Showing posts with label Steve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

Steve Ballmer on Microsoft's Nokia Devices & Services buy

Editor’s Note: On Monday evening, Microsoft announced it was buying Nokia’s Devices & Services division, giving Redmond an in-house hardware arm for its Windows Phone platform. Here’s the letter CEO Steve Ballmer sent to Microsoft employees announcing the move.

We announced some exciting news today: We have entered into an agreement to purchase Nokia’s Devices & Services business, which includes their smartphone and mobile phone businesses, their award-winning design team, manufacturing and assembly facilities around the world, and teams devoted to operations, sales, marketing and support.

For Microsoft, this is a bold step into the future and the next big phase of the transformation we announced on July 11.

We are very excited about the proposal to bring the best mobile device efforts of Microsoft and Nokia together. Our Windows Phone partnership over the past two and half years has yielded incredible work - the stunning Lumia 1020 is a great example. Our partnership has also yielded incredible growth. In fact, Nokia Windows Phones are the fastest-growing phones in the smartphone market.

Now is the time to build on this momentum and accelerate our share and profits in phones. Clearly, greater success with phones will strengthen the overall opportunity for us and our partners to deliver on our strategy to create a family of devices and services for individuals and businesses that empower people around the globe at home, at work and on the go, for the activities they value most.

We have laid out Microsoft’s strategic rationale for this transaction in a presentation that I encourage you to read.

This is a smart acquisition for Microsoft, and a good deal for both companies. We are receiving incredible talent, technology and IP. We’ve all seen the amazing work that Nokia and Microsoft have done together.

Given our long partnership with Nokia and the many key Nokia leaders that are joining Microsoft, we expect a smooth transition and great execution.

As is always the case with an acquisition, the first priority is to keep driving through close, which we expect in the first quarter of 2014, following approval by Nokia’s shareholders, regulatory approvals, and other closing conditions.

But I also know people will have some questions about what happens post-close. While details aren’t final, here is what we know, and how we’re generally approaching integration:

Stephen Elop will be coming back to Microsoft, and he will lead an expanded Devices team, which includes all of our current Devices and Studios work and most of the teams coming over from Nokia, reporting to me.Julie Larson-Green will continue to run the Devices and Studios team, and will be focused on the big launches this fall including Xbox One and our Surface enhancements. Julie will be joining Stephen’s team once the acquisition closes, and will work with him to shape the new organization.As part of the acquisition, a number of key engineering leaders will be joining Microsoft from Nokia, reporting to Stephen in his new capacity:
• Jo Harlow, who will continue to lead the Smart Devices team
• Timo Toikkanen, who will continue to lead the Mobile Phones team
• Stefan Pannenbecker, who will lead Design
• Juha Putkiranta, who will lead the integration effort on Nokia’s behalfRegarding the sales team, we plan to keep the Nokia field team, led by Chris Weber, intact and as the nexus of the devices sales effort, so that we can continue to build sales momentum. After the deal closes, Chris and his team will be placed under Kevin Turner. We will develop a single integrated team that is selling to operators, and there may be other integration opportunities that we can pursue. Kevin will work with Chris Weber and Chris Capossela to make those plans.Our operating system team under Terry Myerson will continue unchanged, with a mission of supporting both first-party and third-party hardware innovation. We are committed to working with partners, helping them build great products and great businesses on our platform, and we believe this deal will increase our partner value proposition over time. The established rhythms and ways of working between Terry and his team and the incoming Nokia team will serve us well to ensure that we do not disrupt our building momentum.We are planning to integrate all global marketing under Tami Reller and Mark Penn. It is very important that we pursue a unified brand and advertising strategy as soon as possible.Finance, Legal, HR, Communications, DX / Evangelism, Customer Care and Business Development will integrate functionally at Microsoft. Sourcing, customer logistics and supply chain will be part of Stephen’s Devices organization. ICM / IT will also integrate functionally for traditional IT roles. We will need to work through the implications for factory systems given the differing manufacturing processes and systems at both Nokia and Microsoft.We plan to pursue a single set of supporting services for our devices, and we will figure out how to combine the great Nokia efforts into our Microsoft services as we go through the integration process.There are no significant plans to shift where work is done in the world as we integrate, so we expect the Nokia teams to stay largely in place, geographically.Tom Gibbons will lead the integration work for Microsoft.

While today’s announcement is big news, we have to stay heavily focused on running the current business. We have a huge fall and holiday season ahead of us, so we need to execute flawlessly and continue to drive our business forward. I have no doubt we will.


View the original article here

Saturday, 24 August 2013

Sayonara, Steve: How a new Microsoft CEO can breathe new life into Windows

The pitchfork wielders have won: Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is retiring sometime in the next year, after he completes the search for a successor. And you know what? It couldn’t have happened at a better time.

