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"We have to change faster internally than the world is changing externally or we will be obsolete," Turner said, as part of his speech, which kicked off Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Conference here.
While change is hard, Turner said Microsoft's partners need to be ready to offer customers the choice of running software on their own servers or subscribing to hosted services. "It doesn't mean locally based software is going away, but customers want the choice."
Microsoft is trying to keep its partners in the fold through the transition. With its new Live CRM service, set to go on sale next year, Microsoft is offering partners a 10 percent cut of ongoing subscription revenue for partners that help sell and support the product, for example. He also noted that an early access program for Live CRM, which kicks off this quarter, is only available through partners.
But the shift also opens the door to more conflict for the company and its partners. Turner talked about how, as software shifts, Microsoft will find itself both partnering with and competing against companies like SAP and Cisco.
Indeed, Microsoft may also find itself competing with its partners in the hosted software arena. While the company is pushing for its partners to help sell its hosted products, Turner acknowledged that some customers may want Microsoft and not partners to do the hosting, a task many partners offer today.
Turner also talked up the new opportunities that will be created by Microsoft services, pointing to the company's Office Live service for small businesses. Turner announced a new program that will allow partners to create add-on applets that Microsoft will host. He said that Office Live, which currently has 400,000 businesses signed up, has the potential to become one of the three or four most-used Microsoft products.
"There are millions and millions of small businesses we can reach," Turner said.
Earlier in his keynote, Turner touted the potential for the company and its partners to profit from the Office 2007 and Windows Vista products that Microsoft launched in its past fiscal year. During that year, some $20 billion in research and development investment came to market, he said.
"I see one thing in fiscal year (2008)," he said. "I see money...I can smell it. I can hear it. This is the year we are going to monetize that innovation."
Turner also announced that Microsoft's new server operating system, Windows Server 2008, won't have its formal launch until next year. Microsoft plans to launch that product, as well as the next version of its SQL Server database and Visual Studio developer tools at an event on February 27 in Los Angeles.
See more CNET content tagged:
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CRM,
Microsoft SQL Server,
small business,
Microsoft Corp.





I'm sure the claim will be the same next decade...
C/ZDnet, always good for a larf...
If MS focused on the customer instead of the money they would not be digging such a big hole for themselves.
Charles R. Whealton
Charles Whealton @ pleasedontspam.com
Historically it seems when someone else comes up with a good idea, Microsoft uses their storehouse of money to either buy the innovating company or produce their own, normally inferior version.
And most people still think buying the Microsoft version is a good idea. But that group of people has been shrinking for years.
Cellphones? Wince phones are still a small percentage of the market. Online services? It's Google, then everyone else. Music players? I live in a large city and spotted a Zune for the first time two weeks ago.
But the XBox does/did have good market share. Too bad it's never made Microsoft a dollar. And now MS has announced a potential $1 Billion dollar liability due to problems with the unit.
I think the analysts are right when they say to Microsoft:
"Give up trying to be cool. It's not working."
http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=201000608&subSection=All+Stories
http://www.sltrib.com/business/ci_6345245
The harder it will be to compete the more reason for them to say #$%^ it, let's break the law again.
Vista - No. Office 2007 - No. Visual Studio .Net - No.
Now, if Microsoft relies on me to push their new products and make money, they have seriuos problem !
Check out G.ho.st (The Global Hosted Operating SysTem) at http://g.ho.st. G.ho.st is working to provide a free fully functional Virtual Computer, on the Web, so that every person in the world can do any computing at any time, any place, on any budget.
stupid licensing requirements, and the basic premise that MSFT
thinks it can merely dictate and the developers will somehow
follow.
Let me put it in very clear terms:
"Hey, Steve! it's not 1998 anymore! You're losing mindshare
faster than a drunken sailor loses money on Shore Leave! Vista
is sucking harder than a galaxy-swallowing supermassive black
hole! Nobody wants to shell out a pile of Benjamins on warmed-
over reheated bloatware like Office 2007! Get a frickin' clue
already!"
If MSFT requires any more clarity, I'd have to hit Maya and make
an animation of it.
/P
Priceless- I'll have to remember that one.
Cheers
- It is time to change to OS/2
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by Thought Police OMalley
July 12, 2007 7:38 PM PDT
- better than a Mac, more stable than Windows, and virus-proof and hacker-proof!
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