There's an old expression that people use in lots of different parts of the 
  U.S., although the people who use it always think that it only applies to where 
  they live: "If you don't like the weather here, wait a few minutes and 
  it'll change." (Incidentally, we have not at all found that expression 
  to hold true in New England in February or March, when it's pretty much cold 
  and gray all of the time -- but we digress. And, on a sunny, 80-degree day in 
  May, we won't complain.) 
Anyway, such is the nature of Microsoft, a monster company constantly in the 
  process of restructuring its various groups and divisions. Nothing stays the 
  same for long in Redmond -- other than the Windows market share, maybe. Last 
  month's org chart often has about as much value as last week's newspaper (that 
  is to say, not much value). So, if you work for Microsoft and don't like your 
  boss, wait a few months and you'll have a new one. And, more to the point for 
  the folks reading this, if you're a Microsoft partner and you're less than thrilled 
  with your current contacts in Redmond, hang on for a while -- they'll all change, 
  too. 
Of course, Microsoft goes to great lengths to keep its partners happy. Still, 
  Partner Program leadership gets refreshed like personnel at other Microsoft 
  divisions. And it turns out that another such leadership shuffle is "in 
  the cards" (sorry) for this summer. Plus, Microsoft is planning to restructure 
  the Partner Program itself and add some new initiatives. RCP Editor in 
  Chief Scott Bekker has more -- lots more -- here. 
To get the details about the reorganization, you'll have to click on the link 
  above to Scott's story (and here 
  it is again, for good measure), but we'll give you a few hints here from 
  Scott himself as to what's going on:
  - There's a new general manager of the Microsoft Partner Program
- Sherle Webb-Robins and Kati Hvidtfeldt will move out of the Worldwide Partner 
    Group
- Partners will fall into one of three "engines": solution providers, 
    ISVs and transactional partners
- A few executives will have explicit responsibility for Software Plus Services 
  
- The new Worldwide Partner Leadership Team will aim to give Microsoft consistency 
    across the channel
This also gives us a good opportunity to solicit your feedback on the Partner 
  Program, something we're interested in hearing whether there's a reorg on or 
  not. What do you think of changes in the program's leadership? How often do 
  you deal with Redmond proper (as opposed to a field office), and how do leadership 
  changes in the program affect you? And what do you think of Microsoft's policy 
  of changing the makeup of its various groups and programs fairly frequently?
Talk to me about these things at [email protected]. We'll take your responses 
  through next week and publish the best of them here next Friday. And if you 
  want to talk amongst yourselves, don't forget the 
  blog site -- where a new, updated, much better photo is coming soon!
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 31, 20071 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    In case you haven't seen demos of (or even heard of) "Surface," Microsoft's 
  
new tabletop 
  computer, trust us when we say that it's pretty cool. It also could be coming 
  to a hotel or casino near you.
Are any partners out there involved in selling Surface? If so, tell me your 
  story at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 31, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Anybody with even a feeble sense of irony will have to chuckle at least a little 
  bit at this one: The Federal Trade Commission is looking into the 
possible 
  antitrust ramifications of Google's proposed purchase of DoubleClick. (This 
  doubles Google's investigation trouble, as the ever-nosy European Union is 
sniffing 
  around about privacy matters.) 
But that's not where the irony comes in. Oh, no. If we're to believe the little 
  hints dropped here 
  and there 
  in the press, one of the main motivating factors behind the FTC's extended probe 
  might very well have been a significant 
  amount of complaining by...Microsoft. 
That's right. The convicted monopolist and losing bidder for DoubleClick might 
  have actually spurred the government to look into somebody 
  else's potentially monopolistic practices. We have to say, though, that 
  we don’t really see Microsoft’s point here (if it did complain to 
  the feds), especially given that Redmond surely believes that its recent 
  acquisition of aQuantive will set up some sort of competition for a Google-DoubleClick 
  combo.
Or maybe it just shows how desperate Microsoft is to catch Google in online 
  advertising, a market in which the relative newcomer from California has been 
  eating Redmond's lunch. In any case, as much as we've defended 
  Microsoft's business practices here in the past, it is pretty funny to hear 
  the pickpocket complain about being robbed and see the cops spring into action 
  -- metaphorically speaking, of course. 
What's your take on Microsoft complaining about somebody else's potential antitrust 
  violations? Drop me a line at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 30, 20071 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    You might remember from history a 
little 
  Corsican named Napoleon Bonaparte, who ran rampant in Europe for a while 
  before invading Russia (never a good idea, by the way) and finally losing his 
  empire on the 
battlefield 
  at Waterloo in 1815. 
