Microsoft and the Follower’s Dilemma

Once a leader, Microsoft has been content to follow other firms' leads for too long

As an entrenched and dominant player in a handful of key markets, Microsoft has settled into a protectionist mode that prevents it from moving quickly into new markets. And its belated entry into multi-touch devices could be late enough to be fatal.

Related: "Windows 8 Sales: Hot or Not?"

This problem isn’t unique to Microsoft. In the tech industry, it has happened before—to firms like IBM—and there are fears that it’s happening to Apple, which now has hundreds of millions of its own users. But it’s somewhat ironic that Microsoft’s dominance of the PC market has made it particularly unsuitable to expand into new markets, even though it has the financial strength and resources to do so. It’s just too easy to protect what already works.

Microsoft has so thoroughly dominated the PC market, and related markets for office productivity software and servers, that it sees every new opportunity through this lens. And that has resulted in over a decade of mistakes in which it has overused the Windows brand and developed strategies for new markets that failed almost exclusively because they emulated the Windows partner model.

The firm was also hobbled considerably by its antitrust problems in the United States and Europe. Over a decade ago, Bill Gates lamented that Microsoft was then still acting like a brash young upstart despite its market dominance. But in the intervening years, Microsoft aged beyond its years and was often unable to move decisively out of fear of regulatory meddling. Competitors that once dropped product initiatives out of fear that Microsoft would enter that market now rarely need to worry about the firm’s plans. Microsoft became IBM.

Indeed, although Microsoft has done a good job of evolving its existing businesses, it has been a lot less successful with new businesses, especially those that follow in the footsteps of other consumer-oriented trailblazers. When Apple jumpstarted the market for MP3 players and then online music services with iPod and iTunes, Microsoft followed up years later with the ill-fated Zune platform, which never resonated with consumers and has since become the butt of jokes.

Microsoft’s efforts with smartphones (Windows Phone followed the iPhone by over three years) and tablets (Surface shipped over two years after iPad) have thus far mirrored Zune: They're well designed and beloved by a small handful of true believers, yes, but neither has resonated with consumers in a meaningful way.

The issue for Microsoft is that these products might have all simply arrived too late to catch up. And though Apple’s success can be tied in part to its ability to move quickly into new markets that it delineates for itself, Microsoft’s inability to mimic that success and instead slowly follow Apple’s lead could result in a new decade of calcification.

So, although Apple is tending to established products like the Mac, iPhone, iPad, and iPod, it’s also moving forward with presumed new initiatives in television and even smart watches. Microsoft would be better served by forging new leadership positions of its own rather than continuing to follow Apple down these increasingly less viable markets.

There are bright spots for the firm, of course. Its Azure online services are expected to be its next billion-dollar business, which makes sense because Azure is a natural evolution of Microsoft’s server efforts. Indeed, Microsoft has done quite well evolving its traditionally delivered software into online services, as evidenced most recently by Office 365. But if Microsoft is serious about being perceived as a leader in this industry, and not just a follower, it can’t only evolve successful products. It needs something new.

One potential bright spot is voice and motion control. Microsoft introduced its Kinect add-on for Xbox 360 in late 2010, and though the first version of this sensor was immature and was perceived as a follow-up to the motion-control capabilities in the rival Nintendo Wii system, Microsoft’s ability to push the technology beyond video games is unmatched. Voice and motion control are arguably more important to the future of computing than is multi-touch.

This is an area in which Microsoft could lead, if it could just get out of Apple’s taillights for a moment.

Discuss this Article 10

henador
on Mar 19, 2013

I was very gloomy about MSFT's prospects until I noticed that AAPL's success in iOS devices did *not* translate into sales of OSX computers. I figured that would be the next upward evolution of their personal device userbase (iPod->iPhone->iPad->OSX).

