Microsoft tends to move slowly. Apple,
Google, Facebook, and others have been blazing the trail into the digital
future, while the 37-year old Microsoft has been inhaling their fumes. Poor
Microsoft? Not exactly. The company's software continues to dominate in the old
world of Windows and Office, as well as with desktop PCs and game consoles via
the Xbox.
For its last quarterly earnings, Microsoft
reported revenue of $17.41 billion and operating income of $6.37 billion, up 12
percent from the same quarter last year. But longer-term growth is dependent on
competing with Apple's iOS and Google's Android platform for the allegiance of
several billion mobile, connected humans around the world.
The laggard Microsoft has finally delivered
a response to the mobile leaders with Windows 8, which is slated for an October
debut. And, taking another lesson from Apple, a key part of the Microsoft
Windows 8 offensive is ramping up its retail stores, with plans to have 44
opened by the end of June 2013.
"The Microsoft Store brand will become
more pervasive and go out into the world," Microsoft Chief Operating
Officer Kevin Turner said at the company's Worldwide Partner Conference.
"More and more markets around are going to see the Microsoft Store, and
this holiday on the heels of the Windows 8 launch we're going to do some holiday
pop-up stores. And we're going to keep going more and more pervasive. And
you'll see the store brand continue to go out into the world with the
opportunity we believe we have to tell the Microsoft story."
Microsoft Store merchandise will include a selection
of Windows PCs, phones, and tablets, as well as the Xbox and third-party apps
and hardware. But, the stores have a long way to go to be pervasive, as Turner
desires. Apple currently has 327 retail stores worldwide, which generated $16
billion in sales last year. Most of the Microsoft stores are located in upscale
shopping malls. Apple burnishes its cult-brand aura with flagship stores amid
high-end luxury brands and museums, as in New York City.
Microsoft Store locations (Source:
Microsoft)
In any case, "pervasive" will not
be enough to make a huge dent in the lead that Apple, or Google, has with
mobile devices. Certainly Microsoft, and its partners, will sell billions in
merchandise as the upgrade to Windows 8 takes hold. But beyond the Windows PC
feast, can Microsoft and its partners make objects of desire, the kind that
compel customers to camp out overnight at the stores to be first in line to
pick up the latest tablet or phone?
A happy iPad owner at Apple's flagship
store in New York City
(Credit: Dan Farber/CBS)
With the Surface, Microsoft is attempting
its own Apple-like object of desire, a marriage of hardware and software,
tablet and PC. It will be sold primarily through the brick-and-motor and online
Microsoft Store.
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said his goal
is to sell "a few million Surface PCs" in the coming year. For
contrast, in the weekend following the Friday, March 16, 2012, launch of the
third-generation iPad, Apple sold 3 million units. Maybe he was being modest,
so as not to further alienate partners who are displeased with Microsoft's new
entry into the hardware space, or he doesn't think that the initial Surface
will slow iPad adoption. Windows 8 phone may have an easier time than the
Surface in challenging the incumbents in the coming months.
Ballmer can take great solace in IDC
estimates that 375 million Windows PCs will be sold in the next 12 months. But
Microsoft is still seeking the Windows 8 object of desire that will have people
breaking down the doors at Microsoft stores and catapult the new Windows into
mobile orbit.
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