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Sunday | 23 November, 2008
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After Bill Gates, five possible futures for Microsoft

Bill Gates' impending retirement comes at a major crossroads for the company. We sketch out five paths the software giant may take
Galen Gruman (InfoWorld) 25 June, 2008 09:56:13

This lack of forward focus is critical because of Microsoft's business realities. While Microsoft has its fingers in many pies, only two slices really matter: Windows and Office. Together, they account for 80 percent (US$6.2 billion) of the company's profits and 61 percent of revenues (US$8.8 billion) in the last fiscal quarter -- meaning that they subsidize most of the rest of the business. Yet a variety of factors -- poor execution on Vista and Office 2007, the rise of the browser, the resurrection of the Macintosh, and the emerging tidal wave of cloud computing -- all threaten this pair of lifeblood businesses. For comparison, all of Apple earned US$7.5 billion and had a profit of US$1.1 billion in the same quarter.

The next biggest contributor to the bottom line is the Windows Server unit, which provided 23 percent of revenues (US$3.3 billion) and 14 percent of profits (US$1.1 billion) in the latest quarter. The Xbox unit provided 11 percent of revenues (US$1.6 billion) but just 1 percent of profits (US$80 million). The online business provided 0.6 percent of revenues (843 million) but lost 0.2 percent of profit (US$228 million). The rest of Microsoft -- the app dev tools, the midmarket business apps, and miscellaneous devices -- together accounted for 5 percent of revenues (US$720 million) and 3 percent of profits (US$186 million).

What these numbers mean is that if Microsoft's core Windows/Office business slows down or even fails, the rest of the company -- excepting the server division -- may not survive. Microsoft needs a strong Windows and Office business to execute the Microsoft-everywhere strategy. Migrating or adapting these assets to an on-demand future is an option, though the financial hit for such a transition is huge, risky, and thus, a hard sell to investors, at least today.

Five futures, from terrible to great

Given the state of Microsoft and the clear trends emerging, we have envisioned five futures for Microsoft, from worst to best, from the vantage point of 2018. See which you agree with:

1. The "Borvell" scenario

2. The "slow decline" scenario

3. The "streaming" scenario

4. The "Oort services" scenario

5. The "Gates was right" scenario

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