News
        
        Microsoft Lays Out Strategy at Investor Event
        
        
        
			- By Herb Torrens
- August 11, 2009
Microsoft gave investors a look at the company's business  prospects on Tuesday at the Oppenheimer Annual Communications, Technology &  Internet Conference in Boston.
In a 30-minute  interview with Bill Koefoed, general manager of investor relations for  Microsoft, questions were fielded concerning profitability, expense management,  cultural shifts in the market, competition and strategies going forward.
Koefoed noted that about 80 percent of Microsoft's "client-side"  revenue comes from OEMs. Consequently, Microsoft's year-over-year performance on  the Windows side was no better or worse than the macroeconomic performance of  PC sales.
"The last quarter in the PC business was mainly driven  by macro factors, with a little bit of inventory build up," said Koefoed. "We  think the overall macro PC industry was down somewhere between six and eight  percent."
He said that about 11 percent of industry PC sales were  derived from netbooks, which have lower selling prices than traditional PCs.  That "netbook effect" has been a factor in Microsoft's business for  the past nine months, according to Koefoed. In addition, he said that business  PC sales, the core of Microsoft client-side revenues, have been suffering  substantially more than consumer PCs.
Business PC software has the highest selling price of  Microsoft offerings, he noted, with professional editions of applications such  as Office leading the way.
Ironically, Intel recently reported improved chip sales,  noting that there has been market strength shown in China. Unfortunately, Koefoed said  that it is well known that Microsoft does not get paid for much of the software  going to China. 
"If we did, it would actually be good for our business,"  he said.
Going forward, Koefoed explained that Windows 7, due to be  released in October, will have an edition for netbooks plus a Home Premium edition  to address consumer sales. In addition, there will be a Professional edition  for business and an Enterprise  edition.
Asked how Office 2010 will compete with the host of new  productivity suites being offered, Koefoed said that the Office strategy will  continue to focus on collaboration that enables productivity for "communications  workers." Specifically, he said chief information officers want a platform  that can break down the barriers of sharing information across applications and  integrate with communications server, instant messaging, voice-over-Internet Protocol  and other emerging communications capabilities.
Koefoed downplayed Google as a competitor in the  productivity-suite space for enterprise customers. 
"[Google] gets a lot of press on the subject, but in  the enterprise, we don't see them as much as the other two guys [IBM and Cisco]."
He did acknowledge Google as a formidable competitor in the  search space.
"In my strategy classes, we would say going head to  head with Goliath, per say, would be a difficult strategy," said Koefoed. "What  you can look for [from Bing] is a search that will be innovative around the  edges, and one that creates new user experiences."
He noted the deal with Yahoo was instrumental to that  strategy because it will drive more users to Bing. 
"Advertisers have actually been rooting for us because  they want competition," said Koefoed, who called the Yahoo deal, which he  expects to close the first part of next year, a "win-win for both  companies."
Koefoed said that Microsoft will continue to lead in its cloud  strategies with progress in scalable data centers, improvements to its Azure  platform and application development.
"We will continue to offer all three capabilities  (infrastructure, platform, applications), and not a lot of other companies can  offer that," Koefoed said. "Plus we offer choice for the ecosystem of  developers and partners."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Herb Torrens is an award-winning freelance writer based in Southern California. He managed the MCSP program for a leading computer telephony integrator for more than five years and has worked with numerous solution providers including HP/Compaq, Nortel, and Microsoft in all forms of media.