It was that invasion of Russia, followed by the famous double whammy in Belgium 
  from Wellington's Brits and the Prussians (along with a bunch of other enemies), 
  that finally sank the little emperor, who at least lent his name to a yummy 
  French dessert and a spectacular cognac your editor purchased at a wine festival 
  in Paris some years back. (Oh, and he wrote France's civil code, still the basis 
  of French law today -- but we're more concerned with gastronomy here at RCPU.)
Well, we don't want to compare Microsoft to a brutal tyrant (really, we don't), 
  but we see some similarities between Napoleon's downfall and the situation Microsoft 
  is facing now with its Internet strategy (further explained, sort of, here). 
  The parallels are hardly air-tight, but they're good enough for the Internet 
  -- and if we could write 
  about Lee Majors last week, you can surely allow us Napoleon this week. 
  Right?
Let's keep this simple. Microsoft's $6 billion acquisition of aQuantive could 
  -- just could -- turn out to be a little bit like Napoleon's ill-fated adventure 
  in Russia. It's expensive and risky. It definitely represents a voyage into 
  possibly hostile -- and still not terribly familiar -- territory of online advertising. 
  At least, that's the way it is for Redmond. So there's that parallel drawn, 
  however quickly.
And then there's this: Cooperation on the horizon between Google 
  and Salesforce.com. Google is now freshly minted as a productivity-applications 
  player and potential competitor to Microsoft, with Web-based applications that 
  step into Microsoft Office's back yard. Salesforce.com is the company that's 
  making waves in the market for customer relationship management applications 
  with its pure Internet, software-as-a-service play. Some analysts are even 
  talking merger here, which has us wondering if maybe, just maybe, we hear 
  Wellington's men meeting up with the Prussians at Waterloo with their flexible, 
  Web-based, inexpensive applications to deal the final blow to Microsoft's Windows-reliant, 
  Office-dedicated, somewhat old-school Napoleon. 
OK, probably not. At least not right now. The fact is that many IT folks quite 
  like having control of their data, thank you very much, and aren't ready to 
  ship it out completely to some vendor's server farms. Plus, there's a lot -- 
  billions of dollars -- of investment in Microsoft sitting in corporate IT shops 
  right now, and that's not going to go away any time soon.
Still, Microsoft doesn't seem entirely sure of its own strategy -- or that 
  which it believes its 
  partners should follow -- regarding Internet-based services, as demonstrated 
  by the fact that Redmond has stuck the "Live" name on so many products 
  that the moniker now seems largely meaningless and certainly doesn't evoke confidence 
  or clarity. (By contrast, we know exactly what both Google and Salesforce.com 
  offer in terms of Web services, and their messaging is crystal clear.) 
Big, corporate America probably isn't ready to go all-Web, all the time. However, 
  smaller businesses (where a lot of new revenues come from these days) will surely 
  at least consider moving in that direction. Moves toward Web-based apps could 
  get hastened even as Microsoft's core offerings -- Office and Windows, mainly 
  -- move in exactly the wrong direction by getting fatter and more expensive. 
The question now is whether Microsoft, big battleship that it has become, can 
  execute well enough to catch Google on the sacred ground of online advertising 
  and still hold off the charge of Google and Salesforce.com in Redmond's own 
  apps back yard. Frankly, we're not sure that any company can do that, emperor 
  or not. And while we're not sure that the battle is upon Redmond right now, 
  we can hear the troops amassing in the distance. Where once the software industry's 
  Napoleon put pressure on others, it now has to gear up to defend itself. 
What impact do you think cooperation between Google and Salesforce.com would 
  have on Microsoft? As a partner, what's your take on Microsoft's SaaS (or S+S) 
  strategy? Talk to me at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 24, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    After Microsoft announced that R2 of the forthcoming Windows Server 2008 (nee 
  Longhorn) will only come in a beefy (get it?) 64-bit version, rumors spread 
  that Microsoft might not release another 32-bit operating system after Vista. 
  That might or might not be the case, though -- because 
Redmond 
  hasn't decided yet.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 22, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Last week, in a 
rather 
  innocuous RCPU entry, we linked to a study put out by the school of business 
  at the University of Michigan that suggests that Microsoft's rating for customer 
  satisfaction is getting worse. We wanted to get your take on that and how it 
  affects partners.
