arvino’s posterous

business 'un-usual', innovation, breakthrough ideas, management, life, experience, wisdom & entrepreneurial spirit around the globe 
Filed under

leadership

 

Microsoft’s Real Problem: Facebook is the New Outlook

Microsoft’s Real Problem: Facebook is the New Outlook, and Other ways that Redmond is not Listening to Generation Y
 
by Dan Kimerling on September 13, 2008
 
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/09/13/microsofts-real-problem-facebook-is-the-new-outlook-and-other-ways-that-remond-is-not-listening-to-generation-y/
 
Microsoft, for all its problems, is a great software company. Its core products, the Windows operating system and the Office productivity suite, still dominate their respective markets and, while they are continually facing more capable competition and hence have declining market share, Windows and Office remain strong product offerings.
 
Yet, it is clear that something is rotten in the State of Redmond. A reading of Microsoft’s Annual Report only strengthens this conviction. For those that do not want to read the entire thing Brier Dudley’s blog offers an excellent summation (http://blog.seattletimes.nwsource.com/brierdudley/2008/07/microsoft_discloses_google_app.html), focusing on the issues that keep Ballmer up at night.
 
However, it does not seem to be the competitive landscape which has changed the consumer orientation towards Microsoft. What has really thrown Microsoft off, is that other companies have shown those consumers both most willing to try new technologies and most willing to open their wallets for technology, the consumers of Generation-Y, that they do not need Microsoft. Companies like Facebook, Apple, and Google, have changed the way that young consumers consume, and therefore purchase, technology. And that is a very dangerous position for a software company to be in, especially one that is not known for being nimble on its feet.
 
Facebook is perhaps the clearest example of this. While Mark Zuckerberg and others, brand Facebook a Social Utility, for young people, who really only care about functionality, Facebook succeeds because it is the killer web application for communications and personal information management. Facebook Mail is not without its problems, but the combination of Facebook Mail, Facebook Chat, and what is functionally an auto updating address book, makes Facebook into the new Outlook not only for those who are inside of Silicon Valley, but for anyone of the millions of people who use Facebook as either their sole or their primary digital identity. LinkedIn, is even more explicit than FaceBook is, in trying to become a person’s primary stop for vital, in this case professional, communications, as it is functionally a digital Rolodex.
 
Another example of Microsoft’s inability to understand younger users, comes in what I can only call their software design philosophy, which I can summarize as “Throw in More Features”. Yet, that seems antithetical to those products which are selling most successfully in the market place, especially to young people. Microsoft Office is the clearest example of this. The myriad number of options buried in Word 2008’s ribbons, will rarely be used by most users. And in Excel 2008, some users might need pivot tables, but vast majority of those that use spreadsheets will never ever need to use them, nor will they ever write a macro, or script in Visual Basic. What is clear from the success of Google Docs and Zoho, especially amongst college age students, is that people want tools that are simultaneously powerful and simple to use. And that is why not only are web based office replacements, which focus on ease of use,facilitating collaborative exchange, and being able to publish in digital environments, but also iWork and Star office, are gaining traction.
 
So, what is the take away from all of this? For Microsoft to pick up the proverbial ball and start running with it, it will need to listen to what the consumer wants, and design products that fit those needs, rather than assuming that the consumer will buy whatever it is that Microsoft hands them, just because it is a Microsoft product. And, the young consumers of today, the big spenders of tomorrow, want products that are focused on mobility, ease of use, speed, and simplicity. Perhaps what is most frustrating is that it is clear that it is not the hardware that is keeping Microsoft from building an Apple killer. There are great products that run the Windows platform. But young consumers, I believe, do not want just great hardware, but want a great computing experience, given how they create, disseminate, and consume information. Until Microsoft starts listening to young people and creating products and services that simply work, and that means no crashes, no blue screens, and a dead simple user interface, it will not surprise me that a melancholy mood will hang over Microsoft, and its share price.

   
Click here to download:
Microsofts_Real_Problem_Facebo.zip (113 KB)

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   bad   ballmerian   failure   innovation   leadership   microsoft  

Comments [0]

Oh, Get Over It Mr. Ball**er ... :-(

Oh get over it Mr Ball***er .. What's all these "I'm a PC Gear" stuff really mean if what Microsoft deliver (during your reign) is a consistent stream of lame, boring, so-so, photo-copying, 'dinosauric' innovation and product ??
Real innovation work, real consistent groundbreaking design and product; that's what matter the most; not these "ad vs ad", "claim vs claim" on top of (your) recent lame products.
I am proud of Microsoft in the past. Bill Gates really needs to be back.

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   ballmerian   change   leadership   microsoft   yuck  

Comments [0]

Truest Leader Act!

The era of 'steril CEO' that only wants to 'have his shoe cleaned (by others)' is over.
 
Today's truest entrepreneurs, successful leaders and CEO -- Richard Branson, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs -- do their act directly, draw their detail design themselves, go up the stage and do their awesome presentation themselves. Their feet is on the ground.
 
