Thread regarding IBM layoffs

The Real Story Behind IBM’s Layoffs: Skill Shift Or Job Loss?

The Real Story Behind IBM’s Layoffs: Skill Shift Or Job Loss?
https://news.abplive.com/business/the-real-story-behind-ibm-s-layoffs-skill-shift-or-job-loss-1792926

IBM's layoff of 8,000 employees signals a shift toward AI and smarter roles. Learn how companies like VolkAI are shaping the future of work.

The global tech industry is changing fast. Artificial Intelligence (AI), data-based decision-making, and smart automation are becoming common. So, the question isn’t “Are jobs going?” The real question is “How are jobs changing?”

IBM’s Layoffs Decision Is a Strategy Shift, not a Crisis

IBM did not make these layoffs because of losses or failure. In fact, the company is doing well financially and is still investing in growth areas like AI, cloud computing, and cybersecurity.

The employees being let go are mostly in old departments, where the work is outdated or slow-moving. IBM is clearing space for new types of skilled professionals like:

AI engineers
Cloud system experts
Cybersecurity analysts
Quantum computing researchers
So, rather than cutting jobs blindly, IBM is making space for future-ready roles.

Jobs Aren’t Disappearing — They’re Upgrading

According to a 2024 Bain & Company report, India is likely to have 2.3 million AI-related job openings by 2027, but only 1.2 million people may be ready with the required skills. This shows a gap not a lack of jobs, but a need for more skilled talent.

What does this mean?

We need to upskill, reskill, and learn new technologies to stay ready.

"AI is not taking away jobs. It’s creating more of them — just in new formats," says Santosh Kushwaha, CEO of VolkAI.
"From AI prompt engineers to ethics experts, the job market is growing. What’s ending is the old way of working — not work itself."

He adds, “By 2027 and beyond, jobs will grow even more. They may not look the same as today, but they’ll be smarter, faster, and more exciting.”

India’s Big Opportunity in the AI Race

India is in a strong position to become a global leader in AI talent. With a young population, digital growth, and government support (like the ₹10,000 crore IndiaAI Mission), India can become the world’s AI hub.

IBM’s offices in Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Noida, and Pune continue to be important for their AI research and global work. So, even though layoffs are happening globally, India remains at the center of IBM’s future.

Also, companies like VolkAI are helping make AI learning easier and more affordable for Indian students and working professionals.

It’s Not Job Loss. It’s a Career Upgrade.

Losing a job is never easy, but in IBM’s case, the company is taking steps to help:

Employees are getting support, retraining, and severance packages

Many are being guided into new roles in cloud, AI, and cybersecurity

The company is focusing on reshaping the team, not shrinking it

The world is moving from:

Regular coding → AI prompt building

Manual IT tickets → Automated workflows

Repetitive testing → AI model monitoring

Work is not ending — it’s becoming more meaningful.

What’s Coming Next?

A recent ServiceNow report says 10 million jobs in India will be reshaped by AI by 2030 — not removed but improved. AI will take over boring, repeated tasks so that people can focus on creative, decision-making work.

“Jobs won’t vanish. They’ll change,” says Santosh Kushwaha, CEO of VolkAI.
“And those who learn and grow with AI will lead the future.”

Final Thoughts

IBM’s layoff news is not the end of employment — it’s the start of a new kind of work life. We must stop focusing only on job loss and start talking about job transformation.

India is not losing the race — it's leading it. With smart platforms like VolkAI, government help, and a growing digital population, India is ready for this change.

The future is not scary. The future is full of new chances — for those ready to learn.

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| 1875 views | | 15 replies (last August 8) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1k1xy8h3m

15 replies (most recent on top)

@nw they cannot give you even a 1 year warranty for anything (like a car or fridge) they produce because the quality is so awful. They know it also. Sadly although it a fact, no one does anything.

In a place like Japan, you would be forced for answer for this. In the US it would be on the front page of newspapers if the car manufacturer products had defects. There would be product recalls.

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Post ID: @pk+1k1xy8h3m

@ng

Furthermore, when they tried to innovate, it didn't work and they had to scratch the projects. If anyone ever studied the likes of fridges or mini car examples, etc, they all failed.