Let's just say that we touched a nerve. RCPU's inbox quickly filled with e-mails 
  about dissatisfaction with Microsoft -- although not all of them were as angry 
  as you might think. Here's the best of what we received, edited in some cases 
  a bit for length. (And, lest you think we've lost our grammar skills, yes, the 
  headline of this entry is an allusion to the classic Rolling Stones song. We 
  hope you knew that already, though.)
Ken, whose thoughts fall more on the angry side, writes from Australia to say 
  that if folks are dissatisfied with Microsoft, it might just be because Redmond 
  has lost its focus on the "little guy" in terms of both partners and 
  customers. 
  "I am a small business IT consultant in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. 
    For 30 years now I have sold and serviced computers to the SOHO marketplace 
    and have worked as a contractor for large businesses, as well. In that time, 
    I have been happy and grateful to sell and service Microsoft products, but 
    in recent years people like me have become less and less relevant to Microsoft 
    and we are feeling the pinch.
  "Clearly I cannot compete with IBM or the multinational IT big boys, 
    and I am not even going to try. But Microsoft seems nowadays to ONLY care 
    about them, and that ticks me off a lot -- as, although I am not a big player, 
    I have been a regular unpaid representative of Microsoft/Intel products for 
    30-plus years and cannot even get the common courtesy of a return phone call 
    or even e-mail replies nowadays. I provide feedback to Microsoft on beta products 
    but my views as an end user and reseller are ALWAYS met with silence, giving 
    me the perception I do not matter at all.
    
    "Vista is a classic case in point -- it provides everything Microsoft 
    wants but not much of what clients want. The PC has become more like a mainframe 
    computer with all the inherent inflexibilities and associated costs; [Vista] 
    suffers grossly from appallingly slow speed, software and driver incompatibilities 
    and code bloat, and, in my opinion, it is a step backward from XP SP2.
    
    "Office has features many of us will never use -- or ever understand 
    why they are there to be used -- so it's a waste. Unfortunately, corporate 
    greed means we may never get an operating system that is really tight, super-fast 
    and reliable, as that might kill off the cash cow that is Microsoft.
    
    "[We] little guys are now saying, tough luck, Microsoft. You won't support 
    us; we are no longer supporting you. We are sticking with XP, refusing to 
    sell or recommend Vista and no longer offering our time and interest for free. 
    I think Microsoft underestimates and undervalues the impact we have on a lot 
    of people, but eventually they will find out they are going to have to rethink 
    the attitude and do a lot more to help us help them again."
Netfali chimes in, too, saying that Microsoft has become more about hype and 
  product bloat than about quality:
  "Rather than relying on the quality of their products and services 
    to back up their sales, they have to create this excitement, which is by now 
    starting to backfire. It is backfiring because customers are tired of it. 
    It brings nothing but confusion and more spending because they know that by 
    the turn of the corner there is a new product to replace what came out yesterday 
    or to add to it. Rather than developing an overall strategy and spending enough 
    time to develop a sound product, they act like high school kids with the eagerness 
    to just be first and beat the competition. This, I think, adds to the perceived 
    disconnection in their products. Not only does the customer have to buy item 
    No. 1, but now they have to buy item 2 and 3 and, tomorrow, item No. 4, a 
    new product altogether. [Microsoft] need[s] someone from a sound company to 
    come in and teach them business basics."
Ian, employing something of a sarcastic (and entertaining) tone, noted that 
  Redmond's technological goofs don't help, either:
  "On a recent SBS 2003 R2 implementation (where I was upgrading from 
    a mixture of legacy servers), WSUS caused the previously infrequently patched 
    but running A-OK workstations to run like snails and be unusable for 20 minutes 
    each morning.
  "What a great idea -- an automatic security protection system that 
    manifests itself in the worst denial of service the customer ever experienced! 
    (After spending a great deal of time convincing them of the benefits, I must 
    have forgotten to tell them about the added benefit of 100 percent CPU usage.)
  "Great customer feel-good factor for a 20K upgrade. I am still struggling 
    with a few workstations. Nice."
Not so nice, Ian. But Bob, on the somewhat softer, less angry side of things, 
  says that the problem isn't so much with products as it is with activation, 
  registration and a bunch of other stuff (although we sense that there are some 
  problems with the products, as well):
  "I believe Microsoft software is better than it has ever been. It 
    is priced pretty decently and is a fair value for the money. Microsoft is 
    less buggy than most business-class software. What the customers hate are 
    all the processes that go with registration, activation, reactivation, multiple 
    choices for the same product, reactivation, checking for authenticity over 
    and over, failed reactivation, 30-minute waits on the phone to reactivate...you 
    get the idea. The dissatisfaction isn't with the product; it's with everything 
    that rides along with it. I understand Microsoft's need to protect its intellectual 
    property, but it is costing multiple millions, if not billions, of dollars 
    in lost productivity to businesses. 
