Microsoft Nightmare Is Coming True

RoomService

Dinner is now being served.
BGOL Investor
RELATED QUOTES


<table id="yui_3_5_1_1_1354594546402_1168" class="yui3-accordion"><thead><tr><th class="first">Symbol</th><th>Price</th><th>Change</th></tr></thead><tbody id="yui_3_5_1_1_1354594546402_1231"><tr id="yui_3_5_1_1_1354594546402_1170" class="yui3-accordion-item yui3-accordion-item-hd yui3-accordion-item-trigger yui3-accordion-item-active"><td class="first">MSFT</td><td>26.43</td><td>-0.19</td></tr><tr id="yui_3_5_1_1_1354594546402_1230" class="yui3-accordion-item-bd yui3-accordion-item-bd-active"><td id="yui_3_5_1_1_1354594546402_1229" colspan="3">
</td></tr></tbody></table>


Almost one year ago today, we laid out the nightmare scenario for Microsoft (MSFT) that could lead to its business collapsing. After laying it all out, we concluded, "Fortunately for Microsoft, none of this is going to happen."

We were wrong.

A lot changed in the last year. Microsoft's nightmare scenario is actually starting to take hold. We're revisiting our slideshow from last year to see how things have played out.

Each number that follows has one piece of the nightmare scenario for Microsoft and an explanation of where Microsoft stands in comparison to that hypothetical situation.

1. The iPad eats the consumer PC market.

This is happening right now. In the third quarter of 2012, PC sales were down 8 percent on a year-over-year basis worldwide. In the U.S., sales were down 14 percent. A big chunk of the decline can be attributed to the rise of the iPad. Apple sold 14 million iPads last quarter, which is more than the top PC maker, Lenovo, which shipped 13.7 million PCs. Throw in Apple's 4.9 million Macs, and it's the top computer maker by a mile.

As the personal computer market goes ...

2. Employees gradually switch away from using Windows PCs for work.

This trend has not played out that dramatically in 2012. However, British bank Barclays bought 8,500 iPads at employees' insistence this year.

And a recent survey showed that the iPhone has overtaken RIM as the smartphone of choice for enterprises. As more people get comfortable with Apple's mobile products at work, Microsoft will have to worry about them converting their Windows-based computers to Macs at work, too.

Microsoft has a plan to combat this but ...

3. Windows 8 fails to stop the iPad.

Gulp. It's still early, but every most data points say Windows 8 is not going to make a dent in the iPad.

-- NPD says Windows tablet sales were "nonexistent" between 10/21 and 11/17.
-- It also says Windows sales were down 21 percent over that period on a year-over-year basis.
-- Piper analyst Gene Munster was in a Microsoft store for two hours on Black Friday and saw zero Surface sales.
-- Microsoft reportedly cut its Surface order in half.
-- Ballmer said Surface sales were "modest."

Meanwhile, we can't think of any analyst who has cut his or her iPad estimate for the quarter based on Surface sales. In Microsoft's defense, it says it sold 40 million licenses, which it says is out pacing Windows 7. There's a chance analysts are wrong.

4. Loyal developers start to leave the Microsoft platform.

We're not sure if this happening or not. So far, the early signs are actually positive for Microsoft. It has over 20,000 apps in its Windows app store. Windows 8 is only a month old. At the same time, Microsoft doesn't have a Facebook app for the Surface, and one of the biggest complaints from reviewers was the lack of good apps for Windows 8.

Windows Phone has over 100,000 apps, but iOS has 700,000 apps, with 275,000 made specifically for the iPad.

5. Windows Phone gets no traction despite the Nokia deal and RIM's collapse.

This has happened. Despite everything Microsoft has tried in mobile for the last two years, consumers aren't buying it. The latest data from IDC says Microsoft has 2 percent of the global mobile market share. And the latest phone from Nokia is thick and heavy compared to phones from Apple and Samsung. We don't expect it to be a blockbuster.

Suddenly, all the dominoes are in place for a lot of bad things to start happening. ...

6. Office loses relevance.

Microsoft's Office has been a juggernaut. In fiscal 2012, the Microsoft business division did ~$24 billion in sales.

Last year, we cautioned, "Office runs only on Microsoft platforms and the Mac. As employees start to do more and more work from non-Windows smartphones and iPads, companies may start to question why they're still buying Office for every employee and upgrading it every two or three releases."

The death of Office, has not happened, though. Despite Google's attempt to create Docs, companies aren't giving up on Excel.

