Microsoft’s top competitors
You want to know what keeps Steve Ballmer up at night? Apparently, not specific competitors, but rather competitive industry trends that strike at the core of Microsoft’s software license business model: open source, advertising, and software-under-the-guise-of-hardware. (Thanks to Brady for calling out the BW article.)
Ballmer says:
Who are Microsoft’s top competitors?Guys who can touch us in multiple places probably matter more than guys who can touch us in any one place. And actually we don’t really have our big competition from any one company. Any one company, we know how to compete with. It’s alternate business models that we will have to embrace or compete well with. You give me any enterprise software company, O.K., and I’ll say c’mon. We know how to go do that. We do do that. And we’re really pretty good at it. We haven’t gotten any worse at it. Boom. Boom. Boom. We know how to keep coming.
[Take open source.] Open source is not a new technology area. It was a new business model. In the last three or four years, we have competed very well by extending our value. Open source never goes away as a business model or competitor. We have learned how to compete with open source, and we will compete with it for the rest of time. But competing with open source will have to be something that’s burned bright on the foreheads of our senior people.
The second big competitive force is advertising as a business model. Typically, people just want to reduce that to Google, and if you want to do that, you can. But it’s do we embrace advertising fully enough as a business model? Because at the end of the day, anybody who comes at you with a cheaper-to-the-customer proposition, you got to worry about. And advertising looks cheaper to a consumer than something you pay for.
In the case of open source, we couldn’t adopt the business model. We adopted a competitive approach that so far has worked very well. In the advertising case, we can embrace that model. We don’t have to sit here and say it’s that bad.
A third model I could sit here and write down on this list is that there are cases where software gets monetized through hardware. That’s what an iPod is. iPod is a software thing. You just happen to collect the money on the hardware. You could say in China and India, it’s unclear whether classic software will get paid for as much as advertising, hardware, subscriptions, etc.
So our ability to embrace and benefit from or compete with new business models—and I would say ad-funded and open source, more than this hardware thing—is more the way to categorize the key competitive dynamic for us.
Fascinating stuff, and I’d encourage you to read the rest of the interview, too.
This isn’t revolutionary stuff (Clay Christensen has been talking about how to disrupt an industry for some time), but it’s interesting to hear the CEO of the world’s largest software company candidly explaining how to beat Microsoft. As with open source code, just because you have “the answer” doesn’t make it any easier to crack the code.
To disrupt a Microsoft product you have to cut off its traditional air supply. Open source is disruptive to Microsoft because it a) removes the one-size-fits-all approach that Microsoft imposes and b) the entry cost is $0. Microsoft knows how to disrupt with “free” (remember IE?), but it has yet to learn how to compete with someone else undercutting its prices by 100%.
Over the long haul, however, it’s going to be modifiability that beats Microsoft. This will sound odd to many, because the common industry wisdom is that no one wants to modify anything. We just want to passively consume software. My experience at Alfresco and Lineo, however, has been the complete inverse of this received wisdom. Many users want their Firefox customized to them. Many enterprises want their ECM customized to them. Etc.
Microsoft has been good about enabling a robust partner ecosystem to extend its products. The question will be whether it can allow its customers, non-customers, and non-partners to do the same. I don’t think it can, and I think that matters.