No, I’m not bashing Ballmer for the monumental transition that Microsoft currently finds itself in. In a world with many screens and a taste for mobile, Microsoft needs to change, or the company will wither. But while Ballmer may have started the ball rolling on these big changes, he simply couldn’t be the one to finish them.

Steve Ballmer's wackiest, craziest, downright funniest moments at Microsoft

When Steve Ballmer steps down from his role as CEO of Microsoft in 12 short months, the world will lose a little bit of luster.

It’s not that the longtime leader is irreplaceable—Ballmer’s achievements were indeed momentous, but there are already possible successors champing at the bit to take the reins. But without Steve at the top, the constant flow of hilarious Ballmerisms we’ve come to enjoy over the years will no doubt dry up, leaving the technology world a decidedly unfunnier place.

From ridiculous to ridonkulous to utterly insane, here are the best Ballmerisms to come out of Steve’s mouth throughout the years. One thing’s for sure: While laughter may die on our lips with Ballmer’s retirement, PR handlers in Redmond will surely sleep easier at night.

On with the show!

We should have named it BOOM!

Steve on Bing, 2009 (via AllThingsD)

Illegal monopoly? Pffffft. Let’s dance! 

Steve, talking to Fortune in 2006:

My children - in many dimensions they’re as poorly behaved as many other children, but at least on this dimension I’ve got my kids brainwashed: You don’t use Google, and you don’t use an iPod .

Steve in 2011 (via Digital Trends):

You don’t need to be a computer scientist to use a Windows Phone. I think you do to use an Android Phone.

Steve, talking to USA Today in 2007:

There’s no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance. It’s a $500 subsidized item.

Steve, 2004 (via ArsTechnica):

We’ve had DRM in Windows for years. The most common format of music on an iPod is ‘stolen.’

Steve on the iPad, in 2010 (via Fortune):

Now, we’ve got some other competitive actions coming back, and we’ll talk about slates and tablets and blah, blah, blah, blah....

Steve, 2001 (via The Register):

Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches.

Steve (allegedly) in 2005, when Microsoft senior engineer Mark Lucovsky announced he was leaving for Google (via BetaNews):

I’m going to f—-ing bury that guy, I have done it before, and I will do it again. I’m going to f—-ing kill Google.

“That guy” is Google boss Eric Schmidt, and Steve supposedly said this while slinging a chair across a room.

What Steve told CNET in response:

I have never, honestly, thrown a chair in my life.

Google’s not a real company. It’s a house of cards.

That’s something else Ballmer allegedly said to Mark Lucovsky. Here’s Google’s response, when asked to comment today:

(Click to enlarge)

And of course, no list of Ballmer’s greatest hits would be complete without…

Brad Chacos spends the days jamming to Spotify, digging through desktop PCs and covering everything from BYOD tablets to DIY tesla coils.
More by Brad Chacos


View the original article here

Steve Ballmer's retirement letter to Microsoft employees

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

View the original article here

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer to retire within 12 months

Call it the end of an era. Friday, Microsoft announced that Steve Ballmer will be retiring within the next 12 months, bringing his 13-year run as CEO of the company to an end.

“There is never a perfect time for this type of transition, but now is the right time,” Ballmer said in a Microsoft press release. “We have embarked on a new strategy with a new organization and we have an amazing Senior Leadership Team. My original thoughts on timing would have had my retirement happen in the middle of our company’s transformation to a devices and services company. We need a CEO who will be here longer term for this new direction.”

Ballmer, of course, recently refocused Microsoft in order to drag the PC stalwart into the faster-moving mobile age, initiating drastic sea changes such as the device-spanning Windows 8 operating system, a push towards rapid-fire releases rather than 3-year development cycles, "One Microsoft, all the time," an increased focus on services and the cloud, and the launch of the Surface brand—Microsoft's first foray into competing with its manufacturing partners.

Any of those could be considered a major shakeup. All of those combined constitute a near-complete reimagining of Microsoft.

Those monumental changes may be the reason for Ballmer's retirement, according to Patrick Moorhead, the principal analyst at Moor Insights and Strategy and an industry veteran who held senior leadership roles at AMD and Compaq. He finds the 12 month search for a successor suspicious.

"Somebody pissed somebody off," Moorhead says. "Potentially it was this $900 million write down [for Surface RT tablets]. If I had to bet money, I'd say that that was the straw that broke the camel's back."

No matter what the reason for Ballmer's departure, the newly molded Microsoft will have a new CEO to lead it—sometime.The exact date of Ballmer's retirement is unknown, as he plans to step down once his successor is determined.

Who, exactly, will carry the torch forward is up in the air. Plenty of potent leaders still call Microsoft home, but the short list of possible CEOs has certainly shortened in recent years, as high-profile Microsoft executives like Ray Ozzie, Stephen Elop, and former Windows president Stephen Sinofsky have all left the company.

