another time. For me the changes that are already happening in the new guy’s first week trigger a realignment, the continuation of a significant culture change, and the clear consolidation of the company’s strategy.

Arvind’s predecessor, Ginny Rometty, has been helping IBM shift gears over the last couple of years, handing off collaboration and other software products to HCL, repositioning their approach to the Cloud after some early missteps, mentioning the Watson brand a bit less and AI and cognitive a bit more, and then making the most significant acquisition in their history – $34Bn for Red Hat, which finalised last year. A move that massively positions IBM at the heart of the open source world. Insiders tell me her last internal video briefing got a bit emotional as she passed on the baton. Combined with Arvind’s open letter what does it all mean?

In the letter Arvind references the mainframe and other successful platforms in their history, and he says:

“I believe now is the time to build a fourth platform in hybrid cloud. An essential, ubiquitous hybrid cloud platform our clients will rely on to do their most critical work in this century. A platform that can last even longer than the others.”

Putting aside what he talks about as platforms two and three, he is quite rightly referencing that IBM “owned” and still owns the mainframe market and has been strong with other products, platforms and services too, but what he is really making clear is their intention to occupy the mission critical, hybrid multi-cloud applications space. He goes on to spell out the strategy in three clear steps:

“First, we have to deepen our understanding of IBM’s two strategic battles: the journey to hybrid cloud and AI. We all need to understand and leverage IBM’s sources of competitive advantage. Namely, our open source and security leadership, our deep expertise and trust, and the fact that we enable clients to build mission-critical applications once and run them anywhere.

Second, we have to win the architectural battle in cloud. There’s a unique window of opportunity for IBM and Red Hat to establish Linux, containers and Kubernetes as the new standard. We can make Red Hat OpenShift the default choice for hybrid cloud in the same way that Red Hat Enterprise Linux is the default choice for the operating system.

Third, we all must be obsessed with continually delighting our clients. At every interaction, we must strive to offer them the best experience and value. The only way to lead in today’s ever-changing marketplace is to constantly innovate according to what our clients want and need.”

I particularly like the continuous innovation message made explicit that underpins the third strand of the strategy. I understand from IBM insiders he has doubled down on the hybrid story and his intent with further internal videos. Importantly, Krishna comes from a technical rather than sales or operations background, ran IBM’s cloud and cognitive software unit and was the architect of the Red Hat purchase. This isn’t any sort of pivot or change from the recent direction of travel, it’s just laying it out with refined clarity. IBM have been saying for a while that the easy 20% of workloads have moved to the cloud, but the next 80% are the complex, legacy style applications, often mainframe based, that have been running banking, credit card transactions, big business and big retail for decades. IBM’s track record with those customers and that style of secure, mission-critical application marries up with the strategy to make Red Hat OpenShift and containers as the standard choice for an enterprise customer’s hybrid “develop once, deploy anywhere” multi-cloud strategy, making IBM an attractive proposition compared to the typical choice of public cloud providers. IBM can see a big revenue opportunity for the next generation of cloud applications beyond the straightforward public cloud infrastructure market, maybe even bigger and longer lasting than the mainframe market.

Microsoft with Azure are obvious competition in the hybrid multi-cloud space, along with some of the other players, but maybe the closest to IBM’s platform strategy are VMware, now part of Dell EMC. Thereby hangs an interesting proposition and internal coopetition challenge for IBM. They have a significant amount of revenue in customers using VMware – they will have to balance those revenues with Red Hat OpenShift inside the cloud and cognitive software business and make it work.

And that leads me to the next key point, which is the significance of two of the leadership changes Arvind just announced. Jim Whitehurst, who was the CEO of Red Hat, in his new role as President, will head IBM Strategy as well as the Cloud and Cognitive Software unit which Arvind used to run. This is effectively splitting Ginny’s role between Arvind and Jim, and importantly bringing the Cloud and Cognitive Software unit both under Jim’s wing and direct into the CEO. Intriguingly it means Jim is directly managing that coopetition between VMware and Red Hat OpenShift. It also means Jim will have a huge and direct influence on the culture of IBM right now rather than at some point in the future as the next potential “CEO in waiting” for the company. The other leadership surprise was bringing in Howard Boville from Bank of America to become Senior Vice President in charge of the IBM Cloud Platform. An outsider from both IBM and Red Hat. A customer. A CTO. A fresh set of eyes.

