Ballmer: Windows 7 worth the investment
- 30 September, 2009 05:51
- Comments 1
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer put on his sales hat Tuesday and made a case for why businesses should upgrade to Windows 7, despite an economy in which many IT budgets have been frozen or are lower than in years past.
"It's a different environment today than the environment we all sat in a year-and-a-half ago," Ballmer told a roomful of business customers at an event in San Francisco.
Microsoft had no idea at that time that it would be launching three major products -- Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2 and Exchange Server 2010 -- into such an uncertain economic climate.
"I can't tell you that this was the economy we thought we were going to live in," Ballmer said.
Overall, the CEO's comments betrayed a few chinks in the usual armor of confidence that cloaks Microsoft executives when discussing their projections for next month's global release of Windows 7.
Ballmer took a poll of the people in the room to find out if IT budgets at companies were up, down or frozen. While a scant few said they were up, most said they were down or frozen, a trend Ballmer said he knows will make it difficult to convince people to purchase new software.
Calling the current IT climate a time for "new efficiency," Ballmer said companies are looking to do more with less and will likely free up IT budgets only to purchase products that allow workers to collaborate more efficiently and take costs out of business.
He tried to position the three upcoming products, but Windows 7 in particular, in this light, saying they would help customers achieve innovation and cost savings in their businesses.
Ballmer cited customer case studies the company prepared with analyst firm Gartner, intended to show how the new OS can help businesses save money in three key areas. The studies were first released a couple of weeks ago in an earlier promotional push for Windows 7.
According to the report, companies achieved annual costs savings of $US36 to $US45 per PC on the service desk; $US25 to $US98 per PC for desktop management; and $US28 to $US61 per PC in deployment and provisioning.
Microsoft promoted Windows 7's predecessor, Vista, with similar case studies. But many businesses ultimately shied away from Vista because they considered it sub-par, and much of Microsoft's marketing efforts around Windows 7 have been focused on repairing that damage.
"Vista was a nightmare," said Brent Allard, a studio technical support manager for Electronic Arts, who was at Microsoft's customer event Tuesday.
But EA has been using Windows 7 for some time as an early adopter, and Allard said Microsoft seems to have put right the flaws in Vista and developed an OS that is relatively bug-free, efficient and useful to EA's business.
Ballmer acknowledged that many businesses are long-overdue for a PC and OS refresh, because many are still using Windows XP or even Windows 2000.
Still, the improvements in Windows 7 and the need to upgrade soon are no guarantee that businesses will free up their budgets for Windows 7, and Ballmer seemed mindful of this.
But he said the triptych of products Microsoft highlighted at the event are the company's best effort to help customers do more with less, and that strategic investments in software will ultimately help businesses save money.
"Now is one of the most challenging times ever in the IT business," Ballmer said. "These are three products that are really super-well-suited to the new efficiency. Now we really get to show our stuff."
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Australia's first 4G smartphone is the HTC Velocity 4G
-
Swedish e-commerce startup's execs linked to NYC sex crime
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
How to implement next-generation storage infrastructure for Big Data
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
Securing SOA and Web Services with Oracle Enterprise Gateway
Companies worldwide are actively deploying service-oriented architecture (SOA) infrastructures using web services, both in intranet and extranet environments. While web services offer many advantages over traditional alternatives (e.g., distributed objects or custom software), deploying networks of interconnected web services still presents key challenges, especially in terms of security and management. -
IBM zEnterprise System Brings Hybrid Computing Capabilities to Midsize Organisations
This paper focuses on the IBM z114 cross-tier solution, which brings IBM AIX Unix and Linux workloads into the mix, with Microsoft Windows support to follow in the future. This blended approach to computing allows workloads running on any of those operating systems to communicate more quickly and effectively with the System z, producing business benefits from the orchestration, or coordination, of management for all of the workloads running across all of the linked platforms. -
Achieve Business and Environmental Goals
HP Web Jetadmin software offers business intelligence capabilities, as part of the Database Connectivity Module, that help IT managers assess printing behaviors and lower their organization’s environmental footprint. HP Eco Solutions reports enable measurement of environmentally relevant capabilities, settings and use patterns. IT can use the results to spotlight opportunities to decrease energy and paper consumption—for a printer, group of printers or an entire fleet. Read more.
-
Unified Objects
-
Mac Upgrade and Repair Bible, 3rd Edition
-
The Csslp Prep Guide
-
Mac OS X Leopard Para Dummies (Spanish Edition)
-
Data Warehouse Design Solutions
-
Programming in Fortran 90 - a First Course for Engineers & Scientists
-
Openoffice.org for Dummies®
-
Businessobjects Xi Release 2 for Dummies
-
Email Marketing








Comments
Anonymous
In other news, the pope stated that Catholicism was worth the investment.
Post new comment