On TechRepublic: 19 words you don't want in your resume
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Ina Fried, News.com
Posted on ZDNet News: Oct 27, 2005 11:00:00 AM

When Microsoft releases its SQL Server 2005 database on Nov. 7, it will have been five years since the last version debuted. If Windows Vista arrives as scheduled next fall, it too will follow its predecessor by five years.

That's a pretty long time to make customers wait for a new release. Too long, concedes Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.

"We just can't make our customers wait three or four years for the things which should have been on more interim cycles," he said at last week's Gartner Symposium/IT Expo in Orlando.

Although many Microsoft products have grown long in the tooth, the company is headed into a cycle that will see a flurry of big releases over the next year and a half. In addition to the new SQL Server, Microsoft is launching a revamp of its Visual Studio developer tools on Nov. 7. Next year will bring new major releases for both of Microsoft's core franchises: Office and Windows.

The company has been touting its coming attractions and is likely to do so further during its earnings report on Thursday. Microsoft is "at the beginning of 12 months of the greatest innovation pipeline we have ever had," Ballmer said.

However, the coming splash of new products could be the last such "big bang" for Microsoft. Many expect the company to offer more measured, but more frequent releases in the coming years.

"I think they have to do this," said Paul DeGroot, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft. "With things like Windows Client, we are now looking at least a five-year product cycle. Man, a lot of stuff has happened in five years."

Ballmer last week outlined a path in which the company tries to make both big and small releases simultaneously, as well as deliver more frequent updates. While he didn't say so explicitly, online services loom as a distinct possibility for the most rapid innovations.

"The key is to make sure that for every line of business, we have the things that pop every six or nine months, pop every couple of years, pop longer than that," Ballmer said.

The company has tried to get more frequent with its server operating system launches. Windows Server 2003 debuted about two years ago, and a fairly modest, but paid, upgrade known as Windows Server 2003 R2 is due by year's end. The next major release, still known by its Longhorn Server code name, is slated for 2007.

Smaller bites
Microsoft has also done more consistent, incremental releases with its Dynamics small-business products, such as Great Plains and Navision. DeGroot sees Microsoft's approach with those products, which Microsoft bought from other companies, as a model.

"I would expect that the company will try to train the market to accept this notion of major and minor releases," he said. "If Microsoft takes smaller bites and makes sure that stuff gets delivered in time with a known feature set--that would be very useful."

The challenge, DeGroot said, is there must be enough new features to make the minor releases compelling. At the same time, if changes come more rapidly, they have to be digestible enough that the costs of training and supporting the new software don't outweigh the benefits.

That so-called "legacy" problem has bedeviled Microsoft for years. Regardless of how frequently the company upgrades its products, it still faces the challenge of encouraging customers to move at all. Even with its comparatively slow pace in recent years, many customers have been slower still to upgrade, with generations-old programs like Windows NT, Exchange 5.5 and Office 97 still common at many businesses.

"Microsoft has a problem with their installed base being archaic," said Gartner fellow Tom Bittman. "Their installed base is stuck in the weeds, and because of that, they can't sell enough product."

Even some companies that are more progressive in using newer technologies don't expect to make an immediate leap to Vista or Longhorn Server. "It's something we are watching. But we have no real plans to make a tremendous investment in that direction at this point," said Joe Druin, TRW Automotive's global chief information officer.

A survey of corporate IT managers published last week by Merrill Lynch found that most businesses are taking a wait-and-see approach to Vista. Of the hundred or so CIOs polled by the brokerage, two-thirds were waiting for more information before planning an upgrade. Just 8 percent said they were planning to update in 2007, while 16 percent said they were eyeing a 2008 upgrade. Some 5 percent were planning on holding off until 2009.

Even if customers aren't clamoring for more frequent releases, Microsoft is under financial pressure to release software more quickly. In addition to the obvious benefit of new sales, having releases on a more frequent basis is important for the company's Software Assurance licensing program.

"If the market leader isn't going anywhere, it is much easier to reach that goal."
--analyst Paul DeGroot, Directions with Microsoft

Under that program, customers pay the equivalent of an extra license fee when buying a new software product. In exchange, customers get, among other perks, any updates released over the next three years. Microsoft has tried to downplay the program as a subscription plan, but analysts still see the upgrade rights as a key factor that customers should consider when evaluating whether to buy a Software Assurance package.

