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Kyndryl Aligns with Microsoft in the Cloud

Following its spinout from IBM, Kyndryl has allied with Microsoft to increase the scope of IT services it provides on the Azure public cloud.

Stephen Leonard, leader of global alliances and partnerships for Kyndryl, said that as part of this initiative, Kyndryl will be expanding the scope of the services it provides to both organizations building and deploying applications as well as those looking to migrate existing applications to the Microsoft Azure cloud.

Over time, Kyndryl will expand its cloud services to include additional public clouds as part of a larger effort to enable organizations to embrace a hybrid cloud approach to enterprise IT that spans multiple on-premises and cloud computing environments.

In the meantime, as part of the first partnership established by Kyndryl, the two companies are committing to providing services to address data modernization and governance, security and application workloads infused with artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities. The two companies also plan to establish a co-innovation lab. Microsoft is also committing to establishing a Kyndryl University for Microsoft.

Leonard said given the overall shortage of IT expertise, more organizations than ever are relying on external IT services to, for example, accelerate application development. Kyndryl plans to work with those organizations to best evaluate where specific classes of application workloads might best be deployed, he noted.

It’s become increasingly clear that more organizations are attempting to integrate third-party IT services within DevOps workflows. In some cases, that means standardizing on an opinionated DevOps workflow defined by the IT services provider. In other cases, the IT services provider is focused on a specific task such as securely provisioning infrastructure on behalf of developers.

Regardless of the approach, however, DevOps workflows are evolving into a team sport made up of both internal and external IT professionals that are trying to bridge the cultural divide that always exists between different organizations. Which IT services provider organizations ultimately select often has as much to do with how flexible they are from a cultural perspective as much as it does their technical expertise.

For its part, Microsoft is counting on IT services providers such as Kyndryl to increase the total number of workloads running on its cloud. Now that Kyndryl is independent of IBM, it is free to establish partnerships that previously would have been more complex to navigate.

Of course, it’s up to each organization to determine the degree to which they prefer to work with a larger IT services provider versus a smaller rival that may specialize in one specific area or that is simply a better fit for a smaller company. The one thing that is certain is that as IT continues to become more complex, it’s not feasible for organizations to hire all the IT talent they require on a full-time basis. Organizations will need to carefully evaluate when it makes more sense to consume certain IT services as a function provided by someone else versus attempting to hire and retain talent to maintain that service themselves.

Mike Vizard

Mike Vizard is a seasoned IT journalist with over 25 years of experience. He also contributed to IT Business Edge, Channel Insider, Baseline and a variety of other IT titles. Previously, Vizard was the editorial director for Ziff-Davis Enterprise as well as Editor-in-Chief for CRN and InfoWorld.

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