Podcast: Taking Microsoft's pulse: Will the software giant peak in next few years?
In the latest BriefingsDirect Insights Edition, Vol. 32, our experts examine the state of Microsoft at the onset of the annual Professional Developers Conference. Two narratives emerge from our roundtable discussion, that Microsoft is behind on many new IT trends
and is tied to past business models. The opposing view is that
Microsoft will ride pedestrian app dev, business intelligence, data
services, Xbox, unified communications, virtualization and cloud computing to become bigger and more pervasive than ever.
Please join noted IT industry analysts and experts Jim Kobielus, senior analyst at Forrester Research; Tony Baer, senior analyst at Ovum; Dave Linthicum, independent SOA consultant at Linthicum Group; Brad Shimmin, principal analyst at Current Analysis; Mike Meehan, a senior analyst at Current Analysis, and Joe McKendrick, independent analyst and prolific blogger. Our discussion is hosted and moderated by yours truly, Dana Gardner.
Here are some excerpts:
Kobielus:
There’s some validity to the viewpoint that Microsoft's growth
potential has capped on the business side, when you consider packaged
applications, and software- and application-development tools, in the
sense that the entire product niche of the service-oriented
architecture (SOA) universe is rapidly maturing.
The vendors in this space—the SOA vendors, the business-intelligence (BI) vendors, the master data management (MDM)
vendors—are going to realize revenue growth and profitability. Those
who survive this economic downturn and thrive in the next uptick, will
be those who very much focus on providing verticalized and customized
applications on a consulting or professional services basis.
In
that regard, Microsoft is a bit behind the eight ball. They don’t
really have the strength on the consulting, professional services, and
verticalization side, that an SAP, Oracle, or an IBM can bring to the
table.
Microsoft, if they want to continue to grow in the whole
platform and application space and in the whole SOA universe, needs to
put a greater focus on consulting services.
McKendrick:
Microsoft has its own economy. No matter what happens to the economy at
large, Microsoft has its own economy going, and just seems to get
through all this.
What’s driven Microsoft from day one, and
continues to do so, is that Microsoft is the software company for Joe
the Plumber. That’s their constituency, not necessarily Joe the
Developer. They cater to Joe the Developer, Joe the CIO, and Joe the
Analyst certainly likes to check in on what they are doing. It's this
whole idea of disruptive technology. They have always targeted the
under-served and un-served parts of the marketplace and move up from
there.
…The base of Microsoft, these companies that are using Microsoft technology, don’t necessarily get virtualization or cloud computing. They just want a solution installed on their premises and want it to work.
Linthicum:
I think they are behind the eight ball. A lot of the strategy I’ve seen
coming out of Microsoft over the last few years, especially as it
relates to cloud computing, SOA, and virtualization, has been
inherently flawed. They get into very proprietary things very quickly.
It really comes down to how are they going to sell an additional
million desktop operating systems.
Ultimately, they just don’t
get where this whole area is going. …We’re heading into an area
where they may not be as influential as they think they should be. They
may be not only be behind the eight ball, but lots of other organizations
that are better at doing cloud computing, virtualization, and things
like that, and have a good track record there, are going to end up
owning a lot of the space.
Microsoft isn’t going to go away, but
I think they’re going to find that their market has changed around
them. The desktop isn't as significant as it once was. People aren’t
going to want to upgrade Office every year. They’re not going to want
to upgrade their desktop operating systems every year. Apple Macs are
making big inroads into their market space, and it’s going to be a very
tough fight for them. I think they’re going to be a lot smaller company
in five years than they are today.
Meehan:
Dave is absolutely right in that the one area that Microsoft never
really conquered that it needed to conquer, given its strength in the
desktop, is the handheld.
If they are not going to be there with the handheld long-term, that’s a
major growth area that they are going to miss out on. That’s where a
lot of the business is going to shift to. …On the SOA side, as I
said before, Microsoft is just trying to be as service-oriented as they
can for users who are trying to be not SOA-driven, but "As
Service-Oriented As Possible" (ASOAP).
In fact, make that an
acronym, ASOAP. There are going to be a number of users who are not
going to go fully into SOA, because they have an enterprise
architecture. It’s too hard to do, too hard to maintain. They’re never
going to quite figure that out. They are just going to try to be
tactical and ASOAP. Microsoft will try to service them and hold that
part of their business.
What’s the next big thing they’re going
to do? Joe referred to Microsoft having come up with that in previous
downturns. I don’t see where they have got that right yet, and so I
think that leads to them being smaller long-term.
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