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November 01, 2007

Vista Growth Surges as Corporate Adoption Kicks In

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Last month, Microsoft announced that it had sold 85 million copies of Windows Vista, compared with just 45 million copies of Windows XP during the same time span in its initial release. This milestone is particularly impressive given the widespread negative articles one reads everywhere online about Vista, though most of that is anecdotal. But Microsoft says the reality of Vista is all upside and that Vista's growth is making a sudden surge.

The reason, Microsoft says, is that its biggest Windows customers, slow-moving corporations, are now starting to move to Vista. They're doing so as they always do, on their own schedules, but now that Vista has been in the market for most of a year, the sudden jump in sales is coming at an opportune time. Combined with holiday PC sales, this surge could make a huge quarter for the supposedly flailing OS. That's good news, unless of course you were playing the Chicken Little role in this invented tech farce.

"We feel like we are starting to hit our stride not only in demand, but in deployment in business," Microsoft president Kevin Johnson told Reuters this week. Growth in the Windows business has exceeded 20 percent each quarter since Vista first shipped, and the company is on track for 25 percent annual growth. Most impressive, perhaps, is that Microsoft makes 75 cents of profit on each dollar in Windows sales.

Part of the reason for Vista's huge financial success is that consumers are turning to high-end versions of the system in record numbers. In the previous quarter, over 75 percent of all Vista sales were for the high-end (and higher cost) Vista Home Premium and Vista Ultimate versions. (With XP, 59 percent of customers opted for premium versions of the OS.) While the software giant's decision to bifurcate Vista into more product versions than any previous Windows version was widely criticized, it's clearly been successful doing so. The company credits its progress on "educating consumers" about the benefits of the higher-end versions.

After the holiday sales season is over, Johnson expects another Vista sales boost, this time from the corporate market, when Microsoft ships the system's first service pack in the first quarter of 2008. Many of Microsoft's business customers wait for the first service pack before deploying a new Windows version. Microsoft's unearned revenue in the Windows business jumped 27 percent in the previous quarter, indicating that its customers were getting ready to make the jump to Vista: Unearned revenue is revenue that has been signed but not yet recognized because the product has yet to be delivered to and deployed by customers. That's all from upcoming Vista deployments, Johnson says.

End of Article



Reader Comments
Watch out for the anti-MS crowd...they'll be out in force on this one.

But, seriously - the company that I work for has been testing Vista since the Beta program, and the release version since it came out. I've talked to the architects and testers that are involved and there really are no major hurdles to rolling out. They will wait until Q1 2008, though.

--tayme

tayme November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


I would not assume that people buying Vista on a new pc or employees having it foisted on them by their company are choosing to move to Windows Vista. M$ will always have that market on any new version of Windows.
Also, why can't we have a version of Windows that does not cost an arm and a leg, runs in the background andmerely acts as the interface between your pc and your programs. Why has the operating system got to be in your face all the time with non-sensical schemes such as Windows Genuine Dis-advantage? Why do Micro$oft and Bill Gates have to go after every last cent when they already have more money than they know what to do with?

pesmith November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Tayme, I would say that comment is about what you were expecting...

bonchsucks November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


@bonchsucks - exactly. And its from a new user, too. Amazing!!!

@pesmith - Nice use of a dollar sign as an S. Shows that you fir into the group described in my first post.

--tayme

tayme November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Microsoft selling to businesses? Who would've thunk it?

Regardless of a persons preference on Vista this was going to happen so the anti-MS crowd can zip it until a certain fruit named company learns a thing or two about the business world of IT.

Reflections November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"We feel like we are starting to hit our stride not only in demand, but in deployment in business,"

did anybody catch the little point of news that BDD 2007 is now called "Microsoft Deployment" and has turned into v4 beta just recently?

XP

Waethorn November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


....wait, my bad. it's RC1.

you can find it here:

www.microsoft.com/deployment
(very cool stuff for IT admins)

XP

Waethorn November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"But Microsoft says the reality of Vista is all upside and that Vista's growth is making a sudden surge."

Well what else would they say? Frankly, that paragraph sounds like it came from the Bush War Room.

Vista's doing fine. Good for Microsoft.

"Most impressive, perhaps, is that Microsoft makes 75 cents of profit on each dollar in Windows sales."

I'm expecting "WaeThorn" to be consistent and complain that these are unreasonably high margins.

"The company credits its progress on "educating consumers" about the benefits of the higher-end versions."

Such as higher margins for Microsoft, and more money spent on systems built by their partners! ;-)

lotsamystuff November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


@"lotsamystuff" - Nice try at trying to hide your true feelings behind the statement - "Vista's doing fine. Good for Microsoft." Of course, we all know that you have an Apple tatooed in a rarely seen area of your body! ;-) <-- wink, wink; nudge, nudge; say no more!

--tayme

tayme November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


@Reflections:
"Regardless of a persons preference on Vista this was going to happen so the anti-MS crowd can zip it until a certain fruit named company learns a thing or two about the business world of IT."

Never thought I'd say this, but I agree with you 100%.

jersey72 November 01, 2007 (Article Rating: )


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