While mainframes are often dismissed as old technology, for many enterprises they continue to be the cornerstone of a hybrid IT strategy, supporting the organization’s most important applications and business processes. On average, enterprises with mainframes use them to run 56% of their mission-critical applications, according to Kyndryl’s 2024 State of Mainframe Modernization report, which is based on a survey of 500 IT and business leaders. In this research, 89% of respondents said the mainframe was important to their business operations.
If the mainframe is core to your business, then it should not be siloed. And it’s critical that it’s modernized and used to its full potential—especially given the opportunities brought by generative AI.
Modernization generally takes one of three forms. Our research found that 40% of respondents are modernizing applications while keeping them on the mainframe. Another 35% are modernizing while integrating applications or workloads with the cloud or other platforms within their hybrid IT estate. And 25% say they are moving applications off the mainframe entirely.
Each of these approaches is equally valid, and each is appropriate in a certain context. There’s no right approach—the goal is to match the right workload to the right platform.
Enterprises reaped impressive one-year ROI from their modernization efforts—between 114% and 225%—depending on the approach taken.
That’s not to underestimate the difficulty of modernization. Senior leaders and even boards of directors often get brought into modernization initiatives, precisely because the applications that run on the mainframe are essential to the day-to-day business operations.
In our experience with large organizations and in research, we’ve found that three strategies are key in helping enterprises successfully modernize their mainframes and reap the most important benefit of all—sustained competitive advantage.