Are there any other IBM employees or retirees that participate in this?

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Subject: Annual Meeting of Stockholders April 30, 2013 Huntsville Alabama
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http://www.ibm.com/investor/services/2013-report-on-the-company.wss#repo\
rtOnTheCompany
Ginni Rometty
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, IBM
2013 IBM Annual Meeting of Stockholders
April 30, 2013
Huntsville, Alabama
I will now provide a report on your company.
It is important to understand IBM's long term model. We are an
innovation company. This means that we pursue continuous transformation.
That is why IBM has been in existence for more than 100 years and why
we will thrive for another century. We pursue this
continuous-transformation model in six key ways.
First, we remix to higher value — in our portfolio, in our organic
R&D investment, and through targeted acquisitions and divestitures.
For example, two decades ago, 70 percent of our researchers were
working in materials science and hardware. Today, 60 percent are in
fields that support key growth areas, such as analytics and cloud
computing. All the while, we have continued to lead the world in
innovation — earning the most U.S. patents for 20 straight
years, with a record 6,478 in 2012.
Our balanced approach to acquisitions has built a strong track record
since 2000, with more than 140 acquisitions that complement our
portfolio and strategy. At the same time, we have divested almost
$15 billion of annual revenue over the past decade. If we had not done
so, we would be a larger company today, but with lower margins and
capabilities that are less valued by our clients.
Second, we make markets. We do so by category, such as new solutions
like MobileFirst, Social Business and Smarter Commerce, and new
systems categories, such as our PureSystems family. We also make markets
by enabling a new generation of IT buyers, from Chief Marketing
Officers to heads of Human Resources. And we make markets by geography
— opening 144 new branches in emerging markets in 2012 alone. This
is much more than setting up sales offices. It is about helping to
build the economic, technological and societal infrastructure that will
make entire regions competitive in the global economy — as we
are now doing across sub-Saharan Africa, including the opening of our
12th IBM Research lab in Nairobi, Kenya.
Third, we reinvent core franchises: Our System z enterprise server,
introduced in 2012, is just the latest reinvention of the mainframe,
and it drove System z's largest capacity shipment ever during the
fourth quarter. New workloads, including those on Linux, have crossed
over to become the majority of work for the mainframe. Another
example is in software, where core software platforms like WebSphere
have been entirely transformed.
Fourth, we remix our skills and expertise: Over the past three years we
have increased our skill base in analytics by more than 8,100 experts.
We have also added nearly 9,500 experts in high-growth industry areas -
such as healthcare, energy and banking.
Fifth, we reinvent the enterprise itself: In addition to continually
enhancing our productivity, we are taking the next step toward becoming
a Smarter Enterprise. This includes the application of analytics to
every part of our business. It also means using social technologies to
change how our employees work, learn and collaborate.
Sixth, we use our strong cash flow strategically: It fuels reinvestment
in the business and consistently strong returns to you, our owners
In 2012, this model produced solid results. Your company continued to
outperform our industry and the market at large. We achieved record
profit, record free cash flow and record earnings per share. This
marked 10 straight years of double-digit earnings-per-share growth.
While our revenues of $104.5 billion were flat at constant
currency, IBM's operating pre-tax income margin rose for the tenth
consecutive year—to 22.2 percent, up 12 points since 2000.
As I mentioned, our strong cash flow enables us to invest in the future
and return high value to you.
* In 2012 we invested $3.7 billion for 11 acquisitions in key areas
of software and services and $4.3 billion in net capital expenditures.
We spent $6.3 billion on R&D.
* We were able to return $15.8 billion to you—$12 billion through
share repurchases and $3.8 billion through dividends. Last year's
dividend increase was 13 percent, marking the 17th year in a row
in which we have raised our dividend, and the 97th consecutive year in
which we have paid one.
* And, as I announced earlier, we have extended those streaks by
increasing the dividend again, by 12 percent.
While we were not satisfied with some aspects of our results for the
first quarter of 2013, we continued to make progress on our Road Map
objectives — growing EPS by 8 percent, and returning $3.5
billion to you. Of our $70 billion goal for returns to investors
through dividends and share repurchases over the five years of our
2015 Road Map, we have already returned almost $40 billion to you.
To sustain a long-term innovation model in our industry, a company must
do more than accommodate major technology shifts. It must lead them.
IBM has done this repeatedly over the past century—not only
pioneering new technology models, but capturing the significant
economic value they create.
Today, another new wave is sweeping in—powered by analytics, mobile,
social and cloud technologies, and the so-called "Big Data" they
generate. This represents a major shift in information technology -
from the back office to the front office, into the core activities of
businesses, institution and societies.
We anticipated this shift with Smarter Planet, describing a world that
was becoming instrumented, interconnected and intelligent. In the five
years since its launch, the goal of building a Smarter Planet has
had a transformational impact both in the marketplace and inside IBM.
It has engaged leaders around the world in reimagining their
systems of retail, supply chain, healthcare, energy,
telecommunications, transportation, food, water, public safety and
more.