DeGroot asserts that Microsoft's changes may already be too late to bolster the program.

"It is probably too late to save Software Assurance," he said. "Software Assurance as an add-on to license purchases has basically not proven itself in many cases."

While the program could make sense for some of Microsoft's newest products that are undergoing rapid changes, he said customers will consider their experiences when evaluating future Software Assurance deals.

"The only way you can begin to address that subject is to look at history--'Had I bought this back then, would it have paid off?'" DeGroot noted.

Too often, he said, the answer has been no, as Microsoft product cycles have crept beyond the three-year term that comes with the Software Assurance program.

"There is a mismatch," DeGroot added.

Open window for rivals
The long time between releases has also been a boon to Microsoft's competitors, both open-source and commercial rivals.

Since 2001, the year that Windows XP debuted, Apple has released five versions of Mac OS X. Another version of the operating system, code-named Leopard, is planned for late 2006 or early 2007, roughly the same time as Longhorn is due. Of course, Apple "doesn't have the installed base that Microsoft has, with 800 million PCs," said Michael Silver, an analyst with Gartner.

Still, the lag time between releases could be costly to Microsoft next time. "In the time Microsoft took to produce two versions of SQL Server, MySQL has produced five of them, each of them with substantial changes," DeGroot said. "Does anyone want to predict--if Microsoft takes another five years for the next version--what MySQL might be like?"

In many areas, Microsoft is competing against lower-cost companies whose goal is to be "good enough" as the comparable Microsoft product, DeGroot said.

"If the market leader isn't going anywhere, it is much easier to reach that goal," he said. "If the market leader is constantly moving the goalposts, it's a lot harder."

One way that Microsoft is trying to regain its nimbleness is by offering more services that connect to its server and desktop software. Then the company could sell and distribute incremental updates to Windows and Office much more quickly, either as a one-time sale or on a subscription basis.

The company has placed former Groove CEO Ray Ozzie in charge of its services push, as part of a major shakeup last month.

"For enterprises, I think we've just barely scratched the surface about which systems can...be brought into the cloud in some way, shape or form," Ozzie said at a San Francisco tech conference on Tuesday. Ozzie and Gates are expected to outline more about the services push in a press event next week.

CNET News.com's Mike Ricciuti contributed to this report.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 259 Talkback(s)
stop the whine please
MS leads because they made smarter business decisions then the other guy when THE OPPORTUNITIES were available for anyone to pursue
in the late 70's early 80's.

