• Explore the magic and the mystery!



  • The Microsoft Death Spiral Continues

    May 6th, 2011

    You could see it this past quarter, when Apple, for the first time, posted higher profits than Microsoft; total sales were already ahead. I could almost imagine Steve Jobs and his crew applauding and cheering when Microsoft’s financials were originally announced. It was a long time coming.

    Apple’s ascendency was most obvious last year when the company’s market cap exceeded that of Microsoft. Whereas Apple’s stock is, overall, rising, Microsoft’s has been flat for years. Fewer and fewer investors have confidence in the long-term prospects, although Microsoft continues to make profits that most companies would envy.

    The problem is that Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer doesn’t seem to have a grasp of the fact that innovation means inventing something new and different, rather than poorly imitate what has gone before. This lack of inspiration from the executive suite may, in part, explain why Windows Phone 7, though it has a really nice interface, seems to be a couple of years behind when it comes to features. Microsoft must still believe they’re stuck in the 1990s, where the mere vaporware promise to beat or exceed the competition some day is sufficient to keep customers calling.

    These days, if there’s any chance of a replay of a two-party operating system war in the mobile space, it’s between Apple and Google, and Microsoft may have a seat at the table, but probably a small one. Perhaps their last great hope is that long-term alliance with Nokia, where Windows Phone 7 will replace the existing Symbian-based OS on the company’s smartphones come next year. Meantime, Apple earns more than Nokia on handsets, with a fraction of the market share. Worse, telling customers that existing Nokia gear is already obsolete doesn’t help the company make much progress this year on the high end.

    And it’s not that Microsoft’s promotional campaigns seem terribly compelling. Although Windows 7 is doing well enough in a stagnant PC market, a large portion of the new sales involve OEM bundles, meaning the OS is preloaded onto a new PC. It’s not that Microsoft’s lame ads are causing loads of people to rush into their local consumer electronics outlet to buy a costly retail upgrade.

    The Bing campaign, to boost Microsoft’s search engine, is curious in its own right. The message is not simple and direct, as in any Apple ad you can mention in recent memory. Worse, the lame attempt at humor falls flat. Besides, what’s so compelling about a free search engine anyway? How many TV ads has Google run lately, or in your memory, yet Google’s search share remains fairly consistent. Bing’s gains came by cannibalizing Yahoo! search which is, as you recall, now powered by Bing.

    That Bing is now an option on a Mac with Safari might help, at least for those who care to try a different search engine, or regard Google as the “evil empire,” Microsoft’s former role. But most customers don’t really care a whit about changing search engine options. Google works fine. Bing might have prettier background images, but I am not at all convinced the search results are superior, let alone comparable.

    Where is the message that Bing conveys that would make you want to switch? Other than, as I said, encouraging people who can’t tolerate Google, which doesn’t really demonstrate a provable advantage for Microsoft, or even a sensible marketing strategy.

    While Microsoft seems to be doing OK is on the game machine front — and they will likely prosper from the backlash in light of Sony’s recent Playstation online debacle — on the long haul the biggest competition is that old nemesis, Apple, with the iPhone, iPod touch, and the iPad.

    And when it comes to tablets, whenever there’s talk of a potential iPad competitor, new Android OS devices get first priority. Then there’s the curious case of the RIM BlackBerry PlayBook, which still must be bridged with a regular BlackBerry to use an email client, not to mention RIM’s pair of CEOs who cannot voice a coherent vision for the company. It’s no wonder RIM’s growth curve has flattened, and the PlayBook was greeted by collective yawns.

    Nowhere do we hear much about an impending Microsoft tablet solution. Sure, maybe Windows 8 will have support for ARM chips, the ones used on other tablets. But supporting a set of mobile processors doesn’t mean that Microsoft has a grasp on how to tailor the classic Windows interface to work best on a mobile device with a touchscreen or tiny physical keyboard. As I said, Windows Phone 7 isn’t bad, actually. Aside from the missing features, there aren’t a whole lot of apps available yet. There’s also a report that Microsoft is actually trying to lure iOS developers to the platform, because they aren’t coming of their own accord.

    Now if Microsoft fails to adapt to the 21st century, it doesn’t mean that sales will suddenly plummet. There’s enough momentum there to keep Microsoft’s stockholders — and their wealthy executives — fat and rich for a number of years. But the trend, as I’ve previously said, remains inexorable. It’s going to be downhill, and the slide will be slow and treacherous.



