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Scathing Vanity Fair article on the decline of Microsoft

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Very interesting and eye opening article, I started reading it last night before bed and couldn't stop until I was finished. A lot of the blame is of course pointed directly at Ballmer. Also of note is a completely idiotic forced employee tier system called "stack ranking" which has lead to nothing but constant back stabbing and in fighting within the company. Also fascinating was how MS had a golden opportunity to launch its own ebook reader in the late nineties, many years ahead of Kindle, ect. but ditched it since Gates insisted it use a Windows style GUI and was a boring idea few would want and also how they missed out on the Ipod craze. I highly recommend reading the whole article, I've quoted some choice bits below (don't miss Ballmer's epic meltdown when a key employee told him he was leaving for Google when Eric Schmidt was still at the helm):

http://www.vanityfair.com/business/2012/08/microsoft-lost-mojo-steve-ballmer

steve-ballmer-crazy-ces.jpg


Microsoft’s Lost Decade

Once upon a time, Microsoft dominated the tech industry; indeed, it was the wealthiest corporation in the world. But since 2000, as Apple, Google, and Facebook whizzed by, it has fallen flat in every arena it entered: e-books, music, search, social networking, etc., etc. Talking to former and current Microsoft executives, Kurt Eichenwald finds the fingers pointing at C.E.O. Steve Ballmer, Bill Gates’s successor, as the man who led them astray.

By Kurt Eichenwald


Sixteen days later, Bill Gates handed off the C.E.O. reins to Ballmer. “I was stunned when Bill announced that he was stepping aside to become ‘chief software architect’ in January 2000, with Steve Ballmer succeeding him as C.E.O.,” recalled Paul Allen. “While Steve had long served as Bill’s top lieutenant, you got the sense through the nineties that he wasn’t necessarily being groomed for Microsoft’s top spot. I’d say that Bill viewed him as a very smart executive with less affinity for technology than for the business side—that Steve just wasn’t a ‘product guy.’ ”

A businessman with a background in deal-making, finance, and product marketing had replaced a software-and-technological genius.

Within a year, Microsoft had lost more than half its value, never to return to its soaring heights of the past. The stock options—once the golden key to untold wealth—were underwater.

The music had stopped. The Microsoft Millionaires were now working alongside the Microsoft Minions. One came to work bragging about his new Bentley; the other made do with a Dodge Neon.

Sometimes, though, the problems from bureaucracy came down to a simple reality: The young hotshots from the 1980s, techies who had joined the company in their 20s and 30s, had become middle-aged managers in their 40s and 50s. And, some younger engineers said, a good number of the bosses just didn’t understand the burgeoning class of computer users who had been children—or hadn’t even been born—when Microsoft opened its doors. When younger employees tried to point out emerging trends among their friends, supervisors sometimes just waved them away.


In 2003, a young developer noticed that friends in college signed up for AIM exclusively and left it running most of the time. The reason? They wanted to use the program’s status message, which allowed them to type a short note telling their online buddies what they were doing, even when they weren’t at the computer. Messages like “gone shopping” and “studying for my exams” became commonplace.

The developer concluded that no young person would switch from AIM to MSN Messenger, which did not have the short-message feature. He spoke about the problem to his boss, a middle-aged man. The supervisor dismissed the developer’s concerns as silly. Why would young people care about putting up a few words? Anyone who wanted to tell friends what they were doing could write it on their profile page, he said. Meaning users would have to open the profile pages, one friend at a time, and search for a status message, if it was there at all.

“He didn’t get it,” the developer said. “And because he didn’t know or didn’t believe how young people were using messenger programs, we didn’t do anything.”

By 2002 the by-product of bureaucracy—brutal corporate politics—had reared its head at Microsoft. And, current and former executives said, each year the intensity and destructiveness of the game playing grew worse as employees struggled to beat out their co-workers for promotions, bonuses, or just survival.

Microsoft’s managers, intentionally or not, pumped up the volume on the viciousness. What emerged—when combined with the bitterness about financial disparities among employees, the slow pace of development, and the power of the Windows and Office divisions to kill innovation—was a toxic stew of internal antagonism and warfare.

“If you don’t play the politics, it’s management by character assassination,” said Turkel.