You cant keep blaming MS for the shortsightedness of the big iron terminal companies of old.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: jimk_z Posted on: 11/03/05 You are currently: Logged In | Log out
Microsoft is leader in market? mlindl   | 10/27/05
Spot On Malik_z   | 10/27/05
Not true java.user   | 10/27/05
Where did you get those number? wexwimpy@...   | 10/27/05
Re: Where did you get those number? dogman01@...   | 10/27/05
Numbers java.user   | 10/27/05
Not quite mdemuth   | 10/27/05
Yes, Not quite MacCanuck   | 10/27/05
I did not forget mdemuth   | 10/27/05
Nail on the head! An_Axe_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
What part of the quote you ... ShadeTree   | 10/27/05
And part... Anti_Zealot   | 10/27/05
I don't believe ... ShadeTree   | 10/27/05
Logic, though... Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
Well "professor", even though you were... MacCanuck   | 10/27/05
He identified your statements as assertions. Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
You spoke first... kb1493   | 10/27/05
Right! Seenidog   | 10/27/05
Wrong IceTheNet@...   | 10/27/05
MS get the market share illegal wexwimpy@...   | 10/27/05
Wrong Update victim   | 10/27/05
No, leader in sales and dollars generated. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
We know that Roger Ramjet   | 10/27/05
Wow, REALLY?? itanalyst   | 10/27/05
That would take a life time. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
Wow, itanalyst must be really smart... tic swayback   | 10/27/05
Ok, now that's funny voska   | 10/27/05
You guys are mean! Sxooter_z   | 10/27/05
How can you NOT lead in sales when you're a monopoly? ordaj@...   | 10/27/05
So who made you buy the new version? No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
Look at the decision process to understand why people buy Windows. DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
The industry wide agreement to supply only Microsoft products preloaded (NT Update victim   | 10/27/05
I know you're not that stupid. Sxooter_z   | 10/27/05
Huh? Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
Look no further than your nearest VC George Jay   | 10/27/05
Software matures. Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
They have done a lot for you and I. osreinstall   | 10/27/05
They have done a lot TO you and I Update victim   | 10/27/05
Whatever dude. osreinstall   | 10/27/05
I disagree voska   | 10/28/05
Without an OS a computer is a chunk of material osreinstall   | 10/28/05
And your point is relevant, because...???? shawkins   | 10/27/05
In the real world, dollars are always relevant. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
And therein lies the problem for Micrsoft. Firefox does NOT need DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
I guess that you're including ETHICS. -NT Update victim   | 10/27/05
So, Since Firefox Leads In Downloaded Browsers But It Is Free itanalyst   | 10/27/05
And, that is the problem for Microsoft. Firefox does NOT have to make DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
True Krazyken39   | 10/27/05
If the measure used is profits... Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
Do you all forget IceTheNet@...   | 10/27/05
Yes, and what are the customers getting for those billions???? DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
Ask those rejecting encumbered source and buying MS products. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
Well, the value is that everybody else is using it and the need to be DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
Proof that "technology and innovation" aren't the important thing ronjohns   | 10/27/05
Innovations beyond the standards. Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
Yes, but Microsoft uses "extensions" to provide lock-in. DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
Better to be locked in than locked out. osreinstall   | 10/27/05
bull puckies. Sxooter_z   | 10/27/05
Not really. osreinstall   | 10/27/05
Please stop using facts. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
Yes, the fact that users can not choose an OS based on quality and features DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
Huh? java.user   | 10/27/05
Microsoft's newest does not = better maddog@...   | 10/27/05
Nonsense marksashton   | 10/27/05
Leader in the Market jack@...   | 10/27/05
Who's us? Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
counter productive IceTheNet@...   | 10/27/05
Well fraz2005   | 10/27/05
AJAX which everyone is foaming ... ShadeTree   | 10/27/05
the iptv i watch the most is quicktime hipparchus2001   | 10/27/05
Innovation not allowed in installed products F-16 Vet   | 10/27/05
"fixing what isn't broken" sguerin_z   | 10/27/05
Well................. Cayble   | 10/28/05
stop the whine please jimk_z   | 11/03/05
Actually Boot_Agnostic   | 10/27/05
You're right, but... Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
And the shut up ppl will tell you to just shutup FilledOut   | 10/30/05
That's what happens Roger Ramjet   | 10/27/05
Have you seen The "Bill" Snake? wiskyjon   | 10/27/05
What do you think APIs are for? Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
You are right Roger Ramjet   | 10/27/05