    Share
    | Print This Post Print This Post

    9 Responses to “The Microsoft Death Spiral Continues”

    1. Jon T says:

      It’s funny, but over the last five, six, and more years, hardcore Mac users have predicted that Apple would win the day and Microsoft would become the Emperor with no clothes.

      The slow, patient, dignified and determined march by the incredibly able team at Apple is today really – really – beginning to bear fruit.

      Never have I read so much, from all sides, expressing the ineptitiude of Microsoft.

      As usual, Gene’s remarks above hit the nail on the head, and yesterday these were my favourites:

      http://minimsft.blogspot.com/2011/04/microsoft-fy11q3-results.html

      http://www.businessinsider.com/microsoft-bing-losing-billions-2011-4

      Microsoft is like a massive tanker that has been navigating the channel, so big it mows down buoys, and smaller ships, some who have holed it, such as Apple. More and more, as the channel narrows, it finds it cannot progress without hitting the banks on either side. Its sides are getting thinner and more vulnerable and the time will come when the water pours in, the cargo and resources pour out, and it settles into the mud, unable to move, for a long, slow, painful decline.

      Meanwhile Apple is more and more like hydrofoil, navigating the channel with ease, and able to go places that tanker never could.

    2. John Davis says:

      Years ago, when Apple was “beleaguered,” someone wrote an article making the point that “since Apple has only 1% of market share (or whatever the figure was, I forget), it can’t possibly be a leader.

      “What a strange thing to say,” I thought. “This has nothing to do with it.”

      A leader is a person. It’s never more than one. You only get one pilot in a plane, one driver in a car, one pedal pusher on a bicycle. There was no team involved in the paintings of Van Goch, the symphonies of Ludwig Beethoven, etc.

      So what happens if you do have groups of people led by groups. You end up with countries like most of those that call themselves democratic. They are led by groups and committees and very little gets done. Microsoft and many other large corporations suffer from this. Microsoft has no leaders. No one could call Balmer a leader, he isn’t. “Mr Knee jerk” might be a better description. He doesn’t think, he reacts. MS study the successful actions of other companies and attempt to imitate them. They got away with it with Windows 3.1, 95, 98, 2000 etc., because they went in the corporate end. Windows is an OS designed for a committee and is likely to be used by someone who belongs to one.

      Creation, new ideas, thinking outside the box, these things are individual activities. If too many people are involved the flow stops and creativity sinks to an imitation of something or even lower to a statement about what is NOT wanted.

      Stephen Jobs IS a leader. This maybe unpopular with the liberal psych crew, but it gets the job done.

      The other doesn’t.

    3. bmovie says:

      Slow and steady, wins the race.

      Back in the days when TV and Technology emigrated to Japan, the big companies to watch were Sony and Panasonic. Sony innovated and Panasonic copied. Today, both are around, but Sony’s in trouble with compromised data and Panasonic is not. So maybe Microsoft is in a good place.

      Bing’s advertising is terrible and I hate how almost every other word gets underlined and Bings to the 4 corners of the Web. I’m rather happy with Google with my search, but it you ever searched for images on Google’s image search, and you will hit at least one image that’s a “Bing” image — however Microsoft sneaks it in, — that will scurry you into the Bing image universe—a much faster and more organized world of super-easy image search. All images fill a same size box and there is no option to go to the web page or the image. It goes like an arrow to the image(s).

      On the tablet front, the Enterprise (bean-counter central) is quite patient and quite large—slow and steady here too! How else would you explain a 32 bit Microsoft Word chock full of ribbons to send out a simple memo. If the 100 pound gorilla in the room didn’t move or weighed 100 pounds, it wouldn’t be the 100 pound gorilla in the room.

    4. bmovie says:

      Oops!
      500 pound gorilla. Not 100 pound gorilla!

    5. veggiedude says:

      I think it might soon be time for Apple to invest $150 million into Microsoft by buying some of their shares, I mean, they owe them that at least…

    6. chano says:

      Not that slow a decline, I believe, but certainly inexorable and treacherous.
      There is a tipping point in such things.
      Like people closing their accounts at a bank leading to a point where everyone starts bailing and, suddenly, there’s a run on the bank.

    7. The Microsoft Death Spiral Continues – Blog! says:

      […] Link Posted in Apple, Business, Computer, iPad, iPhone, Macintosh, Micro$oft, Software, Technology, Windward SHARE THIS Twitter Facebook Delicious StumbleUpon E-mail « Why Netflix’s Lousy On-Demand Library Is Beating iTunes and Everyone Else No Comments Yet […]

    Leave Your Comment