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September 17, 2005

Microsoft's 'troubling exits'

coverbusweek.jpgThis week's Business Week cover story by Jay Greene is an exhaustive examination of the current state of Microsoft -- looking behind the recent series of employee departures to explore the company's disproportionate reliance on Windows and Office, its sluggish pace of major product releases, its layers of bureaucracy, and calls from inside and outside to institute reform.

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer responds in this Q&A, saying that employee morale remains high overall and that it's good for the company to have a culture that encourages self-criticism: "We obviously can always improve. We've set high expectations for ourselves. But, man oh man, have we got an incredible pipeline of innovation coming in the next year."

In this related story, Business Week's Greene meets with "Microsoft's Deep Throat" -- the anonymous employee whose Mini-Microsoft blog has emerged as one of the key voices for change. There are lots of interesting comments, from employees and others, on the related Mini-Microsoft post.

More reaction:

  • "Uh oh -- I'm in Business Week," writes Sean Blagsvedt, one of the two Microsoft researchers whose "Ten Crazy Ideas to Shake Up Microsoft" memo to Bill Gates was excerpted and cited in the story.

  • Microsoft employee Rob Chambers: "It’s true that Microsoft is a different company than it was 10 years ago, but it’s not as bad as what this article tries to make it out to be."

  • Business Week's Tech Beat Blog tells the story behind the story, and examines Microsoft's top ranking in a survey of computer science graduates. How could that happen, given Google's buzz? The search giant wasn't among the pre-written choices given to students, but it still fared well as a write-in.

  • Investor Paul Kedrosky notes that Forbes is also running a cover story with similar themes this week, "Microsoft's Midlife Crisis." (Free registration required.) Kedrosky concludes that it's a good time to buy Microsoft stock, given the big product releases coming up next year.

  • That link came via Om Malik, who observes that Microsoft is "in a street brawl with everyone from Sony, Nokia, Apple, and every tiny start-up that is coming up with new ideas. That is an energy sapping, tiresome battle on many fronts, especially at a time when the company is slowly becoming a collection of fiefdoms." However, he adds, "I am loathe to bet against Microsoft. They just have too much money."

  • Some of the related commentary on Slashdot is well-reasoned and interesting.

  • Microsoft's Robert Scoble: "Am I proud to work here at Microsoft? Yes. Is my morale high? Yes although there are definitely issues I'm working with management on that I'm hearing from around the company. The way we compensate people, for instance, is just not optimal. Is Microsoft becoming less relevant? I'll let our customers answer that one. Is Microsoft a fun place to work? Absolutely."

  • Ed Brill considers Ballmer's comments about blogging.

Meanwhile, some are reacting strongly to this vow by Ballmer in the story: "We won the desktop. We won the server. We will win the Web. We will move fast, we will get there. We will win the Web."

Writes Molly Holzschlag, a steering committee member for the Web Standards Project, on her personal blog: "The Web is not a prize to be won, and Mr. Ballmer’s attitude is deplorable in the light of what the Web means to the world, to users, to designers and developers and to put it into Microsoft parlance, customers." (Link via DL Byron)

Ballmer explains what he means by "win the Web" as part of the Business Week Q&A: "[W]e have to be best in class, not only in taking advantage of those devices that you hold or you type on on your desk, or that will end up on the server, but also those services that are out in the Internet itself."

Posted by Todd Bishop at September 17, 2005 09:52 AM
Comments

Thanks for the follow-up post.

Posted by: DL Byron at September 17, 2005 05:04 PM

Good reporting Todd.

The presence of Microsoft and it's destructive policies are condemning the Puget Sound to 3rd World status in technology.

We should be participating in the Global move to OSS and Linux -- but the Gate$ and Ballmerian suppression are hurting each and every citizen. Their greedy megalomania have turned Seattle from an economic Mecca to a type of NOLA convention center -- a hellhole from which savvy technologists must flee.

Please Mr. President -- Send Us Some Buses!

Posted by: John Bailo at September 18, 2005 08:02 AM

Someone asked me last week where she should direct her retirement savings. I recommended a mix of investments including a global fund with emphasis on China and Russia. I explained that with US business so thoroughly under the control of Microsoft--and with the single point of failure this represents for the entire US economy--the US represents a bad place to invest. Add bad foreign, fiscal and monetary policy and the 21st century growth markets of BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) become increasingly attractive. It's not just the above strategic risk to the US economy that Microsoft domination portends, either. It's the mass security threat that applications deployed on a platform never designed for security portends. It's also the massive productivity hit that workers having to waste time fiddling with notoriously unstable Microsoft systems entails. To allow this convicted criminal monopolist to so completely hamstring any economy is foolhardy. It's also a disaster waiting to happen.

Posted by: James Strother at September 19, 2005 06:41 PM
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Microsoft employees:
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Antitrust info:
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Additional sites:
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