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steve ballmer

Steve Ballmer Starts Talking Yahoo Again

by Jason Wilk on March 19, 2009

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  • At a media conference in New York today,  Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said he expects to see fewer acquisitions in the next 9 months while the economy resettles, but he did say he would be open to discussing a search partnership with Yahoo’s new chief, Carol Bartz.
  • Because valuations at this point in time are hard to assess, Ballmer said he  preferred a search deal with Yahoo, but no outright acquisition. Bartz, in my eyes, has always been put in place at Yahoo to get back the original deal Microsoft offered last year. With no personal attachment to the company and Jerry Yang almost out of the picture, a search deal by the end of the year, followed by a 2010 acquisition by Microsoft seems entirely feasible.
  • Yahoo search market share has been declining for the past 24 months, so striking a deal soon would be in the best interest of Bartz, who is not exactly an expert in the field of turning around a search brand. From radio ads, to billboards, Yahoo can’t seem to find a break. What is in Yahoo’s corner is the fact that Microsoft’s search market share has been declining as well, making the no. 2 search company in the US an even more prime target for Microsoft who is desperate not to be left in the dust when it comes to the search game. Microsoft wants a search partnership with Yahoo in order to get bigger in the search business, but as we’ve seen with Google, being a big player in search can lead to the success of so many other cloud based products and revenue drivers.  I still have a hunch that Microsoft’s 2009 launch of Kumo.com, the rebranded LiveSearch, will have something to do with a Yahoo co-brand. At the end of the day, a search partnership can do nothing but help each of the compaies and provide another avevnue to sell advertisements. As with my 2009 predictions for the tech sector, a Yahoo-Microsoft partnership is a top 5 contender.

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Steve Ballmer Gets A Real Question From The Crowd

by Jason Wilk on March 5, 2009

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  • When’s the last time you ran into someone using a Windows Mobile based phone? Still thinking, huh? Well, it’s been at least 12 months for me. Now, imagine if you are the guy working on WinMo products, and every night you went out with your friends you were bombarded with your friends playing MafiaLive on their iPhones? Well, yesterday a member of the audience addressed this very issue directly at Steve Ballmer during the Microsoft CIO Summit. As usual with an high level executive, Ballmer offered an answer with little substance. He does mention however, that they need to pick up the pace. Here is the question, then the answer.

Question: With platforms like the Google phone and iPhone coming out, it’s really tough to continue to stand behind Windows Mobile when our employees are bringing these consumer devices into our environments,” the questioner explained. “And in your presentation you put Windows Mobile right in the center there, but it was a phone that doesn’t work in America and an operating system that you haven’t released. I’m wondering what your commitment is to continuing to get newer versions of the operating system in our hands so that we don’t have to fight this battle on the ground.”

Ballmer: “We have a significant release coming this year,” he said. “Not the full release we wanted to have this year but we have a significant release coming this year with Windows Mobile 6.5….We still don’t get some of the things that people want on the highest-end phones. Those will come on Windows Mobile 7 next year. Certainly I’m not, um–there’s opportunities for us to accelerate our execution in this area, and we’ve done a lot of work to really make sure we have a team that’s going to be able to accelerate. With that said, we did sell more Windows Mobile devices last year than Apple did iPhones–just an important factoid to have. Blackberry was a little bit ahead, and Google was nowhere to be seen, except in Silicon Valley, I’m sure. But we’ll do our best to help you with that challenge.”

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Office 14 Not Coming This Year Says Ballmer

by Jason Wilk on February 24, 2009

  • Every year, good ol’ Steve Ballmer shows up to Wall Street for his annual “Strategic Update” briefing with analysts on February 24. Despite rising anticipation, the Microsoft CEO said Office 14 won’t be shipping in 2009. MS execs more than a few times last year hinted that the latest enterprise software package would be seen in 2009. Customers can expect to see a beta version this summer, but don’t expect the real thing to drop until at least Q1 2010. Despite some issues with bugs at the moment, Windows 7 is still set to release in Q3 of this year. Why they wouldn’t want to release the latest versions of Windows and Office at the same time, I have no idea. Ballmer must have something up his sleeve if he is willing to wait that long to release an ugraded software package. It leaves companies like SalesForce and ZoHo a whole year to perfect their cloud solutions, further eating away at the gian’t market share.

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Recap: Microsoft At Mobile World Conference

by Jason Wilk on February 16, 2009

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  • Didn’t get a chance to head to Barcelona this year for the Mobile World Conference? No problem. We’ll be giving you the happenings. Here is a recap of everything that went on with Microsoft, who laid out their entire plans for the next two years of competing in the mobile arena.

Windows Mobile 6.5: This is latest version of Microsoft’s mobile OS, which is their answer to Apple’s iPhone OS and Google Android.  You will begin seeing it appear on new phones starting in the second half of 2009. WinMo 6.5 will have an entirely revamped user experience including touch-screen support, an entirely new homescreen, mobile browser (IE 6.1) and third-party marketplace to host those 17,000 WinMo apps spread around the web.

Microsoft MyPhone: A new standard to mobile web application that can “sync text messages, photos, video, contacts and more to the Web.” This is a direct competitor to Apple MobileMe, which Apple charges $100 a year for. MyPhone will be free considering this will be Microsoft’s central hub for WinMo phones as iTunes is the hub for the iPhone (just more features). Apple should have rolled MobileMe into iTunes.

