Not exactly eye-opining for those who have looked at Microsoft from an objective POV, but interesting nonetheless!
Original link here.
So what value does Microsoft actually bring to the table, except that people possess a sheep-mentality and really don't do their homework from a TCO perspective as to what's right for their business? Microsoft stopped delivering a compelling business case long ago IMO.
Gaughan said Microsoft was clear about its strategy, but less than transparent with customers when it came to software licensing.
“This is a platform story,” he said, describing Microsoft’s strategy. “They are a platform company first and foremost. They continually ask themselves, how do we drive platform and how do we protect our cash cows, Office and Windows?
When approaching Microsoft, consider that Windows is the core – and Microsoft will do everything to protect that core.”
New functionality and integration is drip fed through to users of the core Windows, Office and SharePoint platforms, he noted, using the example of Lync (unified communications) integration, which “drives value into investments customers have already made,” but CIOs should be mindful that this again only aims to protect the core.
“This is a platform story,” he said, describing Microsoft’s strategy. “They are a platform company first and foremost. They continually ask themselves, how do we drive platform and how do we protect our cash cows, Office and Windows?
When approaching Microsoft, consider that Windows is the core – and Microsoft will do everything to protect that core.”
New functionality and integration is drip fed through to users of the core Windows, Office and SharePoint platforms, he noted, using the example of Lync (unified communications) integration, which “drives value into investments customers have already made,” but CIOs should be mindful that this again only aims to protect the core.
So what value does Microsoft actually bring to the table, except that people possess a sheep-mentality and really don't do their homework from a TCO perspective as to what's right for their business? Microsoft stopped delivering a compelling business case long ago IMO.
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