For IBM itself, Smarter Planet is not only driving growth, but also
speaking to IBMers' aspiration to be essential to each of our vital
constituencies. This is our purpose as an enterprise—to be
essential to our investors, our clients, our communities and our
partners in realizing their most ambitious hopes.
Being essential takes many forms.
* It means investing, through good times and bad, in the kind of
fundamental research that produces new capabilities for business,
society and individuals. Capabilities such as Watson, our
pioneering cognitive computer that isn't programmed, it learns.
* It means applying those breakthroughs to the world's most
important work. For instance, since its debut on Jeopardy!, Watson has
gone to medical school. It is learning from leading universities,
hospitals and healthcare providers, such as Columbia University,
Wellpoint Insurance and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center: how
to transform patient treatment... how to help healthcare professionals
become more productive... how to make better diagnostic decisions
about cancer and other highly complex diseases.
* Being essential also means helping our clients transform not just
their operations, but their roles — reimagining what it means to be
a police chief, a doctor, a marketer, a mayor.
* Being essential means reinventing not just how computers learn,
but how children are educated — as we are doing at our pioneering
Pathways in Technology Early College High School, or P-TECH, in
Brooklyn, N.Y. Cited by President Barack Obama in his 2013 State of the
Union address, this radical new educational model for grades 9-14
is being replicated by states across the U.S.
* Finally, being essential means engaging with the world in new, more
direct and human ways.
* One example is IBM's Corporate Service Corps, which is modeled on
the Peace Corps and is marking its fifth anniversary this year. Each
year, hundreds of our best and brightest employees collaborate with
community leaders, government officials and NGOs in emerging markets
around the world. More than 2,200 IBMers have deployed on more than
750 team assignments — on health care for poor women and children
in Nigeria; clean water and food safety in Vietnam; and economic
development in Ghana and Turkey — among many others.
* Another example is our Smarter Cities Challenge, launched in 2010
to help 100 cities address some of their most critical challenges.
Right now we're in the most active period in the program's history,
as we send teams to 15 cities in 12 weeks - from Porto Allegre, Brazil,
to Fresno, California.
The impact on communities of these initiatives has been extraordinary
— and the impact on IBMers has been just as powerful. Many describe
it as the most meaningful experience of their careers.
In closing, let me express my deep pride in the worldwide IBM team for
bringing us to where we are, and my gratitude to you, our shareholders,
for your unwavering support. I hope you share our excitement about
your company's continuous transformation and the way in which IBMers
are building a brighter future for our clients and a smarter
planet for us all.
Thank you.
--9-2199290256-1538173942=:6
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http://www.ibm.com/investor/services/2013-report-on-the-company.wss#reportOnTheCompany
Ginni Rometty
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, IBM
2013 IBM Annual Meeting of Stockholders
April 30, 2013
Huntsville, Alabama
I will now provide a report on your company.
It is important to understand IBM's long term model. We are an
innovation company. This means that we pursue continuous transformation.
That is why IBM has been in existence for more than 100 years and
why we will thrive for another century. We pursue this
continuous-transformation
model in six key ways.
First, we remix to higher value — in our portfolio, in our
organic R&D investment, and through targeted acquisitions and
divestitures.
For example, two decades ago, 70 percent of our researchers were
working in materials science and hardware. Today, 60 percent are in
fields
that support key growth areas, such as analytics and cloud
computing. All the while, we have continued to lead the world in
innovation — earning
the most U.S. patents for 20 straight years, with a record 6,478 in
2012.
Our balanced approach to acquisitions has built a strong track
record since 2000, with more than 140 acquisitions that complement our
portfolio
and strategy. At the same time, we have divested almost $15 billion
of annual revenue over the past decade. If we had not done so, we would
be a
larger company today, but with lower margins and capabilities that
are less valued by our clients.
Second, we make markets. We do so by category, such as new solutions like MobileFirst, Social Business and Smarter Commerce, and
new systems categories, such as our PureSystems family. We also make markets by enabling a new generation of IT buyers, from Chief Marketing
Officers to heads of Human Resources. And we make markets by geography
— opening 144 new branches in emerging markets in 2012 alone. This is
much more than setting up sales offices. It is about helping to
build the economic, technological and societal infrastructure that will
make entire
regions competitive in the global economy — as we are now doing
across sub-Saharan Africa, including the opening of our 12th IBM
Research lab in Nairobi,
Kenya.
Third, we reinvent core franchises: Our System z enterprise
server, introduced in 2012, is just the latest reinvention of the
mainframe,
and it drove System z's largest capacity shipment ever during the
fourth quarter. New workloads, including those on Linux, have crossed
over to
become the majority of work for the mainframe. Another example is in
software, where core software platforms like WebSphere have been
entirely transformed.
Fourth, we remix our skills and expertise: Over the past three years we have increased our skill base in analytics by more than 8,100 experts.
We have also added nearly 9,500 experts in high-growth industry areas - such as healthcare, energy and banking.