At the center of the cultural problems was a management system called “stack ranking.” Every current and former Microsoft employee I interviewed—every one—cited stack ranking as the most destructive process inside of Microsoft, something that drove out untold numbers of employees. The system—also referred to as “the performance model,” “the bell curve,” or just “the employee review”—has, with certain variations over the years, worked like this: every unit was forced to declare a certain percentage of employees as top performers, then good performers, then average, then below average, then poor.

“If you were on a team of 10 people, you walked in the first day knowing that, no matter how good everyone was, two people were going to get a great review, seven were going to get mediocre reviews, and one was going to get a terrible review,” said a former software developer. “It leads to employees focusing on competing with each other rather than competing with other companies.”

The best way to guarantee a higher ranking, executives said, is to keep in mind the realities of those behind-the-scenes debates—every employee has to impress not only his or her boss but bosses from other teams as well. And that means schmoozing and brown-nosing as many supervisors as possible.

“I was told in almost every review that the political game was always important for my career development,” said Brian Cody, a former Microsoft engineer. “It was always much more on ‘Let’s work on the political game’ than on improving my actual performance.”

I asked Cody whether his review was ever based on the quality of his work. He paused for a very long time. “It was always much less about how I could become a better engineer and much more about my need to improve my visibility among other managers.”

In the end, the stack-ranking system crippled the ability to innovate at Microsoft, executives said. “I wanted to build a team of people who would work together and whose only focus would be on making great software,” said Bill Hill, the former manager. “But you can’t do that at Microsoft.”

Why, Jim Allchin wanted to know, was Apple’s technology so much better than Microsoft’s?

“I would buy a Mac today if I was not working at Microsoft,” Allchin, a senior member of Microsoft’s leadership team, wrote in a January 7, 2004, e-mail to Gates and Ballmer. “Apple did not lose their way.”

Years passed. Finally, on November 14, 2006, Microsoft introduced its own music player, called Zune. Fifty-four days later, Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone, which combined a mobile phone, a music player, Internet capability, a camera, and other features not available on Zune. But the iPod was still around for customers who didn’t want a phone. In fact, Apple had already introduced its fifth-generation iPod, its less expensive iPod Mini, and was about a year away from marketing the least costly of its music players, the iPod Nano.

Zune was blown away. By 2009, iPod maintained an astonishing 71 percent of the market, the kind of numbers rarely seen anywhere outside of a North Korean election. Meanwhile, Zune limped along with less than 4 percent. Last October, Microsoft discontinued it, in hopes that customers would instead purchase a Windows Phone that, like the iPhone, has a music player.

Longhorn was doomed. A few months later, Allchin brought together the Longhorn team and made the announcement: Microsoft couldn’t complete Windows Vista in time to hit the latest planned release date. In fact, the company couldn’t foresee any launch date. So a decision had been made at the most senior reaches of Microsoft: after three years of work, throw everything out and start over. It was decided, at least for now, to drop or modify many of the original objectives; no more using C#, abandon WinFS, and revise Avalon.

Apple was already in the market with those features; Microsoft was basically giving up in its effort to figure out how to make them work.More than two years passed before Vista was available in stores, and the public response was scathing. PC World, the industry magazine, declared it the biggest tech disappointment of 2007. Apple had won hands down on Microsoft’s playing field for operating systems.

Then came Bing. Cue the evil laughter and organ music.

One topflight engineer, Mark Lucovsky, met with Ballmer on November 11, 2004, as a courtesy to let him know that he had accepted an offer from Google, which at the time was led by Eric Schmidt. And, according to a sworn statement submitted by Lucovsky in an unrelated lawsuit, Ballmer exploded.

He threw a chair against the wall. “Fucking Eric Schmidt is a fucking pussy!” Ballmer yelled, according to the court document. “I’m going to fucking bury that guy! I have done it before and I will do it again. I’m going to fucking kill Google.”

Finally, in May 2009, Ballmer unveiled Bing. But by then the unit working on online search had become encrusted with Microsoft bureaucracy and the usual destructiveness that came along with it.

“It was a bloated mishmash of folks,” said Johann Garcia, a former Microsoft product manager who worked on the Bing project.[/B] “They had two or three times the number of people they needed. There were just so many layers of people.”

Working in the online division evolved into a miserable experience, members of that unit said. Most of the homegrown innovations were shoved aside. Instead, managers spent their days studying Google and telling the employees working on Bing to match whatever that competitor brought out.

“There was this never-ending demand to keep up with Google, and after a while we saw no more innovation for Bing,” Garcia said. “Google was so far ahead and we had so much infighting. A lot of people became so unhappy and just lost all momentum.”

When Apple introduced the iPhone, Steve Ballmer laughed. “No chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share,” he said in 2007, adding that same year, “iPod is a hot brand—not Apple.”

He pooh-poohed the iPad when it came out, in 2010, and it has been busting down the barn doors ever since, selling more than 55 million units

Plenty of people can make predictions that prove boneheaded. But Ballmer’s bad calls have been particularly damaging for him inside Microsoft.

With the competitors showing that kind of success—and winning so many accolades—Ballmer’s confidently proclaimed errors have been hugely embarrassing for Microsoft’s technical specialists,

“Steve has a knack for putting his foot in his mouth and being made to look incredibly foolish, and that just always grated on people at Microsoft,” said a former program manager who left the company last year to work at Google.“When he makes these predictions that are so horribly wrong, and you know it at the time, it is hard to forgive that, because it means he is hopelessly out of touch with reality or not listening to the tech staff around him.”

Ballmer’s key business philosophy for Microsoft was so antiquated as to be irrelevant. The Microsoft C.E.O. used to proclaim that it would not be first to be cool, but would be first to profit—in other words, it would be the first to make money by selling its own version of new technologies. But that depended on one fact: Microsoft could buy its way into the lead, because it always had so much more cash on hand than any of its competitors.

No more. The advantage that Ballmer relied on for so long is now nonexistent. Google has almost the same amount of cash on its books as Microsoft—$50 billion to Microsoft’s $58 billion. Apple, on the other hand, started the year with about $100 billion. Using superior financial muscle to take over a market won’t work for Microsoft or Ballmer anymore.

Ballmer has said he plans to stay in the saddle until 2018, but whether he and the rest of Microsoft’s management want it or not, change will almost certainly come as Wall Street tires of the company’s unfulfilled promises. Already there are rumblings that the time for him to go could be in the offing.
 

railGUN

Banned
I read the article today, very fascinating. It's 6 pages long, so the above quotes isn't near the entire article.
 

Vyer

Member
That's nowhere near the full article.

He threw a chair against the wall. “Fucking Eric Schmidt is a fucking pussy!” Ballmer yelled, according to the court document. “I’m going to fucking bury that guy! I have done it before and I will do it again. I’m going to fucking kill Google.”

tee hee
 

TheSeks

Blinded by the luminous glory that is David Bowie's physical manifestation.
This is news? Ever since Bill Gates left they've been on a downward slide. Ballmer being a reason, yes. But Bill Gates not stepping in, slapping Ballmer and righting the ship and giving him a plan like Steve attempted to do with his "successor" at Apple is another.

Bill should've had many fingers in pies, but he didn't. He was content riding on Office and I guess he figured Office and Windows would keep them afloat while trojan horsing the "all-in-one box"/X-box into the home.

Oh well.
 

teh_pwn

"Saturated fat causes heart disease as much as Brawndo is what plants crave."
Microsoft has kind of been flat for about 8 years. They're probably entering a small to moderate growth period actually, or continue to be flat depending on Win8's mobile success. I wouldn't call it a decline.
 

DiscoJer

Member
Sony was really the the pioneer in e-books and look where it got them. First the data discman, then the first e-ink e-reader, the Librie.

What I think was really holding back e-books was the book stores, which is what Amazon provided. So I wouldn't knock MS too much for not coming out with their own e-reader.
 

ronito

Member
Microsoft has been behind on nearly everything in the past decade which was a formative decade.

They were late on the mp3.
They were late on the tablet.
They were late on phone.
And most damaging they were late on search.

If they weren't rife with cash and had their strong business units such as Sharepoint and Xbox they'd be under.
 

bill0527

Member
MS gets a lot of negative articles like this, imagine if they were actually doing poorly!

Dat Windows and Office money. And those aren't exactly industry game changing products. They give them a refresh every few years to keep the coffers flowing, but they've been around for a very long time. They're mature, and they've peaked. And you have a lot more options these days if you don't want to use either.

I know they did great with Xbox this generation, but damn if I can't help but think if it weren't for Call of Duty, Gears of War, and Halo, (2 of these which Microsoft did not create), the 360 would have been a giant stinking turd this gen in terms of financial performance. It still hasn't exactly set the world on fire financially because they lump every fucking failure of a device they shit out, into the same division as the 360 and that drags its financial performance down.

Ballmer should have went out the door 5 years ago.
 

Bombadil

Banned
This is news? Ever since Bill Gates left they've been on a downward slide. Ballmer being a reason, yes. But Bill Gates not stepping in, slapping Ballmer and righting the ship and giving him a plan like Steve attempted to do with his "successor" at Apple is another.

Bill should've had many fingers in pies, but he didn't. He was content riding on Office and I guess he figured Office and Windows would keep them afloat while trojan horsing the "all-in-one box"/X-box into the home.

Oh well.

Not true. The share price for Microsoft may have dropped immediately upon Ballmer's succession, but it has basically remained flat for a very long time, and has managed to remain flat throughout a terrible economy. Not a lot of companies can make the same claim.

I understand that a flatlining share price is also pretty bad because of the whole "if you ain't growing, you're dying" mentality that day traders possess, but Microsoft isn't doing too shabby right now.
 

Izick

Member
Microsoft managed to enter the video game industry with the Xbox, and dominated it with its successor. It fucked up it's operating system, and then rectified it with the best OS out there right now in Windows 7. It has a semi-successful phone OS. It has a good future with the Surface, and Windows 8 should finally be a viable opponent to Android and the iPad. Yeah, what a shitty decade.
 

Izick

Member
By the way, I feel like for every Apple hater, there are just as many blind Microsoft haters out there as well. It's for different reasons, but it's usually just bullshit people that go in hating MS because of its name, just like Apple.
 

ronito

Member
So if they weren't successful they wouldn't be successful??

Let me rephrase what you said to be more truthy.

'If they did have two good products and hadn't been successful earlier and had enough cash to weather where they are they wouldn't be around.'
 

Windu

never heard about the cat, apparently
Microsoft has been using that ranking system since the 90s. Anyway the Anti-Trust and the Longhorn stuff i think really set them back. They are just now finally starting to be leaders again, its taken awhile to clean up that mess.
Microsoft has been behind on nearly everything in the past decade which was a formative decade.

They were late on the mp3.
They were late on the tablet.
They were late on phone.
And most damaging they were late on search.

If they weren't rife with cash and had their strong business units such as Sharepoint and Xbox they'd be under.
they were actually early on the tablet/phone/search market but whatever. Its never about being first though, those companies are rarely the market leaders at the end of the day.
 

Staccat0

Fail out bailed
I can't help but be seduced my inside baseball shit like this. Really interesting read. I don't care about apple vs. google vs. MS so I enjoy shit like this.

Obviously they do, so why even ask such a redundant question?

*fart sound*
 

ThatObviousUser

ὁ αἴσχιστος παῖς εἶ
I love articles like this.

(Not MS hate articles, but deep, actually well-researched articles on tech companies.)
 

CiSTM

Banned
Some gaffers are so lazy! OP remove all the boldings, people have enough time to read the article in whole if they have time to browse GAF.
 

BlueTsunami

there is joy in sucking dick
Microsoft managed to enter the video game industry with the Xbox, and dominated it with its successor. It fucked up it's operating system, and then rectified it with the best OS out there right now in Windows 7. It has a semi-successful phone OS. It has a good future with the Surface, and Windows 8 should finally be a viable opponent to Android and the iPad. Yeah, what a shitty decade.

This is how I see it. Losing its grip on total dominance in the PC space somehow equals it being a shadow of its former self. Maybe in that regard but I'll say they've nicely branched out in other areas and contributing as competition.
 
The only thing MS has had going for them in the last decade has been Windows. And it's usefulness and popularity are mostly due to the openness of the OS, something which MS seems to want to end beginning with Windows 8.
 

BocoDragon

or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Realize This Assgrab is Delicious
They were poor in the middle to end of the decade.. Circa Vista and Zune... But now I think their future is pretty bright. Dat Surface.
 
