IBM and Google Cloud are deploying thousands of consultants to capture a multi-billion-dollar opportunity in enterprise AI services, intensifying the cloud arms race against Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services.
IBM and Google Cloud are combining thousands of consultants with Google's Gemini AI platform in a partnership that represents a multi-billion-dollar opportunity for both companies, intensifying competition with Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services in enterprise AI services.
"Enterprises are facing one of the most complex modernization cycles in decades," Mohamad Ali, senior vice president and head of IBM Consulting, said. "By expanding our work with Google Cloud, we're giving clients a clearer and more reliable path to scale AI across their business, combining deep industry expertise, hybrid-cloud modernization and an AI-first delivery platform."
The new Google Cloud Practice will deploy thousands of Google Cloud-certified IBM consultants and forward-deployed engineers to help enterprises deploy AI solutions, modernize legacy environments and manage technology across hybrid landscapes. IBM is creating a portfolio of industry-specific AI agents built on its Consulting Advantage platform and optimized for Gemini Enterprise, targeting banking, government, retail, telecommunications, energy, security, insurance and life sciences. The companies have already partnered on major projects including Airbus, where IBM consultants and Google Cloud helped transition two aerospace businesses into fully independent operations in under 18 months by updating more than 100 critical systems.
The partnership pressures Microsoft and Amazon, which have dominated enterprise cloud and AI services through Azure OpenAI and AWS Bedrock. IBM shares trade at roughly 22 times forward earnings, while Alphabet trades at 24 times. The deal signals that Google is investing heavily in services-layer differentiation rather than competing solely on AI model performance.
How the Partnership Works
IBM Consulting Advantage, the company's AI-powered delivery platform, will now integrate with Google Cloud's Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, combining pre-built assets and reusable agents with Google's agent runtime and governance controls. The integration extends to Red Hat OpenShift, now available directly in the Google Cloud Console, and watsonx Orchestrate with Gemini for decision automation. IBM will also help develop common interface patterns connecting enterprise data into Gemini using an open approach, tailored for each client's architecture.
The practice focuses on several priority areas: production-ready AI and data foundations using Gemini and BigQuery, industry-specific solutions for aerospace, financial services, government, healthcare and telecommunications, AI-driven cybersecurity operations, hybrid cloud modernization for regulated industries, and operational resilience using IBM automation with HashiCorp and Apptio.
Who Wins, Who Loses
For Google Cloud, the partnership adds thousands of certified consultants to meet surging demand for AI deployment — a critical gap against Azure and AWS, which have larger enterprise services ecosystems. For IBM, it provides a growth engine for its consulting business beyond its existing hybrid cloud strategy with Red Hat. The losers could be smaller consulting firms and systems integrators that lack the scale or AI platform partnerships to compete for large enterprise contracts.
"This partnership significantly expands the pool of expert Google Cloud consultants in the market to meet surging demand for AI," Kevin Ichhpurani, president of the global partner ecosystem at Google Cloud, said. "By combining Google's agentic infrastructure with IBM's deep industry expertise and proven delivery frameworks, we are ensuring joint customers can move beyond pilots to deploy and govern production-grade AI agents across their entire cloud environment."
For investors, the key metric to watch is whether IBM's consulting revenue growth accelerates from its current pace and whether Google Cloud's market share gains against Azure and AWS show measurable improvement in the coming quarters. The partnership represents a bet that enterprise AI adoption requires human expertise alongside technology — a model that could pressure hyperscalers to deepen their own services investments.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.