Why Google Glass, Amazon Fire Phone and the Segway Failed

Why Google Glass, Amazon Fire Phone and the Segway Failed

Despite huge fanfare at launch, after a few brief months Google Glass is no longer on the market.  The Amazon Fire Phone was also launched to great hype, yet sales flopped and the company recently took a $170M write off on inventory.

Fortune mercilessly blamed Fire Phone’s failure on CEO Jeff Bezos.  The magazine blamed him for micromanaging the design while overspending on development, manufacturing and marketing.  To Fortune the product was fatally flawed, and had no chance of success according to the article.

Similarly, the New York Times blasted Google co-founder and company leader Sergie Brin for the failure of Glass. He was held responsible for over-exposing the product at launch while not listening to his own design team.

google-glass_

Both these articles make the common mistake of blaming failed new products on (1) the product itself, and (2) some high level leader that was a complete dunce.  In these stories, like many others of failed products, a leader that had demonstrated keen insight, and was credited with brilliant work and decision-making, simply “went stupid” and blew it.  Really?

Unfortunately there are a lot of new products that fail.  Such simplistic explanations do not help business leaders avoid a future product flop.   But there are common lessons to these stories from which innovators, and marketers, can learn in order to do better in the future.  Especially when the new products are marketplace disrupters; or as they are often called, “game changers.”

Segway

Do you remember Segway?  The two wheeled transportation device came on the market with incredible fanfare in 2002. It was heralded as a game changer in how we all would mobilize.  Founders predicted sales would explode to 10,000 units per week, and the company would reach $1B in sales faster than ever in history.  But that didn’t happen.  Instead the company sold less than 10,000 units in its first 2 years,  and less than 24,000 units in its first 4 years.  What was initially a “really, really cool product” ended up a dud.

There were a lot of companies that experimented with Segways.  The U.S. Postal Service tested Segways for letter carriers. Police tested using them in Chicago, Philadelphia and D.C., gas companies tested them for Pennsylvania meter readers, and Chicago’s fire department tested them for paramedics in congested city center.  But none of these led to major sales. Segway became relegated to niche (like urban sightseeing) and absurd (like Segway polo) uses.

Segway tried to be a general purpose product. But no disruptive product ever succeeds with that sort of marketing.  As famed innovation guru Clayton Christensen tells everyone, when you launch a new product you have to find a set of unmet needs, and position the new product to fulfill that unmet need better than anything else.  You must have a very clear focus on the product’s initial use, and work extremely hard to make sure the product does the necessary job brilliantly to fulfill the unmet need.

Nobody inherently needed a Segway.  Everyone was getting around by foot, bicycle, motorcycle and car just fine.  Segway failed because it did not focus on any one application, and develop that market as it enhanced and improved the product.  Selling 100 Segways to 20 different uses was an inherently bad decision. What Segway needed to do was sell 100 units to a single, or at most 2, applications.

Segway leadership should have studied the needs deeply, and focused all aspects of the product, distribution, promotion, training, communications and pricing for that single (or 2) markets.  By winning over users in the initial market Segway could have made those initial users very loyal, outspoken customers who would recommend the product again and again – even at a $4,000 price.

Segway should have pioneered an initial application market that could grow.  Only after that could Segway turn to a second market.  The first market could have been using Segway as a golfer’s cart, or as a walking assist for the elderly/infirm, or as a transport device for meter readers.  If Segway had really focused on one initial market, developed for those needs, and won that market it would have started a step-wise program toward more applications and success. By thinking the general market would figure out how to use its product, and someone else would develop applications for specific market needs, Segway’s leaders missed the opportunity to truly disrupt one market and start the path toward wider success.

amazon-fire-phoneThe Fire Phone had a great opportunity to grow which it missed.  The Fire Phone had several features making it great for on-line shopping.  But the launch team did not focus, focus, focus on this application.  They did not keep developing apps, databases and ways of using the product for retailing so that avid shoppers found the Fire Phone superior for their needs.  Instead the Fire Phone was launched as a mass-market device. Its retail attributes were largely lost in comparisons with other general purpose smartphones.

People already had Apple iPhones, Samsung Galaxy phones and Google Nexus phones.  Simultaneously, Microsoft was pushing for new customers to use Nokia and HTC Windows phones.  There were plenty of smartphones on the market. Another smartphone wasn’t needed – unless it fulfilled the unmet needs of some select market so well that those specific users would say “if you do …. and you need…. then you MUST have a FirePhone.”  By not focusing like a laser on some specific application – some specific set of unmet needs – the “cool” features of the Fire Phone simply weren’t very valuable and the product was easy for people to pass by.  Which almost everyone did, waiting for the iPhone 6 launch.