Windows Marketplace for Mobile: Microsoft describes it as “a rich and integrated marketplace for searching, browsing and purchasing mobile applications from Windows phones or from a PC by simply using a Windows Live ID.” The Marketplace goes live this fall, and will be competing for the attention of third-party mobile developers just as Palm, Apple, Google, Nokia, RIM and others are currently doing. The one big ball Microsoft has in their corner here, is that there are currently 17,000 mobile applications that have been created for WinMo phones. This will just be the first time developers will have a home on deck.

Recite
: Microsoft’s attempt at re-inventing the voice recorder. Windows Mobile phones will allow users to record short notes and recall them using voice search.

Skyline: Another new Windows Mobile service and the successor to OutLook. Users can push both work and personal mail, contacts and calendar items to the phone sesamlessly.

Zune Mobile: Let’s face it the Zune isn’t going anywhere, but at the end of the day, it’s a decent music player. It belongs on the phone, making Microsoft phones a big step ahead of Google, Nokia, RIM and the rest of the gang who are using the Amazon music player or worse. It is rumored to have music and video purchasing/sharing/playback services. Keep an eye out for this next year.

Windows Mobile 7.0: The next version of Windows Mobile, which I’ve heard will be available on new phones by April 2010.

A Microsoft-branded phone: While many company watchers believe Microsoft is readying its own branded phone, I hear that — at least for the next couple of years — there won’t be a Microsoft-branded phone coming to market. Microsoft is working on a chasis reference design but, at least for the near term, Microsoft is leaving the smartphone manufacturing and branding to its phone partners. Do expect Microsoft to do more joint R&D and investment on Windows phones (like it announced on February 16 with LG), however.


More must read mobile news from the past 7 days:

Microsoft’s Attempt At The iPhone OS Debuts At MWC

Two Things To Get Excited About For The Palm Pre

Debunked: Apple Is Not To Blame For The G1 Missing Multi-Touch

Update: Why Apple Will Not Pursue A Palm Lawsuit

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Steve Ballmer’s Letter To Employees: You’re Fired

by Jason Wilk on January 22, 2009


From: Steve Ballmer
To: All Microsoft FTE
Subject: Realigning Resources and Reducing Costs

In response to the realities of a deteriorating economy, we’re taking important steps to realign Microsoft’s business. I want to tell you about what we’re doing and why.

Today we announced second quarter revenue of $16.6 billion. This number is an increase of just 2 percent compared with the second quarter of last year and it is approximately $900 million below our earlier expectations.

The fact that we are growing at all during the worst recession in two generations reflects our strong business fundamentals and is a testament to your hard work. Our products provide great value to our customers. Our financial position is solid. We have made long-term investments that continue to pay off.

But it is also clear that we are not immune to the effects of the economy. Consumers and businesses have reined in spending, which is affecting PC shipments and IT expenditures.

Our response to this environment must combine a commitment to long-term investments in innovation with prompt action to reduce our costs.

During the second quarter we started down the right path. As the economy deteriorated, we acted quickly. As a result, we reduced operating expenses during the quarter by $600 million. I appreciate the agility you have shown in enabling us to achieve this result.

Now we need to do more. We must make adjustments to ensure that our investments are tightly aligned with current and future revenue opportunities. The current environment requires that we continue to increase our efficiency.

As part of the process of adjustments, we will eliminate up to 5,000 positions in R&D, marketing, sales, finance, LCA, HR, and IT over the next 18 months, of which 1,400 will occur today. We’ll also open new positions to support key investment areas during this same period of time. Our net headcount in these functions will decline by 2,000 to 3,000 over the next 18 months. In addition, our workforce in support, consulting, operations, billing, manufacturing, and data center operations will continue to change in direct response to customer needs.

Our leaders all have specific goals to manage costs prudently and thoughtfully. They have the flexibility to adjust the size of their teams so they are appropriately matched to revenue potential, to add headcount where they need to increase investments in order to ensure future success, and to drive efficiency.

To increase efficiency, we’re taking a series of aggressive steps. We’ll cut travel expenditures 20 percent and make significant reductions in spending on vendors and contingent staff. We’ve scaled back Puget Sound campus expansion and reduced marketing budgets. We’ll also reduce costs by eliminating merit increases for FY10 that would have taken effect in September of this calendar year.

Each of these steps will be difficult. Our priority remains doing right by our customers and our employees. For employees who are directly affected, I know this will be a difficult time for you and I want to assure you that we will provide help and support during this transition. We have established an outplacement center in the Puget Sound region and we’ll provide outplacement services in many other locations to help you find new jobs. Some of you may find jobs internally. For those who don’t, we will also offer severance pay and other benefits.

The decision to eliminate jobs is a very difficult one. Our people are the foundation of everything we have achieved and we place the highest value on the commitment and hard work that you have dedicated to building this company. But we believe these job eliminations are crucial to our ability to adjust the company’s cost structure so that we have the resources to drive future profitable growth.

I encourage you to attend tomorrow’s Town Hall at 9am PST in Café 34 or watch the webcast.

While this is the most challenging economic climate we have ever faced, I want to reiterate my confidence in the strength of our competitive position and soundness of our approach.

With these changes in place, I feel confident that we will have the resources we need to continue to invest in long-term computing trends that offer the greatest opportunity to deliver value to our customers and shareholders, benefit to society, and growth for Microsoft.

With our approach to investing for the long term and managing our expenses, I know Microsoft will emerge an even stronger industry leader than it is today.

Thank you for your continued commitment and hard work.

Steve

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