IBM: Education, Opportunity, and Lessons in Loyalty
Introduction
I worked with IBM Printing Systems Division in Australia from June 1996 until April 2001, following several years with an IBM RS/6000 Business Partner. Looking back, IBM was more than an employer. It was an education in technology, business, people, and the realities of corporate life.
The experience shaped much of my career and provided lessons that remained relevant long after I left the company.
Taking the Leap
My move to IBM was driven by both opportunity and necessity.
At the time I was living in Sydney while being paid on Brisbane salary levels. Rising living costs were making life increasingly difficult. When my rent jumped from $250 to $360 per week in a single increase, I remember wondering how I was going to make the numbers work. Today, that same apartment would likely command many times that amount.
When I resigned, the CEO warned me that joining IBM would be a mistake and would damage my IT career.
It did neither.
Instead, IBM broadened my horizons, expanded my technical capabilities, introduced me to talented people around the world, and provided opportunities I would never otherwise have experienced. In those earlier days I was across most components of IT – routers, modems, printers, soldering wires, Unix, business software etc. I traveled all over Brisbane, then Sydney, using my street directory to find locations.
Learning the IBM Way
IBM has often been described as an education rather than simply a workplace. I found that description accurate.
The company taught technical skills, but it also taught professional discipline.
Face-to-face communication mattered. Public enquiries were answered regardless of who was calling. If someone needed assistance, it was your responsibility to help or find someone who could. Returning calls promptly was expected. Professionalism was not treated as a slogan but as part of everyday work.
Even today I can often recognise former IBM employees by the way they carry themselves. There was a culture of professionalism that left a lasting impression.
Advanced Function Printing and Technical Growth
Much of my work centred on IBM’s Advanced Function Printing (AFP) architecture, problem management, and production printing systems.
Alongside this, I provided AIX technical support and assisted sales teams with technical solutions involving IBM systems and software.
The work exposed me to a broad range of technologies and industries. It also brought me into contact with IBM laboratories and specialists around the world, including colleagues in Boulder, Colorado.
My overseas travel was never based on status. It was based on usefulness to the business. That lesson alone was valuable. Organisations invest where they see value being created.
Recognition and Achievement
During my time with IBM I received several awards, including recognition that placed me among the top four percent of performers.
Printing and mailing technologies were major industries in the United States during that era. At one conference in Orlando, the industry was large enough to support its own dedicated television coverage.
I also travelled to Wiltshire in England to study IBM archival technologies that were used extensively by banks and large organisations, including institutions in Australia.
These experiences reinforced how widely technology influences everyday business operations, often unseen by the people who rely on it.
Projects That Endured
One of the greatest satisfactions of my career has been discovering that some projects remained operational for decades.
A project I worked on for Qantas involved moving legacy data from a Unisys mainframe environment using SNA communications onto Ethernet-connected IBM RS/6000 systems. The solution supported overnight maintenance documentation for aircraft servicing operations.
Other projects served major Australian businesses and financial institutions for many years after implementation.
While I contributed to those solutions, I remain conscious that many experienced professionals took the time to teach me, challenge me, and expand my understanding along the way.
Becoming a Solutions Architect
Over time I realised that one of my strengths was seeing what could exist before it had been built.
I was often comfortable making decisions in situations where others hesitated. I could visualise systems, data flows, and outcomes before development commenced.
These capabilities contributed to my eventual recognition as a Solutions Architect by IBM both in Australia and internationally.
That said, many architects possessed highly specialised skills that exceeded my own in particular areas. What made the experience rewarding was working alongside talented people with different strengths and perspectives.
Lessons from High-Pressure Projects
Many projects involved intense pressure, difficult timelines, and competing opinions.
On one major engagement I worked closely with IBM laboratories and management teams in Boulder. We were making measurable progress when senior management changed the delivery timeline.
From a technical perspective I knew the revised schedule could not succeed. Alternative approaches were proposed that I believed had little chance of working.