This was the same problem launching Google Glass.  Glass really caught the imagination of many tech reviewers.  Everyone I knew who put on Glass said it was really cool.  But there wasn’t any one thing Glass did so well that large numbers of folks said “I have to have Glass.”  There wasn’t any need that Glass fulfilled so well that a segment bought Glass, used it and became religious about wearing Glass all the time.  And Google didn’t improve the product in specific ways for a single market application so that users from that market would be attracted to buy Glass.  In the end, by trying to be a “cool tool” for everyone Glass ended up being something nobody really needed.  Exactly like Segway.

win10_holoLensMicrosoft recently launched its Hololens.  Again, a pretty cool gadget.  But, exactly what is the target market for Hololens?  If Microsoft proceeds down the road of “a cool tool that will redefine computing,” Hololens will likely end up with the same fate as Glass, Segway and Fire Phone.  Hololens marketing and development teams have to find the ONE application (maybe 2) that will drive initial sales, cater to that application with enhancements and improvements to meet those specific needs, and create an initial loyal user base.  Only after that can Hololens build future applications and markets to grow sales (perhaps explosively) and push Microsoft into a market leading position.

All companies have opportunities to innovate and disrupt their markets.  Most fail at this.  Most innovations are thrown at customers hoping they will buy, and then simply dropped when sales don’t meet expectations.  Most leaders forget that customers already have a way of getting their jobs done, so they aren’t running around asking for a new innovation.  For an innovation to succeed launchers must identify the unmet needs of an application, and then dedicate their innovation to meeting those unmet needs.  By building a base of customers (one at a time) upon which to grow the innovation’s sales you can position both the new product and the company as market leaders.

 

The Kindle Smartphone is a Game Changer – But Not As You Think

The Kindle Smartphone is a Game Changer – But Not As You Think

Yesterday Amazon launched its new Kindle Fire smartphone.

“Ho-hum” you, and a lot of other people, said.  “Why?”  “What’s so great about this phone?”

The market is dominated by Apple and Samsung, to the point we no longer care about Blackberry – and have pretty much forgotten about all the money spent by Microsoft to buy Nokia and launch Windows 8.  The world doesn’t much need a new smartphone maker – as we’ve seen with the lack of excitement around Google/Motorola’s product launches.  And, despite some gee-whiz 3D camera and screen effects, nobody thinks Amazon has any breakthrough technology here.

But that would be completely missing the point.  Amazon probably isn’t even thinking of competing heads-up with the 2 big guns in the smartphone market.  Instead, Amazon’s target is everyone in retail.  And they should be scared to death.  As well as a lot of consumer products companies.

Amazon's new Kindle Fire smartphone

Amazon’s new Kindle Fire smartphone

Apple’s iPod and iPhones have some 400,000 apps.  But most people don’t use over a dozen or so daily.  Think about what you do on your phone:

  • Talk, texting and email
  • Check the weather, road conditions, traffic
  • Listen to music, or watch videos
  • Shopping (look for products, prices, locations, specs, availability, buy)

Now, you may do several other things.  But (maybe not in priority,) these are probably the top 4 for 90% of people.

If you’re Amazon, you want people to have a great shopping experience.  A GREAT experience.  You’ve given folks terrific interfaces, across multiple platforms.  But everything you do with an app on iPhones or Samsung phones involves negotiating with Apple or Google to be in their store – and giving them revenue.  If you could bypass Apple and Google – a form of retail “middleman” in Amazon’s eyes – wouldn’t you?

Amazon has already changed retail markedly.  Twenty years ago a retailer would say success relied on 2 things:

  1. Store location and layout.  Be in the right place, and be easy to shop.
  2. Merchandise the goods well in the store, and have them available.

Amazon has killed both those tenets of retail.  With Amazon there is no store – there is no location.  There are no aisles to walk, and no shelves to stock.  There is no merchandising of products on end caps, within aisles or by tagging the product for better eye appeal.  And in 40%+ cases, Amazon doesn’t even stock the inventory.  Availability is based upon a supplier for whom Amazon provides the storefront and interface to the customer, sending the order to the supplier for a percentage of the sale.

And, on top of this, the database at Amazon can make your life even easier, and less time consuming, than a traditional store.  When you indicate you want item “A” Amazon is able to show you similar products, show you variations (such as color or size,) show you “what goes with” that product to make sure you buy everything you need, and give you different prices and delivery options.