  "Then there was Vista, the fastest-selling OS of all time [or 
    so 
    Redmond says --L.P.]. I don't know one person who likes it. 
    The aggravation mentioned above is far worse; peripherals became obsolete, 
    vendor drivers are buggy or nonexistent, the product is confusing and unfamiliar 
    and the security is far too intrusive (see the associated Apple commercial). 
    But, oh, how we love Office 2007. That's sweet! Everyone knows that someday 
    they will find their way around the ribbon and be far more productive than 
    ever before. No, I don't believe for one minute that the dissatisfaction with 
    Microsoft is from the software. People think they are dissatisfied with the 
    product when the product really isn't their issue." 
For her part, Mary wants to help Redmond out of its customer-satisfaction jam 
  by offering Microsoft a little gift:
  "A book I brought back in 1998 called Great Customer Service 
    was dusted off and put into position. I'm thinking my gift list is going to 
    be long this year."
Apparently Redmond can use all the help it can get right now.
Many thanks to everybody who responded, and don't forget that you can continue 
  this conversation here 
  or by dropping me a line at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 22, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    If you're old enough, or just enough of a fan of TV trivia, you might remember 
  the tastefully named Lee Majors starring in "
The 
  Six Million Dollar Man." The actor played a test pilot who was horribly 
  injured in a plane crash and subsequently rebuilt by the U.S. government with 
  all sorts of high-performance bionic parts in his body -- hence the reason his 
  reconstruction cost $6 million, a hefty price tag back in the mid-'70s. (That 
  kind of money might get you a decent middle reliever today, but we digress.)
Anyway, Majors' Col. Steve Austin character, who made that name famous long 
  before it belonged to a certain "Stone 
  Cold" wrestler, could do all sorts of amazing things with his tricked-out 
  robobody. He paid the government back for the favor of rebuilding him by doing 
  intelligence work and combating all sorts of terrifying threats to national 
  security -- including, in one episode, Bigfoot. (This, of course, was before 
  the phrase "the terrorists" meant anything -- but we digress again.)
It turns out that this "Six Million" metaphor has come back around 
  again, and this time it's about an online advertising firm called aQuantive. 
  Presumably aQuantive hasn't suffered a horrible accident and doesn't need to 
  be rebuilt with bionic parts. But it has a few things in common with Lee Majors 
  as Col. Steve Austin, starting with its price tag. Microsoft announced this 
  week that it's buying 
  aQuantive for an eerily similar sum, updated for inflation in 2007 -- $6 
  billion. 
And just as the government made a major investment in Steve Austin's body, 
  Microsoft is paying 
  a huge premium to buy aQuantive. This deal, in fact, dwarfs the $3.1 billion 
  buyout of DoubleClick by Google that upset 
  Microsoft so much about a month ago. 
We've been wondering here at RCPU just how serious Microsoft was about the 
  online ad game -- and we had to ask some questions again earlier this week when 
  24/7 Real Media, another firm Microsoft had been rumored to be eyeing, went 
  to another bidder. However, $6 billion big ones should answer anybody's questions 
  about Redmond's commitment to catching up with Google. The question now is whether 
  it's too little (or maybe too much), too late. After all, Google has a huge 
  lead in search and online advertising over Microsoft, and unlike Redmond's highly 
  diversified corporate profile, Internet stuff is what Google does -- and does 
  very well.
For most partners, it's hard to see a direct entry into the online ad game, 
  but anybody whose business relies on the corporate giant in Redmond should pay 
  close attention to how and where Microsoft spends its money, especially a chunk 
  of money this large. If Microsoft gets bogged down in an online ad game it can't 
  win with an expensive acquisition it can't swallow, the fallout could affect 
  the company's stock price and executive leadership -- and maybe even trickle 
  down throughout its operations. 
Then again, if the aQuantive acquisition works, it could be a cornerstone of 
  a Microsoft Internet strategy that still 
  seems a bit shaky for now and really needs to come together. Plus, Microsoft 
  has a pretty darn good track record with acquisitions it's made in the past. 
  Still, this is a watershed moment for Microsoft. The commitment is there; the 
  money is there -- now it's time for Redmond to produce results. 
