Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Apple
  4. News

Only five percent of IBM staffers on a Mac need IT support

Add as a preferred source on Google

Since offering Macs to staff, IBM has seen a drastic fall in the number of calls to its help desk from employees, with only five percent requiring support.

That’s according to Fletcher Previn, IBM’s vice president of Workplace as a Service who was speaking at the JAMF User Conference in Minneapolis this week.

Recommended Videos

In June, IBM began making Macs available for staff to work on if they wanted to make the move from Windows, and Previn reported that the response has been impressive, both in the uptake and in reduced support requirements.

Only five percent of staff using Macs make calls to the 24-hour help desk, he said, which compares to the 40 percent of Windows users that make similar calls. Currently IBM is deploying 1,900 Macs a week, and there are around 130,000 Mac and iOS devices used by employees at present.

Just 24 help desk staff members are managing these devices, according to the executive, meaning an approximate ratio of one support employee for every 5,375 employees. Previn referenced some figures from Gartner that concluded that the optimal ratio of support staff to employees is 1:70 though the average is 1:242. Compare that to IBM’s approximate ratio of 1:5,400, at least for its Mac users.

This has significantly reduced costs for the company. “Every Mac that we buy is making and saving IBM money,” said Previn. “We just need a lot fewer people to support these machines.”

Jonathan Keane
Jonathan is a freelance technology journalist living in Dublin, Ireland. He's previously written for publications and sites…
Anthropic confirms Claude acts differently depending on your language and which model you pick
A new study shows Claude's isn't nearly as consistent as you might assume.
Claude app on iPhone

If you've ever felt like Claude gave you a completely different vibe on one day than another, you weren't imagining it. Anthropic just published research confirming that its chatbot's personality shifts depending on which model you pick and which language you type in, and the pattern is consistent enough that it's worth knowing before you ask your next question.

The model you pick decides how Claude responds

Read more
This website is a goldmine if you love Mac menu bar apps
Discover hundreds of menu bar apps, from tiny utilities to powerful productivity tools, all in one place.
MacMenuBar website open on Mac

The menu bar is the most underrated part of macOS. It sits quietly at the top of your screen, and most people never do anything with it other than checking the time and battery percentage. But if you find the right apps, that thin strip becomes the fastest way to get things done on your Mac.

The problem is finding those apps. The Mac App Store is not great at surfacing them, and hunting through random blog lists is a chore. And while I have shared my favorite Mac utilities that include menu bar apps like Supercharge and CleanShot X, there’s an even better place to find the best apps for your Mac’s menu bar.

Read more
How to install macOS 27 Golden Gate public beta on your Mac?
From a smarter Siri to a more reliable Spotlight, here's your full walkthrough for installing macOS 27 Golden Gate's public beta today.
macOS 27 Golden Gate

Along with iOS 27’s public beta, Apple has also released macOS 27 Golden Gate’s public beta build, so that early adopters can get their hands on the new features, including Siri AI, and provide timely feedback to help ensure a stable iOS launch in September. 

If you’re sold on all the new features but don’t want to put your faithful MacBook through developer beta duty, a public beta offers a much more refined experience. To install macOS 27’s public beta, follow the steps given below. 

Read more