The tech giant saw revenue rise 8% for the first quarter of the year, as demand for its hybrid cloud software and consulting services spiked. Credit: Foundry IBM posted strong revenue numbers to start the year, as CEO Arvind Krishna continues to focus the company on hybrid cloud and AI. This was the first quarter IBM reported results since it spun out its managed infrastructure services business under the new name of Kyndryl. That business still contributed 5% of total revenue growth for the quarter but won’t count against IBM results from October, Krishna told analysts. Revenue for the first quarter of 2022 was $14.2 billion, which was up 8% from 2021 and beat analyst expectations of $13.9 billion. Net income from continuing operations jumped 64% to $662 million. IBM shares rose 3% on the news in after-market trading Tuesday evening. Krishna took over as CEO in April 2020, around a year after IBM closed its acquisition of Red Hat and started a pivot to helping customers run hybrid cloud. “Harnessing the power of technology such as hybrid cloud and AI remains essential as our clients face a number of strategic challenges and opportunities, whether it’s competing for talent, supply chain issues, inflation, cybersecurity or geopolitical instability,” Krishna told analysts after the results were announced. Both IBM’s software and consulting segments saw strong revenue growth, with software generating $5.8 billion, which was up 12% year-on-year, and consulting contributing $4.8 billion, which was up 13%. Infrastructure revenue fell slightly to $3.2 billion. IBM only recently announced its next-generation z16 mainframe, which will be available from May 31 this year. IBM also shed its Watson Health division this quarter, with CFO James Kavanaugh telling analysts that the expected divestiture is already included in the company’s improved guidance for the rest of the year. “IBM is now a very different company,” Krishna told analysts. “We have in effect changed our company’s trajectory and while much remains to be done, we are beginning to reap the rewards of our hard-earned efforts and we are confident in our trajectory for the year.” Related content news Google spurs US to ease immigration rules for tech talent Citing a US talent shortage, the tech giant has urged the Department of Labor to expand Schedule A occupations to include AI, software engineering, and cybersecurity roles. By Sascha Brodsky May 01, 2024 4 mins H-1B Visas Hiring Technology Industry brandpost Sponsored by Cisco Reduce your network complexity with AI Jumpstart your AI-enabled network transformation now to achieve multiple benefits. By Matt Landry May 01, 2024 5 mins Networking brandpost Sponsored by SAP Internet startup launches while embracing adoption Internet provider Brightspeed had to replicate information from its SAP solutions to AI-ready, data analytics platform Google BigQuery. SAP’s adoption strategy helped empower the company to become an intelligent enterprise. By Keith Elliot Greenberg, SAP Contributor May 01, 2024 4 mins Digital Transformation feature Expectations vs. reality: A real-world check on generative AI Now with the benefit of hindsight, organizations are more aware of moving cautiously to ensure gen AI delivers rather than disappoints. By Mary Branscombe May 01, 2024 11 mins Microsoft Generative AI Development Tools PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe