Coop's Corner

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July 24, 2008 11:07 AM PDT

No softies need apply for Microsoft's big opening

by Charles Cooper
  • 5 comments

Wanted: Experienced online executive not afraid of challenges. Must be self-starter. Ideal candidate a glutton for punishment, willing to deal with stress, as well as excitable CEO prone to throwing chairs when in foul mood. Huge payout if successful; ritual defenestration if a failure. No phone calls. Send all e-mails to sballmer@microsoft.com.

Now that Kevin Johnson has gone the path of all upwardly mobile executives aching to become CEOs--in his case becoming the next boss at Juniper Networks--who is Microsoft likely to appoint as its next online chief?

Not to get melodramatic on you, but this may rank as Microsoft's most important decision since anointing Steve Ballmer as Bill Gates' replacement in 2000.

Send those resumes my way, folks

(Credit: CNET News)

That's because Microsoft's online-services business has been, um, well, a work in progress for far too long. (I recently returned from a vacation abroad, and the glow hasn't fully worn off yet.) While Google extends its domination in search advertising, Microsoft is conceding defeat. The company's CFO said last week during a conference call that Microsoft expected to lose money in online services for the foreseeable future.

Mary Jo Foley says Brian McAndrews, who arrived at Microsoft via its acquisition of Aquantive, is expected to emerge as a "strong candidate." Kara Swisher over at All Things Digital writes that her sources put McAndrews as the leading candidate, while company veteran Yusuf Mehdi is also in the running.

I've seen McAndrews speak on several occasions--the latest being yesterday, during a conference organized by Fortune magazine--and he is impressive in person.

Swisher also suggests that an outsider has a shot.

"More interesting, perhaps, is one of the top outside candidates on the list, former AOL head Jon Miller, who is poised to be added to the--wait for it--Yahoo board, as part of its recent proxy fight settlement (with) activist investor Carl Icahn."

I like the idea of bringing in an outsider, someone presumably with a fresh perspective. In that sense, McAndrews might qualify, albeit with an asterisk. Microsoft acquired his company months ago, and it takes at least a year for the corporate Kool-Aid to have its true effect.

More seriously, McAndrews is just one among many capable online executives with the right resume for this job. Microsoft can afford to be picky. The last thing that Ballmer needs is a reprise of the Michael Hallman affair. (Hallman was hired away from Boeing to become company president, only to get the boot two years later.)

But perhaps holding off on naming an immediate replacement is the more prudent strategy. With six months' worth of Yahoo-yes, Yahoo-no, Yahoo-maybe, this company still seems confused about what its online strategy ought to be.

July 18, 2008 4:39 PM PDT

Pondering Microsoft's 'Everett Dirksen moment'

by Charles Cooper
  • 10 comments

Update at 7:00 a.m. July 19: Typo fixed in the senator's last name.

Illinois Sen. Everett Dirksen is remembered for the quip, "A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon, you're talking real money." (Truth be told, it's unclear whether those were his exact words, but he's got that tagline for posterity.)

I was thinking of the former senator after listening to Microsoft's chief financial officer explain to analysts why the company intends to continue to pour hundreds of millions of dollars into a business which still isn't producing much of a return. But the online advertising business is just too important to Microsoft's future to be penny wise and pound foolish. Of course, it helps when you're the CFO of a company with tens of billions of dollars in cash and marketable securities. For more, check out the conversation I had with my CNET News colleague, Ina Fried, earlier Friday.

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About Coop's Corner

Charles Cooper has covered technology and business for more than 25 years. A graduate of Queens College and Columbia University, Cooper received the Excellence in Journalism award from the Northern California branch of the Society for Professional Journalists for column writing.

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