Rather than argue endlessly, I continued advancing the solution that was producing results. Eventually the revised timetable collapsed and the original work delivered a successful outcome.
Experiences like this taught me that confidence should come from evidence, not hierarchy.
An example of pressure:
The Qantas project involved moving legacy data from a Unisys mainframe environment using SNA communications onto Ethernet-connected IBM RS/6000 systems. The solution supported overnight maintenance documentation for aircraft servicing operations.
The project was not without controversy. A senior IBM engineer repeatedly phoned me, sometimes angrily, insisting the design would not work. The difficulty was that there was no practical alternative. The RS/6000 hardware available to us had a specific path from SNA into Ethernet, and the business requirement remained unchanged. The data still had to move between Melbourne, Sydney, and the associated printing systems.
I reviewed the documentation repeatedly and could find no technical basis for the objections. The engineering reality was straightforward: either this solution worked, or there was no solution. Despite the criticism, we proceeded. The engineer had no advice or alternative to propose.
The system worked exactly as intended.
That experience taught me an important lesson. Technical discussions should be settled by evidence, testing, and engineering facts—not by who speaks the loudest. Confidence is useful, but proof is better.
The Human Side of Information Technology
Technology projects are often portrayed as technical challenges. In reality, most are human challenges.
Throughout my career I observed extraordinary professionalism and, occasionally, disappointing behaviour.
I saw people work heroically under pressure. I saw individuals refuse to share knowledge for fear of losing influence. I saw organisations promise outcomes that were technically impossible. I saw others openly admit what they did not know and work collaboratively toward a solution.
One project faced a looming penalty of $100,000 per month. The breakthrough came not from technology but from creating an environment where people felt comfortable sharing ideas without fear of criticism.
Once a viable direction emerged, progress accelerated rapidly.
Again and again I found that people solved problems when they felt safe enough to contribute.
Loyalty, Redundancy, and Reality
As the years passed, IBM changed.
Large-scale redundancies became common. Many talented employees lost positions with little warning. I witnessed people reduced to tears after years of dedicated service.
The experience altered perceptions about loyalty.
Veteran IBM employees openly acknowledged that the traditional relationship between employer and employee had changed. Loyalty could no longer be assumed to flow in both directions.
Years later, when I left IBM Global Services, someone remarked that there really was life after IBM.
They were right.
When Work Stops Being Healthy
My final year in Solutions Architecture was the most difficult period of my IBM career.
The role became heavily focused on timesheets, utilisation metrics, and administrative control. Research, reflection, and technical exploration—activities essential to architecture work—were increasingly discouraged.
Architects were expected to deliver complex outcomes within unrealistic constraints while having limited authority over design decisions.
For the first time in my career, I felt trapped.
The experience reinforced an important lesson: professional success is meaningless if it comes at the expense of wellbeing.
Too many people find themselves moving towards burnout, depression, or physical illness because workplace demands become excessive and relentless.
It is a reality that deserves greater attention.
Life After IBM
When I left IBM, one thing became immediately obvious.
I no longer had access to the immense pool of developers, specialists, documentation, and institutional knowledge that had surrounded me for years.
The absence was noticeable.
Yet leaving also brought financial relief. For the first time in my career I experienced a salary that allowed me to move beyond merely surviving from one pay cycle to the next. I was able to eliminate debt and build some financial stability.
That experience left me with a deep appreciation for the financial pressures many people face every day.
My follow-on years led me to new local and overseas projects, utilising my past skills and experience.
Final Reflections
My career in information technology exposed me to banks, manufacturers, hotels, libraries, insurers, transport operators, telecommunications providers, and many other industries.
I learned about systems, architecture, and technology.
More importantly, I learned about people.
I learned that expertise matters, but character matters more.
I learned that some people lead through fear while others lead through trust.
I learned that loyalty has limits, professionalism endures, and good people are often the reason projects succeed.
IBM was not perfect.
No organisation is.
But it provided an education that shaped my career, broadened my perspective, and left me with lessons that remain valuable to this day.