Dvorak is Right, and Microsoft is Wrong

Industry pundit John Dvorak asks What happened to Microsoft? in a new commentary for MarketWatch. I have to sort of wonder if the question is rhetorical, because Microsoft is doing what they're doing on purpose, to their detriment. The problem for Microsoft, of course, is that it's strategy is flawed. This time at least, Dvorak is right. And Microsoft is wrong.

Microsoft earnings look to be back on track, but its once powerful public relations machine seems to have derailed. We hear very little from its outside agencies and almost nothing from the inside PR department. Where are the exciting news stories about what the company is doing?

The next generation cash cow would be Windows 8 and by now, if Microsoft was doing its job, we'd be given a pack of propaganda about what the new operating system would do, when it would be released and how much better it will be than anything ever released to computers users, ever.

So far, nothing.

The company has essentially turned over the buzz machine to Apple, a company that gets non-stop coverage for what amounts to a giant iPod Touch. [Exactly. --Paul]

The real cash cows for Microsoft are Windows and Office and for at least 15 years every pundit and prognosticator has been claiming that these two items were dead. Yet they keep selling like hotcakes.

But as things stand now, I have no idea what this company is doing or what they are up to. All anyone talks about is Apple, HP, Dell, and Google.

Microsoft is simply not in the conversation anymore. That can't be good for the company or for investors.

Exactly right. But the problem here is easily explained. In fact, I've explained it before. Windows 7, as a slice in time, was so successful for Microsoft that the company is now copying the Windows 7 to-market strategy across the board. That is, they're not communicating anything about a product until the feature set is written in stone. So we hear nothing about things like Windows Live, Windows Phone, Kin, whatever, until it's very close to release, too close for the company to have to scale back its plans and be embarrassed by feature cuts, as it was repeatedly with Windows Vista.

But that's the problem. Windows 7 was very much a particular product at a particular time. Windows 7 was so successful because Vista was perceived so poorly. And the Windows 7 strategy worked simply because the previous, Vista-era strategy of early and often disclosures didn't work at all. In that one case.

This doesn't mean that the Windows 7 strategy is the right strategy for every product, or even every Windows version. In fact, unless the previous version of those Microsoft products were as badly executed as Vista, one might make the argument that the Windows 7 strategy doesn't make any sense at all. I have said just this, and repeatedly.

So this cone of silence stuff is cute. And yes, Microsoft will make public statements about how its enterprise customers expect predictability. Whatever. They're not your biggest customer base anymore, Microsoft, and they're not exactly upgrading at a record pace anyway, so why are you bending over for those guys? Consumers, however, are. How about giving them some sizzle with that steak?

I know that, internally at Microsoft, many people do not agree with the direction the company is going. And all you have to do is read the tech press and, heck, the mainstream press, to see who's getting all the press these days.

It ain't you, Microsoft. And that is indeed bad news.

And if you're looking to copy Apple's success--and you are--then at least do it right. It's not about the products at all. What Apple does right is marketing. It's form over function, plain and simple. How else could the world be so excited over an unnecessary over-sized iPod touch? Because it's from Apple, that's how. And the press markets it for them, and makes people believe that this is somehow a big deal. It's a self-replicating back-patting, buddy system, plain and simple.

And you're not part of the circle, Microsoft. How else can you explain the ginormous Windows 7 sales that get no attention, and certainly no love from Wall Street? You've sold over 100 million licenses of this thing in record time and all anyone can talk about are lost iPhones and the iPad. I mean, give me a break.

Discuss this Article 58

DRWAM
on Apr 26, 2010

I kinda think that it's hard to grow bigger when you are enormous. It's hard to go anywhere, when you are already everywhere. MS is very successful in the OS and Office business, and now the Xbox is making some money. However, I agree that MS needs better PR for products other than Windows and Office.

infiniteloop
on Apr 26, 2010

"Microsoft is not generating the excitement or wow factor anymore and you can put that down to a PR\Marketing dept with no direction and little creativity"

Wrong.

Microsoft is not generating any excitement or wow factor because it has no products which its PR/Marketing department can work with. Its Cloud services are boring to the general public and mistrusted by business. Just yesterday it released some Windows 7 Touch Apps for free download for people to try on touchscreen PC's. It just looks desperate. There are tens of thousands of similar and better Apps available right now for iPhone/iPod Touch and iPad.