The smartphone market has matured so there's a perfect opportunity for MSFT to start eating marketshare. However, their fragmented effort so far isn't helping, with significant differences between WinRT and WinPRT. Two stores. Two ways to access Skydrive (it's integrated into WinRT while you have to login separately in WinPRT). WinRT and WinPRT versions of the same app can't communicate settings to each other. The list goes on and on.

MSFT has blown billions on Bing and other online adventures. They need to refocus that money onto their core Windows and WinRT and WinPRT. If they lose Windows then it truly is game over.

jkohut
on Mar 19, 2013

I agree that motion (aka Kinect) has possibilities. Unfortunately as with many things, Microsoft sometimes rushes to control things so much that they sometimes stymie progress. I remember a few years ago people where DOING THINGS with Kinect until Microsoft told them to quit it until Microsoft had things "just right" with respect to licensing, API, etc... Haven't heard as much about it of late (I think there are some other entries into the market now also).
Microsoft used to have a vibrant research website that was generating technlogy. Don't see nearly as much from it in the past couple of years (to be fair Google is somewhat the same). When the coffers get full, too many companies forget the innovation that got them where they are. Microsoft has been trying to buy it's way to innovation (if that is really possible) by picking up Skype and others, but not really happening. Many users are content with a best of breed approach (Windows for Desktop/Laptop, Android for Phone, something else for tablet, etc... ) if they can afford multiple devices. There are some who just want the basics and "just want the devices to work", but they aren't always looking for cutting edge innovation.

Winner
on Mar 19, 2013

Great article Paul.

They of course *have* tried to innovate in certain ways, but their execution is not very good. I suspect the cholesterol of being a big company causes much of this. Examples:

- They bring out Windows Phone, which is well received (technically) - but then they revamp the entire guts of it and the new version doesn't have some of the app functionality of the first version
- They have a good idea (merge tablet and laptop/compuer OSs), but they don't execute well and create a Jekyl/Hyde monster. There's really no reason the SAME desktop and Metro interfaces couldn't have been included in a way that was not jarring or stupid. They should have done a "complete" job rather than having half the settings in the desktop site, and half in the metro side, and jumping between them. It was a good idea, just very poor and incomplete execution. Honestly, is anybody really that surprised at the market reception? We were all suspecting even a year ago that this would happen - we all saw it coming.

I heard you say on WW last week that it's not all Ballmer's fault, that it was market events. I'm not so charitable. He certainly was at the helm for the Win8 situation and had to approve the nature of this OS. That wasn't a smart move. A decade of Zune, Plays for Sure, Surface, Popup stores that Pop down, Outlook without a decent calendar, $6Billion advertising acquisitions that need to get written off, nonprofitable XBox -- how many decades of these types of failures should a CEO be allowed to have?

dalestrauss
on Mar 19, 2013

"This is an area in which Microsoft could lead, if it could just get out of Apple’s taillights for a moment. "

Ahhhh...the age old problem of "When you are not the lead dog on the sled, the view is always the same."

It is truly sad that the Surface has come so late in the ballgame. I've owned iPad 1, 2 and Mini; Galaxy Note; HTC Flyer, and too many ultrabooks/laptops to even count, and the Surface Pro 128 is the best of the lot. 1/2" and 2#'s are NOTHING, especially with the either of the covers/keyboards. But for a five hour battery (which is just fine with me), it is the best portable device out there. But just like Zune, it really doesn't matter, because it is flying into the teeth of an Apple tsunami of quality product, brilliant marketing, and slavish tech press devotion. PLUS - its products are EVERYWHERE. Planes, trains, automobiles (or even busses) you will see MULTIPLE iPads compared to all the paltry (if any) number of other tablets from all other vendors combined (perhaps with the exception of Kindle readers). How many times have you sat in a waiting area, meeting hall, or any other public location, and seen an iPad before seeing any other tablet? 0 - that's the correct (honest) answer.