7. Microsoft's other business applications start to erode.


If Windows continues to fade, and if Office starts to fade, then corporations have less reason to adopt Microsoft technologies on the back end like Exchange Server for email, SharePoint Server for collaboration, Lync for videoconferencing and real-time communication, and Dynamics for CRM and accounting.

Exchange, SharePoint, and Dynamics all bring in more than $1 billion per year, and Lync is Microsoft's fastest growing business application. Plus, they pull through a lot of other Microsoft products. ...

8. The platform business collapses.

For the last decade, Microsoft's fastest growing business segment has been Server & Tools, which did $7.4 billion in sales last year.

A lot of these sales come because Microsoft business apps — Exchange, SharePoint, and Dynamics — require these products. But as companies stop buying these apps, they will have less reason to buy the Microsoft platform products that run them, and the System Center ($1 billion+) products used to manage them.

9. The Xbox was never going to make up the slack, and Microsoft can no longer afford to keep investing in it.

In a year of relative gloom, Microsoft's Xbox has become a big bright spot for the company. Kinect is great technology, people are still buying the console, and it's been a great entry point for Microsoft to take over the living room. But, for a company like Microsoft, Xbox isn't enough. Microsoft had $21 billion in operating income last year. The Entertainment and Devices division, which is home to the Xbox had $364 million in operating income. So, as nice as Xbox is, it's not going to be enough to boost Microsoft if the rest of the business collapses.

10. Microsoft suffers a huge quarterly loss. Ballmer retires to play golf.


Let's not kid ourselves — it's going to take a sudden, unexpected disaster at Microsoft to get Ballmer out of the company.

In 2012, Microsoft had its first ever quarterly loss as a public company because it had to write down the $6.2 billion acquisition of aQuantive. Investors mostly shrugged. If Microsoft posted a real loss people would freak out. But that's going to be nearly impossible in the near term.

In the long term ...

Is this just a bad dream?

Last year, we concluded by saying, "Fortunately for Microsoft, none of this is going to happen. Windows 8 will reassert the dominance of the Windows PC. Office and other business products will remain corporate necessities, and developers will never be able to ignore Microsoft. Windows Phone will become a viable third mobile platform, the Xbox will continue to dominate the living room, and new products will surprise the pundits who thought Microsoft couldn't innovate. Even Bing will finally make a profit someday."

This year, it's a lot harder to say much of that. Windows 8 doesn't seem to be reasserting the dominance of the PC. Windows Phone is not a viable third platform. Bing is still burning money. The Microsoft nightmare scenario is actually becoming a reality.




<div><object width="576" height="324"><param name="movie" value="http://d.yimg.com/nl/techticker/site/player.swf"></param><param name="flashVars" value="browseCarouselUI=hide&vid=31261296&"></param><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed width="576" height="324" allowFullScreen="true" src="http://d.yimg.com/nl/techticker/site/player.swf" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" flashvars="browseCarouselUI=hide&vid=31261296&"></embed></object></div>
 
How the fuck has Ballmer kept his job this long? :lol:

Seriously... that shit is baffling.
 
Microsoft is just flat our lazy in innovation. They act like they scared to be innovative. If MS does not step up in the tablet market, they will be looking like RIM. Desktops and Tablets are switching positions. Phones are the new laptops now. Tablets are the new PC's.
 
Cell Phones and Tablets made People realize that computing does Not revolve around M$ Windows and that other operating systems are a Real option
 
I bet if there was another player on the same level they would get their act together. Windows 8 will not be the answer. Many still don't like or trust Apple.

I just got a new laptop with w8....so far I hate it...but I will learn it before I fuck with Apple

Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk 2
 
Microsoft is just flat our lazy in innovation. They act like they scared to be innovative. If MS does not step up in the tablet market, they will be looking like RIM. Desktops and Tablets are switching positions. Phones are the new laptops now. Tablets are the new PC's.

Its not that Microsoft is lazy, Microsoft has gotten too Corporate and its being run by business men that only care about numbers, and not people that have a passion for technology.

Microsoft was more innovative when it was ran by Bill Gates, But don't worry i also think apple will fall off also, since Steve Job left, The Current CEO attitude is all about numbers to him
 
Meh.

All this stuff could come to pass, and it could not.

Worst case scenario, Microsoft turns into IBM: a good company, just not the absolute powerhouse it used to be.
 
Microsoft is just flat our lazy in innovation. They act like they scared to be innovative. If MS does not step up in the tablet market, they will be looking like RIM. Desktops and Tablets are switching positions. Phones are the new laptops now. Tablets are the new PC's.

But a tablet cannot do what a PC or laptop can.....

they are better machines.....
 
But a tablet cannot do what a PC or laptop can.....

they are better machines.....

The problem is who wants better? What drew in a lot of consumers was the internet.
And not everyone has to do pc related tasks on a daily basis. And in my opinion, microsoft lost me with the unnecessary updates. I refuse to move past windows xp. Any new software can be added via andriod tablet. Microsoft reigned long enough. Let me maximize the old shit. No more boring innovations.
 
MIcrosoft had a moment where they could have shaken up the business model and came hard at tablet martket by pricing the Surface at under $200 and when ten rumors where flying that they were going to do that - people where excited about buying a Microsoft product for the first time in a long time.

MS squashed that noise with a quickness and the realized Surface at the same price point as the IPAD and its debut has been at best lukewarm.

The ship has been sailing from MS they are not going to crash because Xbox is still hot and most folks still use MS Office and other windows products but most people are not looking or need to upgrade as was the norm in the past.
 
I run Win 7 and never had an issue...but I made sure that my hardware was up to par. I own a Ipad as well just cant do any trading or such on that format. I like them both....not fucking with a windows phone. Was thinking about it but got the Note 2 instead.

Msft is a very healthy company fundamentally with a boatload of cash. Very Very fucking big market share if you look at the big picture of things as well.

Stock does nothing but churn sideways however.
 
Its not that Microsoft is lazy, Microsoft has gotten too Corporate and its being run by business men that only care about numbers, and not people that have a passion for technology.

Microsoft was more innovative when it was ran by Bill Gates, But don't worry i also think apple will fall off also, since Steve Job left, The Current CEO attitude is all about numbers to him

Real shit!
 
They created a product called Courier and I think the person who got axed recently was responsible for canning it! The courier product was really advanced had it launched I believe that Samsung's Note & Note 2 would never have been a thought!
 
microsoft was tooooo wall street corporate and fukin greedy, the internet is not going for that old school corporate model, they better get on that google wave to see how its done...

btw nobody trust microsoft now and days if you want to survive as a corp the people have to trust you..

the ol corporate model is done!!
 
"British bank Barclays bought 8,500 iPads" So this anecdote somehow indicates that employees at this one bank will become familiar with IOS and then the bank will replace all of its windows computers with MACs. Maybe at some hipster tech company but I don't see that ever happening on a large scale.
 
Ms needs to abandon the consumer market and fast. Xbox should break off and become it's own company. Balmer should be hung at noon!
 
M$'s problem is that the never separated their mobile and PC platforms. first they tried to cram XP into a mobile phone, now they trying to cram windows 8 into a PC.. nobody wants that shit. WIN 7 is great, keep that for the PC market and make a mobile phone/tablet OS for mobile devices. It boggles the mind that people so smart could get that SO wrong. AND they are LATE they should have had something like win 8 back when the iphone 3 first came out. instead of windows mobile.
 
I know several.... but they all happen to be the family members of my boy who is a Microsoft employee :lol:
Phone actually seems pretty nice honestly...but those fuckers didn't hire me when I interviewed years back, so fuck em!


True, but I do agree with the windows phone part. I've yet to meet s person who owns one.
 
Very true, but Microsoft wants/needs growth, and tablets are going to eat away at the pc market no matter what, because there are some people who just want to go on the web and check their email 80% of the time. Now, some of them are buying tablets whereas previously, they'd get a cheap laptop. That shit hurts Microsoft to the bone. Any movement trends away from pc/laptop hurts. They ain't goin nowhere, but it really bothers them that they're not growing the way they want to be, and that they're not seen in the same light Apple has been seen in. ...and that stock price over the last decade has employees who joined after 2000 like this :( (they used to be splitting it every couple years and had a huge climb while they got into the server market...but over the last 10 years, the shit has been flat).


But a tablet cannot do what a PC or laptop can.....

they are better machines.....
 
I was in the Southwest terminal of the Boston Logan Airport, last week, and Microsoft had a team there allowing people to sample the Surface tablet. I checked it out and I was not impressed. It's not user friendly, there are a no real apps, and I am not impressed by Windows 8. I need that start menu. Old habits die hard. With the IPAD you can get busy the moment you take it out the box.
 
They created a product called Courier and I think the person who got axed recently was responsible for canning it! The courier product was really advanced had it launched I believe that Samsung's Note & Note 2 would never have been a thought!


The people behind The Courier project for Microsoft left (or were let go) and started their own company Fifty Three and released "Paper" for the iPad



 
Back
Top