Fifth, we reinvent the enterprise itself: In addition to
continually enhancing our productivity, we are taking the next step
toward becoming a
Smarter Enterprise. This includes the application of analytics to
every part of our business. It also means using social technologies to
change how our
employees work, learn and collaborate.
Sixth, we use our strong cash flow strategically: It fuels reinvestment in the business and consistently strong returns to you, our owners
In 2012, this model produced solid results. Your company continued
to outperform our industry and the market at large. We achieved record
profit, record
free cash flow and record earnings per share. This marked 10
straight years of double-digit earnings-per-share growth. While our
revenues of $104.5 billion
were flat at constant currency, IBM's operating pre-tax income
margin rose for the tenth consecutive year—to 22.2 percent, up 12 points
since 2000.
As I mentioned, our strong cash flow enables us to invest in the future and return high value to you.
- In 2012 we invested $3.7 billion for 11 acquisitions in key areas
of software and services and $4.3 billion in net capital expenditures.
We spent
$6.3 billion on R&D.
- We were able to return $15.8 billion to you—$12 billion through
share repurchases and $3.8 billion through dividends. Last year's
dividend
increase was 13 percent, marking the 17th year in a row in which we
have raised our dividend, and the 97th consecutive year in which we
have paid one.
- And, as I announced earlier, we have extended those streaks by increasing the dividend again, by 12 percent.
While we were not satisfied with some aspects of our results for the
first quarter of 2013, we continued to make progress on our Road Map
objectives —
growing EPS by 8 percent, and returning $3.5 billion to you. Of our
$70 billion goal for returns to investors through dividends and share
repurchases over
the five years of our 2015 Road Map, we have already returned almost
$40 billion to you.
To sustain a long-term innovation model in our industry, a company
must do more than accommodate major technology shifts. It must lead
them. IBM has done
this repeatedly over the past century—not only pioneering new
technology models, but capturing the significant economic value they
create.
Today, another new wave is sweeping in—powered by analytics, mobile,
social and cloud technologies, and the so-called "Big Data" they
generate.
This represents a major shift in information technology - from the
back office to the front office, into the core activities of businesses,
institution
and societies.
We anticipated this shift with Smarter Planet, describing a world
that was becoming instrumented, interconnected and intelligent. In the
five years
since its launch, the goal of building a Smarter Planet has had a
transformational impact both in the marketplace and inside IBM. It has
engaged leaders
around the world in reimagining their systems of retail, supply
chain, healthcare, energy, telecommunications, transportation, food,
water, public safety
and more.
For IBM itself, Smarter Planet is not only driving growth, but also
speaking to IBMers' aspiration to be essential to each of our vital
constituencies.
This is our purpose as an enterprise—to be essential to our
investors, our clients, our communities and our partners in realizing
their most ambitious
hopes.
Being essential takes many forms.
- It means investing, through good times and bad, in the kind of
fundamental research that produces new capabilities for business,
society and individuals.
Capabilities such as Watson, our pioneering cognitive computer
that isn't programmed, it learns.
- It means applying those breakthroughs to the world's most
important work. For instance, since its debut on Jeopardy!, Watson has
gone to medical
school. It is learning from leading universities, hospitals and
healthcare providers, such as Columbia University, Wellpoint Insurance
and Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center: how to transform patient treatment...
how to help healthcare professionals become more productive... how to
make better
diagnostic decisions about cancer and other highly complex diseases.
- Being essential also means helping our clients transform not just
their operations, but their roles — reimagining what it means to be a
police
chief, a doctor, a marketer, a mayor.
- Being essential means reinventing not just how computers learn,
but how children are educated — as we are doing at our pioneering
Pathways in
Technology Early College High School, or P-TECH, in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Cited by President Barack Obama in his 2013 State of the Union address,
this radical
new educational model for grades 9-14 is being replicated by states
across the U.S.
- Finally, being essential means engaging with the world in new, more direct and human ways.
- One example is IBM's Corporate Service Corps, which is modeled on
the Peace Corps and is marking its fifth anniversary this year. Each
year,
hundreds of our best and brightest employees collaborate with
community leaders, government officials and NGOs in emerging markets
around the world.
More than 2,200 IBMers have deployed on more than 750 team
assignments — on health care for poor women and children in Nigeria;
clean water
and food safety in Vietnam; and economic development in Ghana and
Turkey — among many others.
- Another example is our Smarter Cities Challenge, launched in 2010
to help 100 cities address some of their most critical challenges.
Right now
we're in the most active period in the program's history, as we send
teams to 15 cities in 12 weeks - from Porto Allegre, Brazil,
to Fresno, California.
The impact on communities of these initiatives has been
extraordinary — and the impact on IBMers has been just as powerful. Many
describe it as the
most meaningful experience of their careers.
In closing, let me express my deep pride in the worldwide IBM team
for bringing us to where we are, and my gratitude to you, our
shareholders, for your
unwavering support. I hope you share our excitement about your
company's continuous transformation and the way in which IBMers are
building a brighter
future for our clients and a smarter planet for us all.
Thank you.
--9-21