IBM

Global technology company
Last updated:
January 3, 2026
Company details
HQ
Armonk, NY
HEADCOUNT
10000+
ORG TYPE
Corporate
SECTOR
Technology & Digital
About the company
IBM is a global technology company that sells software, consulting services, and infrastructure products to large organisations. IBM’s current focus areas include hybrid cloud, AI, cybersecurity, automation, and enterprise IT modernisation. IBM also operates a large consulting arm that delivers transformation programmes for clients across industries. IBM works with customers worldwide, from governments and banks to retailers and manufacturers.
Locations and presence
IBM operates globally with offices and client sites across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and other regions, with headquarters in Armonk, New York. Working patterns vary by role and business unit, and public reporting shows IBM has required in-office or client-site presence (often at least three days a week) for some groups such as US managers and parts of the sales organisation.
Palpable Score
72.1
/ 100
IBM is a strong early-career option for people who want multiple entry doors, because IBM runs internships, apprenticeships, and named entry-level programmes alongside “entry level” job hiring. IBM is also more transparent than many large tech employers about the steps in the hiring process and how assessments work, including accommodations and asking for feedback. The main constraints are uneven pay transparency by country and role, plus limited public outcome data (conversion rates, promotion timelines) for early-career cohorts.
Pillar 1: Early-career access

Score

16.8
/ 20
  • The company runs an internships pathway with a central internships portal and global postings, which creates recurring student access rather than one-off team hiring.
  • IBM lists named entry-level programmes such as the IBM Associate Program (entry-level consulting) and the IBM Sales Accelerator Program for Europe, which are built for early-career starters rather than experienced hires.
  • The company operates an earn-and-learn IBM Apprenticeship Program that is explicitly open to people without a four-year degree in the field, widening access beyond traditional graduate recruiting.

Pillar 2: Hiring fairness and transparency

Score

14.8
/ 20
  • The company publishes a step-by-step “application process” page that lays out screening, online assessments, interviews or assessment centres, and decision, which reduces uncertainty for first-time applicants.
  • IBM states that candidates can request accommodations during the assessment process via confidential self-identification, and IBM also says hiring managers and talent teams are trained on interviewing best practices and unconscious bias.
  • The company sets a “feedback if you ask” expectation after interviews, but IBM also notes that application volume can prevent direct contact for unsuccessful candidates, which can still feel like low closure at scale.

Pillar 3: Learning and support

Score

14.5
/ 20
  • The company positions the IBM Sales Accelerator Program as structured early-career training with mentorship and a defined career path, which is more supportive than “learn by being thrown in.”
  • IBM runs the IBM Apprenticeship Program as an earn-and-learn model, which pairs paid work with skill-building for people transitioning into a new field.
  • The company provides candidate-facing learning and credential routes through SkillsBuild content linked from IBM Career Guidance, but IBM does not publish a single, early-career onboarding standard that applies consistently across all entry-level roles and business units.

Pillar 4: Pay fairness and stability

Score

13.5
/ 20
  • The company includes stated pay ranges on at least some public job listings (including internship wage ranges and full-time salary ranges in certain markets), which helps early-career candidates benchmark before investing time in interviews.
  • IBM publishes benefits and “work-life” support information through candidate FAQs, but IBM does not consistently show salary ranges on every early-career listing worldwide, so transparency depends heavily on location and the posting channel.
  • The company has had public reporting of workforce reductions planned for late 2025, which can add perceived uncertainty for early-career joiners choosing between similarly paid options.

Pillar 5: Early-career outcomes

Score

12.5
/ 20
  • The company has public examples of intern-to-full-time journeys in team storytelling (for example, IBM Research profiles describing interns moving into full-time roles), which signals that conversion can happen in practice.
  • IBM has had public reporting of job cuts planned in 2025 tied to shifting investment toward higher-margin software, which can affect early-career confidence about team stability and internal mobility in some areas.
  • The company does not publish early-career cohort outcomes like internship-to-offer conversion rates, apprentice completion-to-role rates, or typical time-to-promotion ranges, which limits how confidently candidates can plan progression.

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