Microsoft is trying to fight too many corners and this has put paid to actually bringing anything new to the party.

chuckb84
on Apr 26, 2010

"Microsoft has the hardest audiences, they show Natal, Phone 7, amazing Bing maps augmented reality technology, and all the stuff at MS Labs which is amazing, and they just get a warmluke applause and a small article in the media."

The problem is that Microsoft has NEVER shown the ability to make any money from any of that stuff. They make essentially all their money from desktop OS and Office. They've failed to make any money on anything else. Sure, servers make a little, but it is a pittance compared to Windows and Office. Xbox has profitable quarters now, but is $20B in the hole for development and will never break even.

For all the hand wringing, Microsoft is a highly profitable $270B company. The trouble is their markets are very mature. Excitement over Windows 8? Well, why? What will it have that we don't have already in Windows 7? Office version whatever? Why? Office hit feature saturation several ticks back.

The stock is flat and the market cap essentially flat for some time because investors don't see how the company is going to grow.

The one thing in Microsoft labs that blows me away is Photosynth. They could do so much with that, but it is Xerox Parc decades ago; they just demo the stuff and then nothing happens.

rr0de74@live.com
on Apr 26, 2010

"It doesn't help that, outside of the business space, you could argue that Windows lacks a "killer app".  This ties in with the decline of PC gaming, which Paul has discussed, and the fact that more and more of our computing experience is web-based.  Furthermore, as our computing experience becomes more mobile with laptops, smartphones, tablets, etc., and variations in hardware specs are less important, people care more about the form-factor and the total experience.  Obviously, this plays nicely into Apple's hands."

Best statement yet.  Microsoft is moving to the cloud slower than the rest.  The OS and Office products are boring and in the MS world tied to your PC.

Mobile/Cloud gets all of the attention these days and Apple/Google control the mind share in these areas right now.

A good example of this is IM.  IM sitting a computer is going down hill, while texting, mobile versions of twitter and facebook posting replace it.  IM will still be used by why go over to your computer and "IM" while you can do it on your phone.

RobertC
on Apr 26, 2010

BXP I think the lack of aggression on Microsoft's part has much to do with the hefty penalties from antitrust bodies in the EU and US that have basically skewered the company's hitherto unstoppable tenacity.

The impact of the law on the company cannot be understated.

daveinla
on Apr 26, 2010

I have to agree with decals 92 who hits the nails here:

last time MS delivered something that excited the people was Win95.

Back then the PC was all the rage and Apple was selling outrageously expensive machines that looked good.

Since then OS have just evolved to keep up with our digital life while being more secure and reliable but nothing exciting. Nobody ever got excited by Office I think. Nobody's excited anymore by a computer (less alone one that runs Windows); the X and Y gen are all about portable device that are sleek and user-friendly

As far as products goes, MS is good with releasing concepts that are more or less vaporware or under-delivering when products come out.

People have never been wowed by a MS product in a while and it's not bound to change.

And Win7 yes was a sale success, but for a good reason: it was the too long awaited successor to the worthy XP OS that bridged the gap with Leopard in a way that Vista failed to deliver. It's just the OS that should have been delivered by MS 5 yrs ago, and now people are snapping it to make up for the lost years stuck with the old looking XP.

DRWAM
on Apr 27, 2010

rrode, my decision to replace my Treo 659  had much to do with form factor, but also functionality. Finally, Paul's review, as well as two friends experience, helped me decide to buy the iPhone 3G. However, when looking for a laptop, the price made the decision. I was able to test it out at BestBuy to insure that it had at least the minimum speed that I needed and the screen size was good for me. I not thinking that form factor was much of the decision unless you count screen size for me. At $399, I can tolerate a lot, but I actually have no problems for all everyday activities. Sure, it's not my Mac Pro Tower, but it meets my everyday needs without a hiccup.

Dipsh t Admin
on Apr 27, 2010

"The impact of the law on the company cannot be understated."

Exactly.  I've said the same thing before.  They have become rather meek with competitors because they know the hate that will reign down on them if they act too aggressively.  Being meek in this case *IS* a PR strategy.

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