Many retailers have spent considerably training employees to help customers in the store.  But it is rare that any retail employee can offer you the insight, advice and detail of Amazon.  For complex products, like electronics, Amazon can provide  detail on all competitive products that no traditional store could support. For home fix-ups Amazon can provide detailed information on installation, and the suite of necessary ancillary products, that surpasses what a trained Home Depot employee often can do.  And for simple products Amazon simply never runs out of stock – so no asking an aisle clerk “is there more in the back?”

And it is impossible for any brick-and-mortar retailer to match the cost structure of Amazon.  No stores, no store employees, no cashiers, 50% of the inventory, 5-10x the turns, no “obsolete inventory,” no inventory loss – there is no way any retailer can match this low cost structure. Thus we see the imminent failure of Radio Shack and Sears, and the chronic decline in mall rents as stores go empty.

Some retailers have tried to catch up with Amazon offering goods on-line.  But the inventory is less, and delivery is still often problematic.  Meanwhile, as they struggle to become more digital these retailers are competing on ground they know precious little about.  It is becoming commonplace to read about hackers stealing customer data and wreaking havoc at Michaels Stores and Target.  Thus on-line customers have far more faith in Amazon, which has 2 decades of offering secure transactions and even offers cloud services secure enough to support major corporations and parts of the U.S. government.

And Amazon, so far, hasn’t even had to make a profit.  It’s lofty price/earnings multiple of 500 indicates just how little “e” there is in its p/e.  Amazon keeps pouring money into new ways to succeed, rather than returning money to shareholders via stock buybacks or dividends.  Or dumping it into chronic store remodels, or new store construction.

Today, you could shop at Amazon from your browser on any laptop, tablet or phone.  Or, if you really enjoy shopping on-line you can now obtain a new tablet or phone from Amazon which makes your experience even better.  You can simply take a picture of something you want, and your new Amazon smartphone will tell you how to buy it on-line, including price and delivery.  No need to leave the house.  Want to see the product in full 360 degrees? You have it on your 3D phone.  And all your buying experience, customer reviews, and shopping information is right at your fingertips.

Amazon is THE game changer in retail.  Kindle was a seminal product that has almost killed book publishers, who clung way too long to old print-based business models.  Kindle Fire took direct aim at traditional retailers, from Macy’s to Wal-Mart, in an effort to push the envelope of on-line shopping.  And now the Kindle Fire smartphone puts all that shopping power in your palm, convenient with your other most commonplace uses such as messaging, fact finding, listening or viewing.

This is not a game changing smartphone in comparison with iPhone 5 or Galaxy S 5.  But, as another salvo in the ongoing war for controlling the retail marketplace this is another game changer.  It continues to help everyone think about how they shop today, and in the future.  For anyone in retail, this may well be seen as another important step toward changing the industry forever, and making “every day low prices” an obsolete (and irrelevant) retail phrase.  And for consumer goods companies this means the need to distribute products on-line will forever change the way marketing and selling is done – including who makes how much profit.

 

Microsoft ReOrg – Crafty or Confusing?

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer appears to be planning a major reorganization. The apparent objective is to help the company move toward becoming a "devices and services company" as presented in the company's annual shareholder letter last October. 

But, the question for investors is whether this is a crafty move that will help Microsoft launch renewed profitable growth, or is it leadership further confusing customers and analysts while leaving Microsoft languishing in stalled markets?  After all, the shares are up some 31% the last 6 months and it is a good time to decide if an investor should buy, hold or sell.

There are a lot of things not going well for Microsoft right now.

Everyone knows PC sales have started dropping.  IDC recently lowered its forecast for 2013 from a decline of 1.3% to negative 7.8%.  The mobile market is already larger than PC sales, and IDC now expects tablet sales (excluding smartphones) will surpass PCs in 2015.  Because the PC is Microsoft's "core" market – producing almost all the company's profitability – declining sales are not a good thing.

Microsoft hoped Windows 8 would reverse the trend.  That has not happened.  Unfortunately, ever since being launched Windows 8 has underperformed the horrific sales of Vista.  Eight months into the new product it is selling at about half the rate Vista did back in 2007 – which was the worst launch in company history.  Win8 still has fewer users than Vista, and at 4% share 1/10th the share of market leaders Windows 7 and XP. 

Microsoft is launching an update to Windows 8, called Windows 8.1 or "blue."  But rather than offering a slew of new features to please an admiring audience the release looks more like an early "fix" of things users simply don't like, such as bringing back the old "start" button.  Reviewers aren't talking about how exciting the update is, but rather wondering if these admissions of poor initial design will slow conversion to tablets.

