‘Clients are turning to trusted partners that know their industries inside and out,’ says Neil Dhar, IBM Consulting Americas managing partner.
IBM plans to buy SAP S/4HANA services provider Cognitus to grow skills in digital transformation for regulated industries and to leverage the provider’s proprietary, SAP-endorsed software assets that are enabled by artificial intelligence.
The Armonk, N.Y.-based technology giant is buying Cognitus in part for its Cognitus CIS-GovCon government contracting software, Cognitus CLM contract lifecycle management offer for government contractors and its Cognitus Data Migration low-code, AI product aimed at migrating data from legacy systems to SAP S/4HANA, according to an IBM statement.
The vendor did not reveal a closing date or financial details for the acquisition, but more information could come up during IBM’s next earnings call Wednesday.
“Clients are turning to trusted partners that know their industries inside and out and can deploy AI-powered solutions to their enterprise operations,” Neil Dhar, IBM Consulting Americas managing partner, said in a statement. “Cognitus brings deep industry expertise and proprietary AI technology that improves the efficiency of SAP implementations and will extend the functionality of tools across our SAP portfolio.”
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IBM To Buy Cognitus
CRN has reached out to IBM and Cognitus CEO Pat Sathi for comment.
Sathi said in the statement that IBM ownership will allow his company to strengthen how it serves customers. “Our clients will continue to benefit from our proven SAP-Endorsed solutions and accelerators, backed by Cognitus’ deep industry expertise in regulated industries and now supported by IBM’s global scale and advanced technology capabilities,” he said.
Sathi also took to Microsoft-owned social media network LinkedIn to announce the news, saying that he and his team took Cognitus “from a small group of passionate SAP experts to a global organization recognized for its products, delivery excellence, and industry expertise.”
“This journey has been nothing short of remarkable,” he said.
IBM Consulting, a likely beneficiary from the new skills coming in from Cognitus, is No. 6 on CRN’s 2025 Solution Provider 500. As a channel-focused vendor, IBM’s top channel goals for 2025 include increasing the overall percentage of company revenue that comes through the channel, according to CRN’s 2025 Channel Chiefs.
The acquisition follows comments IBM CEO Arvind Krishna made Monday during the 2025 XChange Best of Breed Conference run by CRN parent The Channel Company that in the AI era, IBM is focused on the complex work of integrating AI into enterprise systems of record.
Although Krishna didn’t mention Germany-based enterprise resource planning (ERP) vendor SAP by name in his comments, the company’s products are widely used by enterprises worldwide.
“AI is incredibly powerful, incredibly competent, but you still need to spend the energy to insert it into the workflow, how work is done,” Krishna said. “AI is not magical.”
Krishna said the business world is “absolutely in the first inning” of AI adoption. But he also said businesses—including the channel—should be making use of AI for what he called “low-risk uses cases” such as accounting, procurement and human resource management apps.
Dallas-based Cognitus, founded in 2002, focuses on end-to-end SAP S/4HANA implementations and application maintenance services, according to the IBM statement. The company is a Gold & Co-innovation partner with SAP.
Cognitus’ proprietary software also includes Real-Time Billing for high-volume, project-based billing with real-time transactions processing.
The Cognitus acquisition follows IBM’s strategy of continuing to grow capabilities with strategic vendor partners ranging from SAP and Oracle to Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Palo Alto Networks.
IBM’s consulting-related acquisitions this year have included Snowflake-focused data, AI consultancy Hakkoda and global Oracle consultancy Applications Software Technology (AST).
IBM’s vendor acquisitions this year have included DataStax, which closed in May, and HashiCorp, which closed in February.