Tech's journalistic giants (like Mossberg and Pogue), have declared the genius of Apple (Jobs) was in defining things you didn't even know you needed - HOGWASH. His genius was in seeing markets where existing vendors had @$#%&^ up, and pushing their ideas to new, lighter, integrated heights. Examples:

(0) Xerox Parc (ok, stop - - promised myself no original sin theft article)
(1) Diamond Rio/Creative/Sandisk ---> iPod;
(2) Palm Treo 600/Samsung SPH-i5 ---> iPhone;
(3) Portege 3440-R100/Sony Vaio X ---> MacBook Air;
(4) HP 2710/Lenovo x61T/Compaq TC1000 ---> iPad

I've got more examples, but little time. One place Microsoft has taken the lead from Apple is in the cloud, as Skydrive is eons better to me than iCloud - move to the cloud Microsoft...

sg60
on Mar 20, 2013

I agree with pretty much all of your points but I would just emphasize that the number one issue facing Microsoft is that once again they are way too late to the party. As you say, it almost doesn't matter how good the Surface is because it has to be that much better than the iPad because it was there first. If you have a decent product and you're first to market than that is an extremely tough combination to beat.

chuckb84
on Mar 19, 2013

Steve Jobs got this right almost 9 years ago. From the biography

"I have my own theory about why decline happens at companies like IBM or Microsoft. The company does a great job, innovates and becomes a monopoly or close to it in some field, and then the quality of the product becomes less important. The company starts valuing the great salesmen, because they’re the ones who can move the needle on revenues, not the product engineers and designers. So the salespeople end up running the company.

John Akers at IBM was a smart, eloquent, fantastic salesperson, but he didn’t know anything about product. The same thing happened at Xerox. When the sales guys run the company, the product guys don’t matter so much, and a lot of them just turn off. It happened at Apple when Sculley came in, which was my fault, and it happened when Ballmer took over at Microsoft. Apple was lucky and it rebounded, but I don’t think anything will change at Microsoft as long as Ballmer is running it."

Sculley almost killed Apple, Ballmer (the sales guy) is slowly killing Microsoft.

jersey72
on Mar 21, 2013

And history is repeating itself. Apple was the dominant player in mobile. Android surpassed them because, really, little has changed in the Apple products save for lighter/faster (which is natural) and Siri (which they bought, and even that's a flop by most accounts). iOS hasn't matured. Even Windows Phone is superior to iOS now.

On top of that, they continue acting like, well, Apple. Their handling of the lock screen security bug was indefensible. I know of no security conscious administrator who feels comfortable with those devices on their network.

TV is a loser for Apple (and any tech company) as there's no upgrade model that involves people buying new TVs every two years, which is what Apple, HTC, etc. depend on for their profits. They may have something in the watch department, but we'll have to see.

That said, I hope they do. Few companies have had the ability to create a market as well as Apple. If only they could keep momentum.

BananaJr
on Mar 20, 2013

Nice attempt at revising history but even you stated that Microsoft had been in the smartphone and tablet game for far longer than Apple when the iPhone and iPad were first released and claimed there was no way Apple could contend against established products. Apple followed Microsoft/RIM/Symbian and not the other way around. You also thought netbook was superior to the iPad and anybody who thought the iPad was a game changer was a tool. That didnt' work out so well either. It's folly to think that you can lay Microsoft's issues at Apple's feet. No, the issue is that to every problem Windows is the answer and since the OS needs a mouse/pen/stylus and keyboard input to operate then every piece of hardware that ships will have to have it. Ballmer always slighted the iPhone and iPad for their lack of a physical keyboard and stylus. 100's of millions of sold Apple devices later he's trying to dig the company out of that misguided perception. At least Window Phone has made the leap to stylus/physical keyboard free. Now Surface needs to do the same. As long as the desktop exists on RT and Pro the products are the same old tired retreads that doomed the initial tablet efforts from the company.

pthurrott
on Mar 20, 2013

Yawn.

BananaJr
on Mar 20, 2013

Bingo

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