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Techaisle Analyst Insights

Trusted research and strategic insight decoding SMBs, the Midmarket, and the Partner Ecosystem.
Anurag Agrawal

IBM Think 2026: The Operationalization Premium and the New Math of Enterprise AI

Two years into the generative AI gold rush, the spreadsheet is starting to call the question. IBM's own CEO study, released around Think 2026, found that only 25% of enterprise AI initiatives are delivering expected ROI, and just 16% have scaled enterprise-wide. Techaisle's own GenAI adoption research confirms the same gap from the buyer side: midmarket organizations plan a 27% average increase in GenAI spending for 2026, yet 45% of mid-sized firms remain stuck in pilot purgatory, unable to move workloads into production.

The capital has moved. The returns have not.

This is the gap Arvind Krishna walked onto the Boston stage to occupy. His framing was simple and, in its way, audacious. “The enterprises pulling ahead are not deploying more AI. They are redesigning how their business operates.” That sentence reframes the entire industry conversation. Not better models. Not bigger clusters. Not cheaper tokens. A different operating model.

It also reframes IBM.

Last year, after the IBM Analyst Forum, in September 2025, Techaisle defined IBM as the Vertical Integrator of Transformation, a company that owns the foundation (Red Hat OpenShift), the components (watsonx), and the factory (IBM Consulting), and ties them together with a single point of accountability. That frame held. Twelve months later, IBM has done something harder than extending it. The company has made the integration itself the product.

I am calling this evolution the Operationalization Premium: the durable economic advantage that accrues to vendors who solve the boring, expensive, regulated middle of enterprise AI, the part hyperscalers and frontier labs largely cede. Think 2026 was not a model launch. It was the most coherent operating-system play any incumbent has made for the agentic enterprise. The question for the next year is whether IBM can charge for it.

techaisle ibm think 2026

The Thesis: AI as an Operating Model, Not a Capability

IBM's central claim at Think 2026 is that enterprise AI failures are not model problems. They are architecture problems. Models are commodified. Inference will continue to fall. What organizations cannot buy off the shelf is the operating layer that lets agents act on connected data inside a governed infrastructure, with auditable outcomes.

IBM is now organizing its entire portfolio around four interlocking systems: agents, data, automation, and hybrid. The framing is not new; every firm has some version of it. What is new is that IBM has a product in the market across all four, with credible proof points, and a thesis that explicitly links them.

The boldness sits in the second-order claim. IBM is betting that the differentiated economic value of enterprise AI will not be captured at the model layer at all. That bet looks more credible the longer the ROI gap persists.

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IBM
Anurag Agrawal

16 Provocations from 5,450 Channel Partners

The channel has split into two economies. Most partner programs serve one.

We surveyed 5,450 channel partner firms across 24 topic sections and 144 questions, with multiple respondents per firm matched to the subject matter their role actually owns. Marketing leaders answered co-marketing. Technical leaders answered AI capability. Finance leaders answered margin and ARR. Quotas were set by partner type and revenue band, drawn from Techaisle's proprietary global network of 250,000 partners. The findings represent both business model and scale, and they are sharper than what single-respondent channel research can produce.

What came back is 16 provocations. Each one is a finding the data forced. Each one has an implication a vendor program owner has to act on, or accept the cost of not acting on. The provocations are not predictions. They describe a channel that has already changed. The question is whether your program has.

techaisle 16 provocations from 5450 channel partners

Anurag Agrawal

Dell Stopped Selling Boxes. It Started Selling the Place Where Tokens Run.

Michael Dell opened Dell Technologies World with a line that sounded like theater but was actually a strategy: just as electricity transformed the world when it left the power plant, AI will transform the world when it leaves the screen. With intelligence becoming infrastructure, the job now is to make it real, local, secure, and useful, whether that is on an oil rig, in an ambulance, or on the factory floor.

