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Title: Microsoft staff savage Ballmer at company confab
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/0 ... icrosoft_staff_savage_ballmer/
Published: Sep 28, 2011
Author: Iain Thomson
Post Date: 2011-09-28 14:03:32 by Skip Intro
Keywords: None
Views: 12255
Comments: 35

Claims of staff walkouts and tanking morale

During Microsoft's annual full staff meeting, employees unmistakably expressed their displeasure about how the company is being run.

Every year Redmond assembles the rank and file for a huge presentation about plans for the next 12 months, with senior management laying out current progress and future plans. According to comments made on the unofficial but respected Mini Microsoft blog [1], staff were less than impressed.

“What a sad spectacle. While SteveB was yacking away, people were leaving in droves. Back in the good old days when BillG spoke, EVERYONE listened,” posted an anonymous commentator.

Due to prior leaks from these, events staff are usually told nothing too sensitive, and this year’s gathering appears to be no different. Windows 8 will be out in a year’s time, Microsoft is refocusing around cloud and applications, and there were frequent demos of the Windows 8 fondleslab [2] that Microsoft showed off at BUILD.

Overall, the tone of the comments was almost uniformly negative, although one poster claiming to be an employee said that the event was “pretty good.” Others pointed out that most of the presentations were dominated by Windows 8, and particularly the new fondleslab.

“Is Win 8 tablet all we have left to be excited about? Has the morale across the company slumped so much that 20,000 of us together can’t even generate a decent applause? Please someone tell me I’m wrong. Tell me I’ve just got a bad attitude and I completely misread the meeting,” pleaded one poster.

Commentators reported that Ballmer also didn’t do his traditional shout of “I love this company,” and there was no sweaty dancing around and screaming by the CEO, unlike at previous meetings.

“SteveB did one of the smartest things I've ever seen him do as CEO today: He delegated responsibility by paying someone else to jump around like an asshole during his entrance instead of doing it all by himself,” said a poster. “Now if only he'd do the same with his regular day job.”

Try as we might, The Register could find no Microsoft staffer who was willing to talk to us on the record.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 9.

#2. To: Skip Intro (#0) (Edited)

Microsoft has certainly had a lost decade. The lost decade started when Bill Clinton's Justice Department savagely attacked Microsoft at the behest of Microsoft's competitors (who were also big Clinton donors) in Silicon Valley.

This demoralized the Microsoft executive team, especially Bill Gates. The stock price plummeted by half overnight. People started to leave. I left. This is also when Gates started to check out and turned more control over to Ballmer.

Microsoft is starting to do some really great things again.

A big part of my business business revolves around Dynamics CRM. Dynamics CRM is a Customer Relationship Management platform that you can install on-premise or in the Cloud. In the Cloud, it cost less than half of its main competitor -- Salesforce.com. It's one of the hottest things in the enterprise right now.

Another big part of my business is Windows Azure, which is a platform for building scalable applications in the cloud. Azure is up and running, but it's not quite complete. By mid-2012, it will be the best platform-as-a-service on the market.

After 10 years of screwing the pooch on mobile, Microsoft finally this week released a compelling mobile platform. Nokia (the 800 lb gorilla in the European mobile market) is completely committing to Windows Phone, which will give Microsoft a big boost against Android and iPhone. Android has already passed iPhone in both installed base and existing sales. My prediction is that Windows Phone will pass iPhone in sales within 2 years. Apple doesn't have the right business model to succeed. Blackberry is dead.

Microsoft released a revolutionary consumer device last year -- the Kinect for XBox, which uses your body as a motion controller for controlling the device, playing games, etc. I bought my 10 year old one for her birthday and all three of my daughters and my wife love it.

Then there is Windows 8, which will run on both PCs and tablets, and be geared for touch. It will also include an integrated sensor API for accelerometers, gyrometers, compasses, and other types of sensors, as well as facial recognition. Yes, Microsoft is late to the tablet market but Windows 8 will support all types of touch, and sensor-based devices, not just tablets. So far, Android devices have failed to compete with the iPad. Windows 8 will compete handily.

I worked at IBM in the early 90s when they were declared dead. Then I went to Microsoft. IBM made a big comeback. Microsoft will come back too.

Yes, Ballmer needs to retire and Microsoft needs to bring someone in from the outside to run the company, just like IBM brought in Lou Gersner, who saved the company.

jwpegler  posted on  2011-09-28   14:39:15 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: jwpegler (#2)

The lost decade started when Bill Clinton's Justice Department savagely attacked Microsoft at the behest of Microsoft's competitors (who were also big Clinton donors) in Silicon Valley.

Riiight...as if you'd see Gates instructing a course in Business Ethics...

war  posted on  2011-09-28   14:41:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: war (#3)

Pegler never fails to get it wrong. MS had no lobbyist presence in DC when Justice went after them. Billg soon changed that, and all was well.

You can't play in the big leagues in America unless you're willing to pay. It's never been any different, no matter how far back in the country's history you care to go.

Skip Intro  posted on  2011-09-28   14:49:32 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Skip Intro (#4) (Edited)

Pegler never fails to get it wrong. MS had no lobbyist presence in DC when Justice went after them. Billg soon changed that, and all was well.

I was at Microsoft between Jan 1993 and Aug 2000.

No, they didn't have a lobbying presence because they thought that D.C. was irrelevant. Prior to Clinton attacking them, Gates used to say that the only thing in D.C. that could hurt him was falling down the Capitol steps.

Yes, Bill Clinton's Justice Department completely demoralized Microsoft and their executives. Good people started leaving, including a lot of top talent that could have helped them against the next wave of competitors like Google.

All has been well ever since? No it hasn't. Microsoft created 10,000 millionaire employees in the 1990s. How many have they created since? Almost none. Microsoft's stock plummeted by half when Clinton attacked them and it has been stagnant ever since. Google and others started opening development centers in Seattle to attract disaffected Microsoft talent, with promises of big stock payoffs.

In the 1990s, we thought we were changing the world. Janet Reno killed Microsoft's spirit.

You weren't there, so you don't have a fucking clue, as usual.

jwpegler  posted on  2011-09-28   15:00:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: jwpegler (#6)

All has been well ever since? No it hasn't. Microsoft created 10,000 millionaire employees in the 1990s. How many have they created since? Almost none. Microsoft's stock plummeted by half when Clinton attacked them and it has been stagnant ever since. Google and others started opening development centers in Seattle to attract disaffected Microsoft talent, with promises of big stock payoffs.

In the 1990s, we thought we were changing the world. Janet Reno killed Microsoft's spirit.

You weren't there, so you don't have a fucking clue, as usual.

In a competitive world, that is the name of the game.

Ain't no use whining about it.

lucysmom  posted on  2011-09-28   16:17:07 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 9.

#10. To: lucysmom (#9)

Pegler's whining that because MS had to stop forcing users to use that crappy Internet Explorer their feelings got hurt and they just crawled up in a corner to cry?

What a crock of shit.

Skip Intro  posted on  2011-09-28 16:37:38 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 9.

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