Fujitsu
Fujitsu is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Fujitsu.
Fujitsu is a company.
Key people at Fujitsu.
Fujitsu is a global technology company specializing in IT services, solutions, and products, with approximately 130,000 employees serving customers in 180 countries. It ranks as the 10th largest IT service provider worldwide and No.1 in Japan, generating FY2022 revenues of 3,713.7 billion JPY, and focusing on AI, data, computing, networks, security, and converging technologies to drive sustainable growth through its Fujitsu Uvance portfolio and Technology and Service Vision 2025.[4][2][3] In Q2 2025, Fujitsu reported record net profit of ¥262 billion, an 83.6% surge in adjusted operating profit, and slight revenue growth to ¥1,566.5 billion, fueled by AI initiatives like deploying AI tools to 30,000 engineers and acquiring BrainPad Inc. for data science enhancements, while targeting FY full-year operating profit of ¥360 billion.[1]
The company's purpose is to make the world more sustainable by building trust in society through innovation, aiming for a 2030 vision of net positive impact via digital services, with key growth in Uvance (targeting ¥700 billion revenue), modernization (¥330 billion), and consulting.[2][3][4]
Founded in 1935 as a joint venture between Fuji Electric and Japan's post office (initially Fuji Telecommunications Manufacturing Co.), Fujitsu evolved from telecommunications equipment into a full-spectrum IT giant, expanding globally post-WWII with mainframes, PCs, and services.[4] (Note: Search results emphasize current vision over detailed founding; this draws from established company history.) Pivotal moments include its rise as Japan's top IT services provider and recent shifts: launching Fujitsu Technology and Service Vision 2025 to harness human-AI collaboration amid geopolitical and climate uncertainties, and establishing 1FINITY Inc. on July 1, 2025, to consolidate network R&D, manufacturing, sales, and maintenance for focused innovation.[3][5][7]
Under leaders like CFO Takeshi Isobe and CTO Vivek Mahajan, Fujitsu has progressed its 2023–2025 Medium-Term Management Plan, transforming its business portfolio for sustained growth.[2]
Fujitsu rides the AI and data revolution, positioning as a transformation enabler in an era of geopolitical risks, climate change, and AI akin to the industrial revolution, creating ecosystems for sustainable business growth and net positive societal impact.[3] Timing aligns with exploding demand for sovereign AI, governance against disinformation, and digital sustainability, where Fujitsu's global reach (100+ countries) and Japan dominance amplify influence.[1][4][5] Market forces like rapid AI adoption favor its 130,000-employee scale and Uvance portfolio, influencing the ecosystem through international consortia, R&D consolidation, and human-AI collaboration that empowers businesses while addressing global uncertainties.[2][3][7]
Fujitsu's trajectory points to accelerated AI dominance, with FY2025 targets (¥360B profit, Uvance/modernization growth) likely met via ongoing acquisitions, 1FINITY efficiencies, and its unchanged 5-year tech roadmap.[1][5][7] Trends like sovereign AI, converging tech, and net positive digital services will shape its path, potentially evolving it from IT services leader to global sustainability innovator by 2030.[2][3] As AI transforms industries, Fujitsu's trusted innovation—building from record profits and human-AI vision—positions it to sustain momentum in a volatile world, delivering escalating value to stakeholders.[1][4]
Key people at Fujitsu.