Executive Summary:
In the face of enterprise competition from the increasingly popular Apple, Microsoft is ready to overhaul the battered image of Windows Vista. But the move is late in coming, and the company would be better served by improving its products rather than bandaging old wounds. |
Apple is on a roll these days. Other than the embarrassing
release of the not-quite-fully baked MobileMe service,
Steve Jobs and the crew at One Infinite Loop have
been showered with positive press about strong Mac
sales, booming iPhone business, and even increased
Mac adoption by the enterprise.
Mac sales in 2008’s second quarter were the highest ever, with
market-research firm Gartner estimating that Apple sold 1.4 million
Macs in that period—enough to leapfrog Apple over Acer to become
the third largest PC vendor in the United States by sales volume.
Even more news of Apple’s good fortune came in the form of an
August 2008 Yankee Group report indicating that the Mac is making
noticeable gains in the enterprise. Report author Laura DiDio found
that approximately 80 percent of the more than 750 IT professionals
surveyed have Macs operating on their networks. “Although the Apple
Mac hardware and OS X operating systems still represent a small niche,
adoption and acceptance of Mac hardware and operating system software
are growing at a steady and sustained pace not seen since the late
1980s,” DiDio said. “Use of Apple products in a corporate environment
is much more pervasive and complex than previously thought.”
By comparison, Microsoft seems to be under the gloom of
(somewhat undeserved) negative press these days, much like a
cartoon character in the shadow of a perpetual rain cloud. Earlier
this year, a class-action lawsuit stemming from Microsoft’s ill-fated
Windows Vista Capable marketing campaign revealed embarrassing
email messages about Microsoft execs unable to use printers and
run Vista on their own laptops. And corporate customers have been
slow to adopt Vista; a June 2008 survey of IT pros—commissioned
by KACE Networks and conducted by King Research—indicated that
more than 60 percent of the 1,162 IT professionals surveyed had no
Vista migration plans.
Truth be told, Vista has improved mightily since its January
2007 release. It had some early teething pains and still runs like cold
gravy on minimum-spec machines, but I’ve largely had a positive
experience with it. And the Vista migration here at the Penton Media
offices earlier this year went off without a hitch.
But after ignoring the growing perception that Vista was a dud for
more than a year, Microsoft has belatedly decided to strike back—by
saying it needs to be more like Apple? Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer
must have been glowing an envious green when he typed the following
in an email message (which was reprinted by Todd Bishop at the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer) to Microsoft employees. “In the competition
between PCs and Macs, we outsell Apple 30-to-1. But there is no
doubt that Apple is thriving,” wrote Ballmer. “Why? Because they are
good at providing an experience that is narrow but complete, while
our commitment to choice often comes with some compromises to
the end-to-end experience.”
In another example of Microsoft’s dewy-eyed glances at Apple,
a recent Microsoft news release eagerly proclaimed ActiveSync
support for the iPhone, a marketing move equivalent to joining a
screaming throng of teenage girls chasing their favorite boy band.
Then there was the Mojave experiment, a thinly veiled homage to
those soft-drink taste tests in which Microsoft gathered up a panel
of computer novices, had them test a new OS called Mojave (really
Vista in drag), then performed a Candid Camera–style “It’s not
Mojave, it’s Vista!” reveal at the end.
Microsoft is determined to change public perceptions about
Vista, but I don’t think an ad campaign hinged upon saying “Sure,
Vista used to suck, but it’s better now!” will inspire IT managers
to bust out their purchase orders and schedule a Vista migration.
General Motors made a similar mea culpa in 2003 with an expensive
“road to redemption” effort that reminded potential customers GM
made cars in the 1980s that leaked oil, dropped important metal
bits, and spewed clouds of discolored smoke at random intervals,
but promised that GM had learned its lesson and would make better
cars. GM learned that producing better products was the answer,
and Microsoft should do the same: Why tout the merits of damaged
goods when you can develop and promote new products that don’t
have the negative PR baggage? It would be foolish to think that Apple
could ever challenge Microsoft’s dominance in the enterprise, but
the Mac is making some headway in a world in which small businesses
are increasingly using consumer technologies such as the
iPhone and VMware Fusion to meet their needs. And Microsoft?
I’m no Dr. Phil, but Ballmer and company might be better served
by ditching the Apple fixation and marketing better products.
End of Article