Recent Court cases assured all Windows API's... Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
Secrets and Shadows BFD   | 10/27/05
Lindoze has a wonderful growth pattern Boot_Agnostic   | 10/27/05
Microsoft's 'big bang' could be its last Loverock Davidson   | 10/27/05
Once again... jasonp@...   | 10/27/05
10.0 - Best Post Of The Week itanalyst   | 10/27/05
11 D-Ram   | 10/27/05
IT jknight_z   | 10/27/05
EGO is the core issue, here. lalogos   | 10/27/05
Message has been deleted. MacGeek2121   | 10/27/05
Please note: I do not resort to name-calling ... lalogos   | 10/27/05
Couldn't agree more... dsentman@...   | 10/27/05
Ya had to go THERE didn't ya? ; -) dolfinwriter@...   | 10/27/05
fact glocks out   | 10/27/05
ACTUAL Fact dolfinwriter@...   | 10/27/05
sources glocks out   | 10/27/05
I don't want to battle anything... except bad guys who want to kill us! dolfinwriter@...   | 10/27/05
dolfinwriter-don't fight sguerin_z   | 10/27/05
nice diatribe ... glocks out   | 10/28/05
Theme: it's all about POLICY. lalogos   | 10/27/05
sovereigny glocks out   | 10/27/05
Not quite kb1493   | 10/27/05
Gotta agree with you...mostly, but... dsentman@...   | 10/27/05
Do you mean that Bill Clinton was WRONG about WMD in Iraq? -NT Update victim   | 10/27/05
Of course he was azurensis   | 10/27/05
Doesn't matter glocks out   | 10/28/05
oh my finnerski2k5   | 10/27/05
Double standards aren't good, but.... kb1493   | 10/27/05
Once again Loverock Davidson   | 10/27/05
LOL... 10... thanks (nt) el1jones   | 10/27/05
OWWW..........!! Cayble   | 10/28/05
OWWWW...!! Cayble   | 10/28/05
Give it up Seenidog   | 10/27/05
No need to Loverock Davidson   | 10/27/05
Definitely not Mike Cox Sxooter_z   | 10/27/05
Funny Rockie Sabz5150   | 10/27/05
Question about office wexwimpy@...   | 10/27/05
If you don't know I'm not going to tell you Loverock Davidson   | 10/27/05
"good enough" as the .. Microsoft product? Otto_Delete   | 10/27/05
Adopting alternatives? Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
Yes, better, but "compatible" enough and cheaper. DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
Just how many releases are enough? Roger Ramjet   | 10/27/05
I agree Krazyken39   | 10/27/05
AMEN, roger maddog@...   | 10/27/05
Gee, how many Linux distros are enough? No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
MORE! Seenidog   | 10/27/05
Regardless of your excuse, they meet the market demand. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
No excuse Seenidog   | 10/27/05
You forget that MS Office is not forward compatible. DonnieBoy   | 10/27/05
Good point geobeck   | 10/27/05
Expectations Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
Not everyone upgrades voska   | 10/28/05
A different point of view clif.cable@...   | 10/27/05
wrong NemesisNL   | 10/27/05
there will be an implosion! Linux Geek   | 10/27/05
I've got a bridge to sell you... archerjoe   | 10/27/05
Yeah that too! Krazyken39   | 10/27/05
Yeah Right! Krazyken39   | 10/27/05
Here's the thing that gets me... steelcuda   | 10/27/05
Fix the existing stuff first duclod   | 10/27/05
Exacty right Seenidog   | 10/27/05
Car Analogy ragnars   | 10/27/05
Message has been deleted. Guy.Salomon@...   | 10/27/05
Ditto Seenidog   | 10/27/05
Oh ZDNet... Qbt   | 10/27/05
Dogging Apple? MacGeek2121   | 10/27/05
There are Qbt   | 10/27/05
Note Qbt   | 10/27/05
ZDnet a MS hater? glocks out   | 10/27/05
Do you think MS is dying? voska   | 10/28/05
Microsoft is still Number One erniem1970@...   | 10/27/05
Cut & Paste Forum lalogos   | 10/27/05
Cut &paste Seenidog   | 10/27/05
what if jforjan@...   | 10/27/05
linux good at office, windows good at home charlescandy   | 10/27/05
Here's a thought tic swayback   | 10/27/05
Actually IT Scion   | 10/27/05
That is an important part of it tic swayback   | 10/27/05
and in Apple's case they really weren't ... ShadeTree   | 10/27/05
I don't know that I'd agree tic swayback   | 10/27/05
No more Microsoft BS for me onemegshyofagig   | 10/27/05
the Mac looks better and better An_Axe_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
OS X looks great but IT Scion   | 10/27/05
Patching is good! MacGeek2121   | 10/27/05
$125 per OS X upgrade... Anton Philidor   | 10/27/05
that's not that much money hipparchus2001   | 10/27/05
Maybe they just caught on rabrooks   | 10/27/05
Never! An_Axe_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
Let us pray ..... An_Axe_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
From the Church of the holy Cabbage.. Seenidog   | 10/27/05
From the church of the holy No_axe_ to _grind.. Seenidog   | 10/27/05
I bet in your little world that passes for funny. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
Well, yes Seenidog   | 10/27/05
Ask itanylist if you can borrow... No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
To understand MS, you must understand their market. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
Did You Post This???? itanalyst   | 10/27/05
If you pay attention I do hold MS's feet to the fire when appropiate. No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
... it's just never been appropriate... An_Axe_to_Grind   | 10/27/05
Aw, did I ruin your itty bitty day? No_Ax_to_Grind   | 10/27/05