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Post ID: @nw+1k1xy8h3m

India has never innovated in anything. All they have is cheap labor, mostly with fake degrees and credentials. Oh yeah, and massive call centers running global scam operations 24/7.

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Post ID: @ng+1k1xy8h3m

@fj you get what you pay for.

Id--ts like Alvind and Krapanaugh want to pay peanuts, so they hire monkeys. No surprises when there is ZERO quality code and no one has any integrity.

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Post ID: @jj+1k1xy8h3m

@aj+1k1xy8h3m spot on. The code I get from India is straight trash most of the time. He-l Copilot GitHub does a better job half the time. I'd rather QA that code than deal with endless back and forth with the India coders anyway.

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Post ID: @fj+1k1xy8h3m

Work ethics as well. Out the door by 5 while I worked on to get the job done

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Post ID: @em+1k1xy8h3m

@dd their sheer arrogance and temerity is what amazes me...but, as we know pride goeth before a fall.

It's coming to both Alvind and Modi first.

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Post ID: @e5+1k1xy8h3m

Sorry to say... but we don't need more Indians... we need less of them.
The quality of work that most of them provide is really bad!
So, if you are OK with bad quality for cheap, then be my guest!

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Post ID: @e2+1k1xy8h3m

@dd

They should not be laughing.

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/08/04/indias-it-layoffs-spark-fears-ai-is-hurting-jobs-in-critical-sector.html

  • India’s largest private sector employer, Tata Consultancy Services, announced last month that it would cut more than 12,000 jobs.
  • “AI adoption is a major challenge for India,” said Sonal Varma, an economist at Nomura.
  • India could risk “getting stuck in the middle-income trap” if its economy doesn’t adapt, she added. "If the economy is unable to adapt, this could lead to job losses, lower services exports, moderate urban consumption. It could risk India getting stuck in the middle-income trap."

When all you are is a low-cost IT resource factory, then AI can and will replace you, because all you are doing is "entry level stuff".

Silicoon Valley should find CEO talent somewhere else or it will turn into a sweat shop factory with declining outputs.

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Post ID: @dg+1k1xy8h3m

@a4

Transition to Walmart? Not unless you are an Indian!

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Post ID: @df+1k1xy8h3m

Copying same post here. I just find it unbelievable, TBH. What an arrogance from the very same country that gave them opportunity....

THIS IS HOW THEY THINK:

Comment from user (link below):

"Pawan Goled - 6 hours ago
other sides trumps advisors are advising him to ban H1b visa, Lol on the American leadership! America will be a dead end for sure if it happens."

https://www.msn.com/en-in/money/news/another-indian-american-shakes-up-silicon-valley-meet-shyam-sankar-palantir-s-cto-powering-company-s-meteoric-rise/ar-AA1JXdGj?cvid=1d6136b8928344da92206c71f3d3710a&ei=49#comments

They really think they are the ones that are making Silicon Valley....

Apparently, Palantir's CEO is r_cist, as if they aren't?

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Post ID: @dd+1k1xy8h3m

@a5 Indians like to believe that they are really advanced as a civilization and going to go places with the BS that gets spouted by senior IBM crooks like Alvind on TV interviews. The reality is that they have been conning the rest of the world with a lot of hand waving and BS arguments. Have they even signed a potential tariff deal with the wayward Trump and Company ? I think not. They keep arguing and bickering in the hope everyone forgets about the tariffs that they raise on every US import, but they don't want the same on their Indian exports. they need to be backed into a corner...

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Post ID: @aj+1k1xy8h3m

This doesn't sound like first class journalism. It's much more of an opinion piece.

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Post ID: @ac+1k1xy8h3m

@a4

Well, since it's an article from India, they are eager to show that it's not about cheap labor, but "really advanced stuff, the future of the future of the future" >>> "nothing like builder.ai... not all all."

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Post ID: @a5+1k1xy8h3m

Does it mean IBM rejects dinosaurs will transition to Walmart?

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Post ID: @a4+1k1xy8h3m

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