Whoever takes over the reins will have some mighty big shoes to fill. Ballmer was Microsoft's 30th employee and its first business manager, and for all the grief tossed Ballmer's way in the wake of Windows 8, there's no denying that the company accomplished some amazing things under his stead.

Like what, you ask? Here are Ballmer's accomplishments in Ballmer's own words, via a farewell letter sent to all Microsoft employees.

I am proud of what we have achieved. We have grown from $7.5 million to nearly $78 billion since I joined Microsoft, and we have grown from employing just over 30 people to almost 100,000. I feel good about playing a role in that success and having committed 100 percent emotionally all the way. We have more than 1 billion users and earn a great profit for our shareholders. We have delivered more profit and cash return to shareholders than virtually any other company in history.

And he's continued that trend of profitability even with his retirement notice. Microsoft's stock is up more than 7 percent on news of his leaving.

Thanks for the memories, Steve—and for Windows XP, Windows 7, the continued awesomeness that is Office, the Xbox, and heck, even the Ribbon interface. (I love it!) I'll give Ballmer the last word, via his goodbye note.

This is an emotional and difficult thing for me to do. I take this step in the best interests of the company I love; it is the thing outside of my family and closest friends that matters to me most.

Updated 10:50 A.M. E.T. with quote from Patrick Moorhead.

Brad Chacos spends the days jamming to Spotify, digging through desktop PCs and covering everything from BYOD tablets to DIY tesla coils.
More by Brad Chacos


View the original article here

Steve Ballmer's retirement letter to Microsoft employees

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

View the original article here

Steve Ballmer's wackiest, craziest, downright funniest moments at Microsoft

When Steve Ballmer steps down from his role as CEO of Microsoft in 12 short months, the world will lose a little bit of luster.

It’s not that the longtime leader is irreplaceable—Ballmer’s achievements were indeed momentous, but there are already possible successors champing at the bit to take the reins. But without Steve at the top, the constant flow of hilarious Ballmerisms we’ve come to enjoy over the years will no doubt dry up, leaving the technology world a decidedly unfunnier place.

From ridiculous to ridonkulous to utterly insane, here are the best Ballmerisms to come out of Steve’s mouth throughout the years. One thing’s for sure: While laughter may die on our lips with Ballmer’s retirement, PR handlers in Redmond will surely sleep easier at night.

On with the show!

We should have named it BOOM!

Steve on Bing, 2009 (via AllThingsD)

Illegal monopoly? Pffffft. Let’s dance! 

Steve, talking to Fortune in 2006:

My children - in many dimensions they’re as poorly behaved as many other children, but at least on this dimension I’ve got my kids brainwashed: You don’t use Google, and you don’t use an iPod .

Steve in 2011 (via Digital Trends):

You don’t need to be a computer scientist to use a Windows Phone. I think you do to use an Android Phone.

Steve, talking to USA Today in 2007:

There’s no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance. It’s a $500 subsidized item.

Steve, 2004 (via ArsTechnica):

We’ve had DRM in Windows for years. The most common format of music on an iPod is ‘stolen.’

Steve on the iPad, in 2010 (via Fortune):

Now, we’ve got some other competitive actions coming back, and we’ll talk about slates and tablets and blah, blah, blah, blah....

Steve, 2001 (via The Register):

Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches.

Steve (allegedly) in 2005, when Microsoft senior engineer Mark Lucovsky announced he was leaving for Google (via BetaNews):

I’m going to f—-ing bury that guy, I have done it before, and I will do it again. I’m going to f—-ing kill Google.

“That guy” is Google boss Eric Schmidt, and Steve supposedly said this while slinging a chair across a room.

What Steve told CNET in response:

I have never, honestly, thrown a chair in my life.

Google’s not a real company. It’s a house of cards.

That’s something else Ballmer allegedly said to Mark Lucovsky. Here’s Google’s response, when asked to comment today:

(Click to enlarge)

And of course, no list of Ballmer’s greatest hits would be complete without…

Brad Chacos spends the days jamming to Spotify, digging through desktop PCs and covering everything from BYOD tablets to DIY tesla coils.
More by Brad Chacos


View the original article here

Sayonara, Steve: How a new Microsoft CEO can breathe new life into Windows

The pitchfork wielders have won: Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is retiring sometime in the next year, after he completes the search for a successor. And you know what? It couldn’t have happened at a better time.

No, I’m not bashing Ballmer for the monumental transition that Microsoft currently finds itself in. In a world with many screens and a taste for mobile, Microsoft needs to change, or the company will wither. But while Ballmer may have started the ball rolling on these big changes, he simply couldn’t be the one to finish them.