Of course, to continue the metaphor, we shouldn't forget how Lee Majors fits 
  into all this. Just as the government needed Col. Steve Austin to perform superhuman 
  feats, Microsoft needs aQuantive to help it pull off a near-miracle and catch 
  Google in the online ad game. Let's remember, though, what Lee Majors did after 
  "The Six Million Dollar Man" ended its run -- he became "The 
  Fall Guy." 
Taking a fall and failing to catch rival Google isn't what Redmond plans with 
  aQuantive, of course. No doubt, Redmond is hoping for something more like the 
  "Promised Land" 
  where Lee Majors spent an episode (OK, we're stretching here, but just go with 
  it). 
What's your take on Microsoft's big acquisition? How do you see it affecting 
  you as a partner? Can you get the theme song from "The Fall Guy" out 
  of your head? I can't. Enlighten me at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 18, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Unlike some other commentators, we're not big fans here at RCPU of referring 
  to Microsoft as "evil" or "the devil," so let's put the 
  headline of this entry into context. SAP -- the big, German, still mostly dominant 
  enterprise resource planning vendor -- has been 
snuggling 
  up to Microsoft lately, promising better integration between its ERP applications 
  and Redmond's SQL Server 2005 database. 
SAP's motivation for doing this appears to be to keep database giant Oracle 
  and its line of enterprise apps, which compete with those of SAP, at bay. SAP 
  also has a nice product with Microsoft called Duet that ties the familiar Office 
  front-end to SAP's considerable back-end. So, by being buddy-buddy with Microsoft, 
  SAP covers two of its main weaknesses -- database integration and front-end 
  accessibility. All of that sounds pragmatic enough, right? 
Well, here's where the context part comes into play. Anybody who has been paying 
  even the faintest attention to the ERP market knows that Microsoft 
  has major ambitions in it along with a complicated -- and increasingly 
  competitive and contentious -- relationship with SAP. All of this, then, 
  leaves us wondering whether SAP has made a deal with its own personal little 
  devil in Redmond (as opposed to a more universal devil, which we don't consider 
  Microsoft to be) in the name of driving a stake into Oracle's heart.
After all, Microsoft plans to attack the ERP market the way it has attacked 
  many of the other markets it now owns -- by preaching native integration of 
  its own applications. Just to spell things out, that means that Microsoft is 
  ready to send its partners to customers with the message that Dynamics, its 
  ERP offering, is simpler (in a good way), cheaper and better (and certainly 
  better integrated) top to bottom than what SAP or Oracle can offer. 
And what better way for Microsoft to boost the two quantities it lacks in ERP 
  -- credibility and experience -- than by working closely with the longtime market 
  leader? The pitch almost sells itself: "If you like SAP's enterprise wares 
  with our database and front-end, just imagine how much you'll like cheaper, 
  simpler, easier-to-maintain and more tightly integrated Dynamics playing nicely 
  with your all-Microsoft implementation. Let's get you started switching over 
  now..."
Now, your editor has had considerable experience writing about SAP over the 
  last 10 years or so. We're quite sure that the folks in Walldorf (Germany, where 
  SAP's headquarters are located) know that they're playing with fire. So how 
  do the folks at SAP propose to not get burned? 
And here are some other things to ponder. Does Walldorf see any threat to their 
  gigantic market share from Microsoft on the horizon? Do they not believe that 
  Redmond can execute on its ambitious, but still largely nascent, ERP strategy? 
  Does Oracle -- a bigger threat to SAP right now than Microsoft -- just look 
  like the most important dragon to slay?
We suspect that, in part, the answer to those last three questions is "Yes." 
  However, if that's the case, SAP had better know what it's doing. Dynamics is 
  no Windows Live Search or Zune. It's a serious set of business applications 
  from a company that has a hefty presence of its own in the enterprise. The folks 
  in Walldorf have a pretty impressive ERP empire going, but the road is littered 
  with such deals. It's why, we suspect, "the devil" term is used in 
  the first place.
What do you think of SAP's cooperation with Microsoft? How soon do you see 
  Dynamics seriously competing with SAP and Oracle? Let me know at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 17, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Bill Gates says that Vista has sold 
40 
  million licenses in its first 100 days on the market, and, given the new 
  operating system's 
impressive 
  numbers, who are we 
to 
  quibble? 
Of course, Vista's success is all in the eye of the beholder. Some interested 
  parties are more 
  impressed than others.