How will Jim influence the IBM culture? To try and understand that question I’ve just started reading his book The Open Organization: Igniting Passion and Performance. The foreword by Gary Hamel is very much my cup of tea and sets the scene beautifully. Here are the first two sentences:

“Here’s a conundrum. The human capabilities that are most critical to success – the ones that can help your organization become more resilient, more creative, and more, well, awesome – are precisely the ones that can’t be managed.”

The foreword, obviously written before the acquisition like the rest of the book, goes on to explain how Red Hat is one of the small but growing number of companies that have transcended the old trade-offs between scale and agility, efficiency and innovation, and discipline and empowerment. I’m only a few chapters in, and Jim’s whole message of why opening up your organisation matters is coming across loud and clear. And he’s bringing that to IBM.

One of the IBM insiders was telling me earlier today about an open “Ask Me Anything” internal Slack session that Arvind had just set up for that day. They went on to tell me how everyone is aligned to and excited by the new strategy.

IBM’s been around for 109 years. It’s been through ups and downs and the elephant has learned to dance. This might be one of the most significant weeks in its history as it sets foot on the path to “opening up”, with a refined and defined market differentiation, and a clear and transparently explained strategy.

This post was first published at Bloor Research. Agile Elephant is a strategic partner of Bloor Research. To find out more, please contact us.

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Filed Under: leadership, shared values, strategy Tagged With: Arvind Krishna, culture change, IBM, Mutable Thinking, open business

We need to shift from Linear Thinking to Mutable Thinking

April 2, 2020 By David Terrar

We need to shift from Linear Thinking to Mutable Thinking

Only a few weeks ago many of us at the forefront of analysing, influencing and telling the story of the amazing technological changes that make up the “Fourth Industrial Revolution” would be explaining that we are living in one of the most exhilarating times in human history. We might even have joked using the Chinese proverb, or is it a curse, “May you live in interesting times”. In the course of those few weeks things got very interesting. The dramatic spread of COVID-19 has disrupted lives, livelihoods, communities and businesses worldwide. Even with all of the knowledge most of us had at the start of March, did many of us imagine we would be where we are today, as I write this “locked down” in my home on the last day of March 2020? The most significant part of the problem is that we humans have 200,000 years of evolutionary circumstances and thinking that happened in a linear way. Our minds have been conditioned to changes in speed, growth, the climate and our environment in easily digestible steps. We think in terms of steps, not step change, but to survive in this new world we need to think differently.

Technological change has always been a numbers game, and the numbers are big. If we talk about a minute on the Internet BC (before COVID-19) then across the world 4,497,200 Google searches were conducted, 18,100,000 texts were sent, 55,100 photos were shared on Instagram, 188,000,000 emails were sent, 231,800 Skype calls were made, and for that minute 4,500,000 people were watching videos on YouTube. That only covers a few of the world’s social media and technology platforms, and those numbers will all have changed significantly in the last Month as so many of us have shifted from face to face meetings and working, to working from home or in isolation at home wanting to connect with family. Some of us are using online collaboration tools, communication mechanisms and certain social networks for the first time. As hunter gatherers or farmers as well as feeling ourselves age, or watching a single animal or tree grow, we’ve been used to looking at a massive herd, or a deep forest, or the size of an ocean – we can deal with big numbers too.

“we can deal with big too”

Where our conditioning gets in the way is grappling with exponential change. I’ve heard this explained with lilies growing to fill a pond, or with the fable of the origins of chess and grains of rice on the board. I’ll use a passage lifted out of the book Abundance, The Future Is Better Than You Think by Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler:

To give you a sense of the difference, if I take thirty linear steps (calling one step a meter) from the front door of my Santa Monica home, I end up thirty meters away. However, if I take thirty exponential steps (one, two, four, eight, sixteen, thirty- two, and so on), I end up a billion meters away, or, effectively lapping the globe twenty-six times.”

