Kyndryl Peru S.A.C. is the local entity of Kyndryl, the world's largest IT infrastructure services provider, which spun off from IBM in 2021. The company designs, builds, manages, and modernizes mission-critical technology systems for thousands of enterprise customers across more than 60 countries. With a global workforce exceeding 10,000 employees, Kyndryl operates at the scale where infrastructure failures become headline news - banks that can't process transactions, manufacturers whose production lines halt, hospitals whose systems go dark.
The company's technical portfolio spans seven core domains: applications, data and AI, cloud solutions, digital workplace, core enterprise and zCloud, network and edge computing, and cyber resilience. This last domain - cyber resilience - sits at the intersection of infrastructure stability and threat mitigation, addressing attack surface management, incident response, and recovery operations for systems that can't afford downtime. Kyndryl serves banking, automotive, manufacturing, healthcare, and government sectors where security incidents carry regulatory penalties, operational disruption, and reputational damage measured in billions.
Kyndryl's delivery model centers on three platforms: Kyndryl Bridge (an open integration platform for connecting disparate systems), Kyndryl Collaborative (a delivery network for distributed operations), and Kyndryl Vital (a human-centered experience framework). The company maintains strategic partnerships with AWS, Microsoft, Google Cloud, Cisco, SAP, and Oracle - relationships that define how multi-cloud security architectures get implemented at enterprise scale. For security professionals, this translates to exposure across heterogeneous environments where threat models shift based on workload placement, compliance frameworks vary by jurisdiction, and incident response requires coordination across vendor boundaries.
Peru represents one node in Kyndryl's 60+ country network, positioned to support Latin American enterprises navigating digital transformation while managing legacy infrastructure that predates modern security paradigms. The work involves operational security for systems where patching windows are measured in minutes, where zero-trust architectures must coexist with decades-old mainframes, and where a misconfigured cloud permission can expose customer data across jurisdictions with conflicting privacy regulations.