Oh, and while we're talking about what Gates has been talking about, he confirmed 
  this week that Longhorn Server will indeed be 
  called Windows Server 2008, in a completely unsurprising continuation of 
  Microsoft's mundane (but, we guess, effective) naming policy.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 16, 20072 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Whether or not the latest (and oddly persistent) flare-up of the 
Microsoft-to-buy-Yahoo 
  rumor turns out to be true -- and we're not betting that it will -- Steve 
  Ballmer does seem to have a hankering for a bit of shopping. Ballmer said this 
  week that he wouldn't rule out dropping a bundle of Microsoft's 
dwindling 
  pile of cash on acquisitions to beef up the company's still-cloudy Software 
  Plus Services (not to be confused -- or 
maybe 
  to be confused -- with software-as-a-service) strategy. 
Big spending all in one place would buck the trend that Microsoft has set of 
  late -- buying 
  up smaller players and glomming their applications into the Microsoft stack. 
  (Of course, it's not as though Microsoft hasn't tried to dump lots of money 
  into one acquisition lately -- remember 
  DoubleClick?) Furthermore, Ballmer's talk of pumping up S+S with a major 
  buyout has the overtones of an executive who is maybe just a bit desperate to 
  piece together a strategy in an area in which Microsoft is not at the forefront. 
  Of course, any company with tens of billions of dollars in the bank and a chokehold 
  on the markets for operating systems and productivity suites can't be all that 
  desperate. Still, Ballmer's dropping hints -- will dollars follow?
If they do, they'll be dedicated to S+S, or at least not spent on enterprise 
  applications such as business intelligence. Jeff Raikes, president of Microsoft's 
  business division, said this week that Redmond plans to build, 
  not buy, business applications. That, of course, is a bit of an odd statement, 
  given that Microsoft announced a BI-related 
  acquisition (albeit a small one) just this week. It's even more odd considering 
  that Microsoft Dynamics, 
  the company's enterprise resource planning offering, is really just a package 
  consisting of four different suites that Microsoft purchased over the last few 
  years by buying other vendors' solutions. 
We'll take Raikes' comments to mean that Microsoft won't be spending any more 
  money on business apps than it already has. Clearly Redmond seems more confident 
  in its business offerings than in its S+S wares -- and probably for good reason. 
  In any case, Ballmer seems ready to open the vault and perhaps redirect the 
  course of the whole industry the way Microsoft has done in the past. 
If you were Steve Ballmer, how would you spend Microsoft's money? Let me know 
  at [email protected].
And speaking of S+S, SaaS and lots of other unusual acronyms, Mike weighed 
  in this week in Microsoft's Web-apps strategy. We edited this one a tad for 
  length, but we liked it a lot:
  "The good news for Microsoft is that the world is in a migration. 
    Most of us use Windows and Office and are not leaving the womb (or tomb) any 
    time soon. As new software, with new delivery models, is introduced, we consider 
    it, and if it makes sense, incorporate it into our daily routine. I don't 
    think individuals are any different than large corporations. 
  "I have made investments in real dollars to buy Microsoft software 
    (and lots of other companies' software, too) and invested significant time 
    in learning Microsoft products over the last 17 years. I'm not going to throw 
    that away overnight. Just because Google has a Web-based spreadsheet, that 
    doesn't compel me to switch to it when the one I'm using is working just fine. 
    Like they say, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.
  "Ten years from now, Microsoft will be around; it'll be an $80 billion 
    company, and will have figured out how to monetize the Web and include partners 
    in the process. But the model won't look the same as it does today. The revenue 
    is likely to be recurring, maybe based on usage, and we will pay more for 
    the same functionality than we do today. That's happened with television (cable), 
    communications (cell phones) and that's the way it will be with software. 
    
  "Microsoft and Ray Ozzie have time and they know it. Their problem 
    is that the sizzle is gone -- Google, Salesforce.com and others have taken 
    away the franchise that they owned for almost 15 years. That hurts the stock 
    price, makes recruiting talent more difficult and it makes playing the game 
    a lot more difficult. In other industries, investors are ecstatic to own a 
    company that has 25 percent net margins, is throwing off cash faster than 
    they can invest it and growing predictably. Microsoft's problem is that that 
    is not what it, or the market, is used to. Google will run into the same problem 
    in five to 10 years, maybe sooner. Then the next big thing will get all of 
    the attention. 
  "I think Microsoft and Ray are right on track. Keep the faith, experiment, 
    react when necessary and everything will be just fine."
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 11, 20070 comments