Let me just amplify the magnitude of difficulty here. After seven exponential “steps”, that’s a quarter of the “steps”, you’d only be 127 meters away, but when you get to that last exponential “step” it would take you 13 times around the globe. The problem with exponential versus linear is that nothing much happens for a while, then you reach a cusp, and then the rate of change is massive. Easy to visualise as a graph, but much more difficult to get your head around in human terms. A virus that first infected someone aged 55 in Hubei province, China on 17 November 2019, that can generally infect two or three people once you’ve got it, is now teaching us all about the power of exponential change. As long ago as 2015 the likes of Bill Gates warned us of the danger of such a pandemic. What should we have done?

My answer is that we need to learn and think differently. We need to shift from a linear perspective to thinking exponentially. We call it Mutable Thinking.

Those of us in the “digital transformation” business have been learning from the military and talking VUCA for a while. Nobody will argue against the volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity that we all face now. Let’s explore some of those ingredients. As we’ve advanced through the industrial revolutions to this fourth one, our business world has steadily moved through levels of complicated, but now it’s complex. What’s the difference? Complicated can be controlled. Complicated might be difficult, but there are a set of rules to be to be understood – instructions, recipes, and algorithms all ripe for the application of machine learning and AI. There are linear pathways that allow us to identify individual causes for observed effects. Complicated can be controlled with a mindset of efficiency. We can reduce the problem to steps, and with enough computing power and the right data we can make solid predictions, improve the process or even solve the problem completely. Complex is different. Complex problems involve too many unknowns, and too many variables and interrelated factors to be reduced to a set of rules and processes. Complex means patterns that don’t repeat themselves regularly. Complex defies forecasting and brings in the unexpected with radical uncertainty. Complex needs to be managed in a different way. Complex needs a different mindset.

In today’s VUCA landscape we believe that successful organisations need to be a Mutable Business™, meaning that they can successfully transform in a continuous way. You can find out more about the business, people and technology ingredients that make up our recommended approach, but let’s discuss the need for a different mindset to support it. You need exponential thinking in place of linear thinking, a different kind of leadership, and a different kind of culture – we call it Mutable Thinking. We see today’s successful leaders have a different set of characteristics and values that they encourage at all levels of their organisation:

  • Unlimited mindset
  • Strong team cohesion
  • Unbounded culture
  • Inspirational leadership
  • Strong sense of purpose
  • Passion in what they are doing

With complicated shifting to complex, the planning horizon is dramatically reduced and predicting the future is impossible. If it’s uncharted, that means you can only map it when you get there. As a Mutable Thinker you embrace the fact you can’t plan for an unknown future, but you know that you can be prepared for it. We can beat 200,000 years of evolutionary conditioning on linear thinking because of the other key factor that Darwin taught us. The species that survives is the one that’s most adaptable to the new conditions. In this uncharted future, what are the characteristics that will help us? We need to:

  • Expect the unexpected and prepare for many possibilities
  • Think in a “team of teams” way, forming partnerships, building coalitions, looking for ecosystems that can help, both inside and outside the organisation
  • Use our imagination – it is combining new ideas, fostering innovation and finding the right new things to do that are much more important than efficiency and doing the old things right
  • Allow experimentation, allow our people to fail and learn from the process
  • Be brave and stand for something

Over the last week we’ve heard some amazing and positive news stories to set against the bad news of the global pandemic and the readjustment of the world economy that will come. In the UK 700,000 people volunteering to help the NHS in a matter of a few days. Acts of community encouraging the nation to collectively thank the NHS front line staff a few days ago or helping the most at risk get deliveries of the food and medicine they need. The development of a Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) breathing aid that can help keep COVID-19 patients avoid intensive care, adapted by mechanical engineers at UCL, clinicians at UCLH working with Mercedes-AMG F1 engineers to create a state-of-the-art version suited to mass production and approved by NHS in less than two weeks. Kings College London launching a new app on 24 March which maps and tracks symptoms related to COVID-19, allowing anyone to self-report daily, that already has one 1.5 million users and counting, giving us fresh data and insights to help combat the disease. All of this thinking signposts the different mindset that all of us should be considering in making our businesses more successful going forwards. We need to shift from Linear Thinking to Mutable Thinking.

This post was first published at Bloor Research. Agile Elephant is a strategic partner of Bloor Research. To find out more, please contact us.

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Filed Under: Think Differently Tagged With: disruption, Exponential Thinking, Fourth Industrial Revolution, mutable business, Mutable Thinking, preparedness, VUCA

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