Some gaffers are so lazy! OP remove all the boldings, people have enough time to read the article in whole if they have time to browse GAF.

image.php


Wow. Uh, I already unbolded it at least twenty minutes ago. Some gaffers are so lazy! Replier, next time don't sit on a reply, just post it right away before your indignant complaint becomes irrelevant! People have enough time to read your reply if they have time to browse GAF.
 

Windu

never heard about the cat, apparently
Hal Berenson (former Microsoft employee) over at hal2020 describes it as "the lost 5 years" basically they had to spend that much time cleaning up the mess that was longhorn and all of the antitrust ramifications etc... Windows 7 was just them cleaning up Vista etc... It wasn't really any new stuff.

http://hal2020.com/2011/12/29/is-2012-microsofts-year/

also he recently talked about the ranking system that microsoft uses http://hal2020.com/2012/07/05/the-upcoming-vanity-fair-article-on-microsoft/
If you don't make a strong push in the market it doesn't count. They introduced tablets very early, but not in a form the market would accept and since it wasn't a success they ignored it. At least that's how I remember it.

What was their push in the search market ? How much money did they spend ? How much did they push it ? I can't remember anything before Bing, so I'd guess it was another half-assed approach.
i think they had msn search back in the day or something and then stopped doing much with it when the web crash hit.
 

Izick

Member
The only thing MS has had going for them in the last decade has been Windows. And it's usefulness and popularity are mostly due to the openness of the OS, something which MS seems to want to end beginning with Windows 8.

The Xbox 360 doesn't count as a thing that would qualify as something going for Microsoft?
 

ThatObviousUser

ὁ αἴσχιστος παῖς εἶ
Microsoft managed to enter the video game industry with the Xbox, and dominated it with its successor. It fucked up it's operating system, and then rectified it with the best OS out there right now in Windows 7. It has a semi-successful phone OS. It has a good future with the Surface, and Windows 8 should finally be a viable opponent to Android and the iPad. Yeah, what a shitty decade.

It's a lost decade because almost all those things only happened in the last couple years. Did you forget how long it took Longhorn/Vista to come out? And as you mentioned, it was a disappointment reception-wise when it finally did. Remember Internet Explorer 6 holding back the entire internet for almost ten years*? Because I don't. I remember the dark days. They completely missed the music player boat, only to try halfheartedly when the market was already in sharp decline with Zune. Kin? Don't even get me started. It took three and a half years after the iPhone for Microsoft to put out a credible competitor -- only to reboot the damn thing with Windows Phone 8. And for that matter, Windows Mobile was never really king of the castle either.

The only thing good for the company to come out of the lost decade was the Xbox and 360, and I think they still haven't recovered the money they sunk in forcing themselves into the gaming industry yet. 360 has turned profitable, but it took billions to get the Xbox to barely compete with the GameCube. One other good thing from that era maybe the Office ribbon, which some hate, but was an important first step in the rise that Steven Sinofsky played in getting the focus back to where it should be. (He's largely responsible for Windows 7's success, in my opinion.)

Today's MS is a great company, making some risky bets but they're bets I like because they're focusing on the consumer now. For a while, nobody knew what the hell MS would end up being. Google and Apple were eating their consumer lunch and it was sort of assumed MS would just eventually drift into being enterprise-driven like IBM.

It was also a horrible decade for MS compared to their previous decade, where they were invincible. Everything they did felt like a success -- some failures were sweeped under the rug, but they were the exceptions, not the rule. Not like how it was in their lost decade.

* IE6 was such an absolute, unmovable plague that no website seriously started thinking about cutting off support until about 2009/2010. Which was after IE8 was released.
 
My brother and one of our best friends both loved the Zune. My brother's died this past year, our friend's Zune is still going strong. The FM tuner and wifi/streaming features were cool features over the IPod classic at the time.

Edit: That said I'll never forget Craig Ferguson's comment on Zune. "Hey, Microsoft! Ya can't make another IPod! Apple has ALREADY made an IPod, OK?!" lol Just imagine it in the Scottish accent and you'll chuckle.
 
The Xbox 360 doesn't count as a thing that would qualify as something going for Microsoft?

It does now, to a small extent. The gaming division has lost huge amounts of money since it's inception, and has only recently become profitable. But those profits pale in comparison to their OS division.
 
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