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        Ballmer Promotes 'New Efficiency' Vision for IT
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - September 29, 2009
 
		
        
		Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer gave a keynote talk at a  Microsoft event called "The New Efficiency" on Tuesday.
The presentation, broadcast from San Francisco, was a marketing pitch featuring  comments from several of Microsoft's early-adopter Windows 7 customers. The  event was billed as a launch of Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2 and Exchange  2010, among other Microsoft products. A recorded version of the talk is available here.
Ballmer took the position that IT pros can do more with less  and still innovate by using Microsoft products -- even in the present down  economy, which he described as "a reset" or "the new normal."  His position was supported by on-stage testimonials from executives at  Continental Airlines, Ford, Intel and Starwood Hotels on the efficiencies to be  derived from Microsoft's products.
Ballmer said that IT budgets "have been reset  down" and that Microsoft would have to demonstrate how its products can help  IT departments do more with less. In a Q&A session, Ballmer even suggested  that restricted budgets represented a kind of "freedom" for IT  departments looking to set priorities.
"One of the interesting things about budget reductions  is once the new budget's in placeā¦in a sense, the budget sets you free,"  Ballmer said. "You know you can't petition. We don't live in a world where  it'll be very easy to petition the business for more money. So it really gets  to be a question of tradeoffs. Within the new normal, the new IT budget, what  really is of highest priority -- what migrations, what transition?"
Ballmer paused his talk for an on-stage presentation  demonstrating how Microsoft's Office  Web Apps, scheduled for release in the first half of next year, could be  used to boost worker productivity while complying with corporate security requirements.
A presentation of the Outlook Web App showed how company  security policies could be enforced for remote workers using DirectAccess, a  feature available in the Enterprise  edition of Windows 7. Per the demonstration, DirectAccess allowed a remote  worker to access a document on the company server without having to use a  virtual private network (VPN) connection. The remote worker used Microsoft's  Excel Web App to manipulate charts -- all done using a browser.
"There was no VPN, yet the level of security was as  good as a VPN," Ballmer commented about the demo. 
He also gave a pitch for Microsoft's hosted applications, which  amount to a form of outsourcing for many IT organizations.
"We've seen an incredible wave of interest in what  we're doing with Exchange Online and SharePoint Online," Ballmer said.  "The biggest part of the IT budget in every company is in running the things  that you do today. Every dime you can save in the run budget becomes a dime you  can reinvest in the innovate budget."
Ballmer was asked whether the down economy implied that  innovation would be diminished in businesses, replaced by the concept of "good  enough."
"No," Ballmer said. "The truth is, you will  get pushed to be efficient. Which means you are going to take the cost out of  some things [that] you are doing today to do new things -- innovative things --  for tomorrow."
Ballmer acknowledged a tough sales job ahead. He noted that  most in the audience, in a quick show of hands, thought that future IT budgets  would be on the decline.
Software actually appeared to be one of the better-off  segments when Forrester Research  took a poll of IT spending trends in the enterprise in North America and Europe. Forrester  estimated that software spending would "hold steady" in the  enterprise in 2009 compared with a year ago.
The  report, "The  State of Enterprise Software: 2009," found that enterprises had allocated  about 16 percent of their IT operating budgets toward software costs in 2008,  with plans to boost that spending to 17 percent in 2009. Forrester  predicted a similar flat trend for "new software initiatives and projects,"  with spending rising from 33 percent in 2008 to 34 percent in 2009. 
A  separate Forrester Report, "US  Enterprise Versus SMB IT Budgets in 2009," predicted that  small-to-medium businesses would decline as promising business target for  software vendors. The current bad economy has changed that dynamic.
"Contrary  to past experience, small and medium-size business (SMB) IT spending will decline  more than enterprise IT spending as SMBs bear more of the pain from the housing  sector collapse and the financial crisis," wrote Andrew Bartels, author of  the report. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.