Thursday, May 29, 2014

Microsoft’s real problem



Ten to fifteen years ago in Silicon Valley when a software developer was looking for a new they found that roughly sixty percent of the companies were looking for people fluent in Microsoft technologies like .Net, C#, VC++, or MFC.  Fast forward to today, the skills that companies are asking for in Silicon Valley are either app development or big data, all of which use open source programming languages like C++, PHP, Java, or Python.  I estimate only one to two percent of the available jobs are for people with Microsoft centric skills.

What Silicon Valley does now, IT departments do in five years.  This is a fact that has been true for a long time.  Microsoft’s bottom line still looks strong, but if virtually all the new development is in areas other than Microsoft, then Microsoft will be then next Yahoo -- A big company that once had a leadership role and is now fighting for relevance.

Why Apple bought Beats



I think it’s an encouraging sign that Apple bought Beat.  Now let’s see if they can integrate Beat’s leaders with their culture.

Why do I think it’s encouraging?  As everyone knows Steve Jobs was the visionary at Apple.  That is he could look at something and had an unbelievable ability to see if it was cool.  But more than that, he had focus and energy to look at lots of cool things and pluck out what was really cool, drive people to create something cooler, or move mountains to make technologies he thought he needed for cool to come about.

What he didn’t do is hire competing executives.  He hired complementary executives.  That is he surrounded himself with guys who could execute what they know Steve would like, or find cool things for Steve to choose from.  But the final decision was always Steve.  With him gone the decision maker for cool is gone.  Apple’s problem is now who decides what’s cool?  And for a company like Apple, that’s the difference of remaining on top or just becoming another Silicon Valley technology company.

So Beat, the guys at Beat are cool, know what cool is, and can project ahead what consumers will buy because it’s cool.  Which is what Steve Job’s did.  By buying Beat, Apple has now bought executives that hopefully can fill the shoes Steve Jobs left empty.