The most revealing moment came a day later, when Jeff Clarke admitted that his own engineers burned through a month's worth of allocated tokens in a few hours. This happened not because something broke, but because it worked perfectly. Put those two moments together, and you have the entire event's thesis. Michael Dell named the destination (intelligence everywhere it is needed), while Clarke named the bill that arrives when you get there. Ultimately, what Dell announced was not a refresh cycle; it was a bet on where intelligence physically lives, and who pays the meter to run it.

techaisle dell dtw 2026

The number that should reset every infrastructure budget

From the keynote stage, Jeff Clarke cited figures that framed everything that followed: token prices have fallen roughly 80% year over year, yet consumption for reasoning has surged 320-fold. Furthermore, inference, not training, now accounts for nearly two-thirds of all AI compute. Whatever the underlying sources of this data, the direction is indisputable and directly mirrors what Techaisle has been tracking from the buyer side all year.

Reading those numbers together leads to an unavoidable conclusion: the unit cost of intelligence is collapsing, yet total spend is accelerating. This is the exact pattern Techaisle named Token Shock. We've seen this curve before with bandwidth, storage, and compute, where cheaper units unlock so much new consumption that the overall bill climbs anyway. What sets this era apart is the sheer speed, as no one has seen a cost curve bend this quickly.

The strategic consequence, and the line Clarke delivered that should be sitting in every CFO conversation, is that as agents take on more cognitive work, costs migrate from headcount to tokens. Historically, cognitive work scaled with human hours; if you wanted more analysis, you hired more analysts. Agentic AI has broken that ratio entirely. Techaisle data puts a number on how far it has already shifted: the Agent-to-Human Ratio has reached 144-to-1 in the midmarket and 59-to-1 in small businesses. With the agentic workforce already deployed at that density, it's alarming that most of the operating models meant to govern it still assume a payroll rather than a token budget.

Dell's actual announcement was an answer to "Where"

Across both keynotes, one question sat underneath every announcement: where should a given token run?

Anurag Agrawal

IBM's Partner Ecosystem at Think 2026: Kareem Yusuf, Ph.D and the Curation Doctrine

The channel is rewriting its own economics, and most vendor partner programs have not caught up. Techaisle's 2026 Global Channel Partner Survey, N=5,450 across the United States, EMEA, APJC, and LATAM, captures the pivot in detail. Partners are moving from horizontal-platform resale to vertical solutioning, from transaction-led incentives to lifecycle-tied economics, from open marketplaces to curated agent catalogs, and from one-vendor loyalty to partner-to-partner delivery networks. The vendor programs that still pay primarily at the deal close, fund primarily through legacy MDF, and tier primarily on past revenue are now structurally misaligned with where partner economics are heading.

Kareem Yusuf, Ph.D., Senior Vice President, Ecosystem, Strategic Partners & Initiatives at IBM, sees this clearly. At Think 2026 in Boston, his partner keynote and the analyst meetings around it laid out one of the most analytically rigorous channel resets any large incumbent has put forward this year. The substance was a deliberate redesign of how IBM identifies, equips, compensates, and scales its partner ecosystem, anchored in three personas, a scoring-based partner selection model, a curated agent catalog, and a hard-edged client segmentation framework.

techaisle ibm think ecosystem

What stood out in the analyst sessions around the keynote was the analytical depth of how Yusuf thinks about partner programs. He talks about partner enablement for transformational AI in the midmarket as a multi-quarter build, with the IPP scoring and Agent Catalog as the foundation rather than the finish. He has rethought the legacy 50%-channel-revenue target and replaced it with a far more rigorous target tied to product mix, customer segment, and lifecycle context. The shift in framing is itself the signal: this is an ecosystem leader treating channel design as an engineering discipline rather than a marketing function.

This is what a serious ecosystem reset looks like.

I am calling Yusuf's approach the Curation Doctrine: the deliberate substitution of partner quality, fit, and workflow alignment for the partner-counting, revenue-shaping, MDF-pumping reflexes that have dominated channel programs for two decades. The Curation Doctrine is not a marketing posture. It is an operating model, with five components, real proof points on stage at Think 2026, and a multi-year execution arc that is one year in. It is also the most analytically rigorous channel strategy any large incumbent has put forward at this scale in 2026.

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