Skirmish steril CEOs is so horribly "1930"s. ;-)

Richard Branson: http://holykaw.com/this-is-why-richard-branson-is

Bill Gates: http://arvino.posterous.com/board-room-vs-bored-room

Bill Gates: http://arvino.posterous.com/board-room-vs-bored-room

Steve Jobs: http://arvino.posterous.com/board-room-vs-bored-room

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   act   awesome   leadership   philosophy   principles   true  

Comments [0]

HTC's Rapid Innovation & Entrepreneurial Bold Act Is Truly Awesome!

HTC products become increasingly awesome. SInce 1.5 year ago, as a respond and anticipation to iPhone touch, HTC pioneer Windows Mobile devices that is 'touch ready' -- even before Microsoft really swiftly done so.
It's not a perfect 'touch interface' yet at that time. I happen to know because I happen to have the first generation of the HTC touch device :-) Yet the rapid (and truly responsive innovation) works. Without HTC's quick and daring initiatives, WIndows Mobile would probably already been 'obsolete' even more.
 
Now, HTC again pioneer the Android market, by becoming the first phone manufacturer releasing G1 phone, long while others still 'watching, long before others jumps in, into the market place.
 
Peter Chou's -- HTC CEO -- leadership, and entrepreneurial bold act is truly awesome!

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   awesome   htc   innovation   leadership   market   marketing  

Comments [0]

Innovation At A S..L..O..W..W..W p-a-a-a-c-e ... :-O

Innovation at a slow pace seems to be Mr. Ball** leadership signature at Microsoft.
 
Mr. Ball** seems busy to 'pooh pooh'-ing the competitor, 'monkey dance'-ing when he got chance, boastful shouting, ... yet when it comes for his time to deliver (real innovation), Mr. Ball**'s Micro*** simply postpone the schedule back!
 
Innovation at a s-l-l-o-o-o-w-w-w-w p-a-a-a-c-e ? .. ? .. ? .. ? .. ? .. ? ..??
 
Oh My, Oh My!

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   innovation   leadership   marketing   microsfot   slow   yuck  

Comments [0]

The Tale Of The Dinosaur

Long long time ago, big huge powerful dinosaurs live big around the earth and dominate the land to each other.
Meanwhile, plants are just small, spread everywhere, being shallow, 'puny' and tiny.
 
When sudden climate change come, the big heavy less adaptable dinosaur dies.
Nobody believe it can happen, but it dies.
The big huge powerful dominating dinosaur extinct.
 
Meanwhile, the adaptive plants lives on.

  • Is Microsoft & its Closed-Computing concept (aka 'everything only run on Windows') the gigantic dinosaur of our software industry today?
  • Is the internet & open connectivity the 'meteoric changes' that changes the total climate of the industry?
  • Is OpenComputing (aka 'everything runs anywhere anytime on any device and any platform') is the flexible adaptive future-ready plants that spread and seed around?

We'll see.
 
As Darwin says: "Only the most adaptive survive".
 
-arv

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   competition   innovation   leadership   market   trend   yuck  

Comments [1]

Micro-hoo??

Microsoft vs. Yahoo ?? (Round 3)
 
Micro-hoo -- part 3?
 
What would happen when people type www.yahoo.com, and the first page that appear is: "do you want to install silverlight" ?? :-O what would happen when people activate their YM, and the first message that appear is: "Are you a PC" ??
 
I seriously wonder what's so cool about Microsoft buying Yahoo, except that Carl Ichan now has his "money making objective" happen, and Mr Ballmer has his "apetite" to "eat Yahoo" (and later to have a chance to beat Google) fulfilled?
 
History shows that under Mr. Ball** leadership, the bigger Microsoft become, the slower it innovate in ways that changes society for the better.
 
Only when Microsoft had a leader that enable the company to innovate greatly once more, such acquisition matters. If not, perhaps it'd just be "monsterous distruction" to the great innovation potential of the world software industry. A step back to the world's global innovation potential, rather than a meaningful giant leap forward.
 
-arv

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   competition   innovation   leadership   market   microsoft  

Comments [1]

Computing .. In the REAL CLOUD! :-)

Inflight Internet Now Goes Live!
 
Really cool!
 
Why wasting those valuable time staring on the wall when you can now use it for browsing, surfing and working on the net?
 
Truly entertaining, innovative, and fun!
 
Virgin America rocks! :-)
 
Here's the press release:
 
http://gogo.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=43&item=11
 
-arv

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   cloud computing   innovation   leadership   next step   trend  

Comments [0]

Cloud Computing

This is how computing of the future would be. Simple. Fast. Flexbile.
Desktop software connects to the web. Key processes resides in the cloud itself.
One day, almost everything even might resides on the web.

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   cloud computing   idea   innovation   leadership   trend  

Comments [1]

Board Room vs Bored Room

     
Click here to download:
Board_Room_vs_Bored_Room.zip (605 KB)

Leading/innovation companies have their board sitting in the 'lab', looking at competition and dynamics of the marketplace, giving awesome direct presentation, drawing-discussing-designing-and-strategizing on the board, making things happen.
Giant yet slow-down companies have their board sitting in their 'bored room', looking at their 'sacred' spreadsheet and numbers, hoping their quarterly numbers will happen .. eventually.

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   boardroom   innovation   leadership   management   strategy   style  

Comments [1]