And tablets are still the market where Microsoft isn't – even if it did pioneer the product years before the iPad. Bloomberg reported that Microsoft has been forced to cut the price of RT.  So far historical partners such as HP and HTC have shunned Windows tablets, leaving Acer the lone company putting out Windows a mini-tab, and Dell (itself struggling with its efforts to go private) the only company declaring a commitment to future products.

And whether it's too late for mobile Windows is very much a real question.  At the last shareholder meeting Nokia's investors cried loud and hard for management to abandon its commitment to Microsoft in favor of returning to old operating systems or moving forward with Android.  This many years into the game, and with the Google and Apple ecosystems so far in the lead, Microsoft needed a game changer if it was to grab substantial share.  But Win 8 has not proven to be a game changer.

In an effort to develop its own e-reader market Microsoft dumped some $300million into Barnes & Noble's Nook last year.  But the e-reader market is fast disappearing as it is overtaken by more general-purpose tablets such as the Kindle Fire.  Yet, Microsoft appears to be pushing good money after bad by upping its investment by another $1B to buy the rest of Nook, apparently hoping to obtain enough content to keep the market alive when Barnes & Noble goes the way of Borders.  But chasing content this late, behind Amazon, Apple and Google, is going to be much more costly than $1B – and an even lower probability than winning in hardware or software.

Then there's the new Microsoft Office.  In late May Microsoft leadership hoped investors would be charmed to hear that 1M $99 subscriptions had been sold in 3.5 months.  However, that was to an installed base of hundreds of millions of PCs – a less than thrilling adoption rate for such a widely used product.  Companies that reached 1M subscribers from a standing (no installed base) start include Instagram in 2.5 months, Spotify in 5 months, Dropbox in 7 months and Facebook (which pioneered an entire new marketplace in Social) in only 10 months.  One could have easily expected a much better launch for a product already so widely used, and offered at about a third the price of previous licenses.

A new xBox was launched on May 21st.  Unfortunately, like all digital markets gaming is moving increasingly mobile, and consoles show all the signs of going the way of desktop computers.  Microsoft hopes xBox can become the hub of the family room, but we're now in a market where a quarter of homes lead by people under 50 don't really use "the family room" any longer. 

xBox might have had a future as an enterprise networking hub, but so far Kinnect has not even been marketed as a tool for business, and it has not yet incorporated the full network functionality (such as Skype) necessary to succeed at creating this new market against competitors like Cisco. 

Thankfully, after more than a decade losing money, xBox reached break-even recently.  However, margins are only 15%, compared to historical Microsoft margins of 60% in "core" products.  It would take a major growth in gaming, plus a big market share gain, for Microsoft to hope to replace lost PC profits with xBox sales.  Microsoft has alluded to xBox being the next iTunes, but lacking mobility, or any other game changer, it is very hard to see how that claim holds water.

The Microsoft re-org has highlighted 3 new divisions focused on servers and tools, Skype/Lync and xBox.  What is to happen with the business which has driven three decades of Microsoft growth – operating systems and office software – is, well, unclear.  How upping the focus on these three businesses, so late in the market cycle, and with such low profitability will re-invigorate Microsoft's value is, well, unclear. 

In fact, given how Microsoft has historically made money it is wholly unclear what being a "devices and services" company means.  And this re-organization does nothing to make it clear. 

My past columns on Microsoft have led some commenters to call me a "Microsoft hater."  That is not true.  More apt would be to say I am a Microsoft bear.  Its historical core market is shrinking, and Microsoft's leadership invested far too much developing new products for that market in hopes the decline would be delayed – which did not work.  By trying to defend and extend the PC world Microsoft's leaders chose to ignore the growing mobile market (smartphones and tablets) until far too late – and with products which were not game changers. 

Although Microsoft's leaders invested heavily in acquisitions and other markets (Skype, Nook, xBox recently) those very large investments came far too late, and did little to change markets in Microsoft's favor. None of these have created much excitement, and recently Rick Sherland at Nomura securities came out with a prediction that Microsoft might well sell the xBox division (a call I made in this column back in January.)

As consumers, suppliers and investors we like the idea of a near-monopoly.  It gives us comfort to believe we can trust in a market leader to bring out new products upon which we can rely – and which will continue to make long-term profits.  But, good as this feels, it has rarely been successful.  Markets shift, and historical leaders fall as new competitors emerge; largely because the old leadership continues investing in what they know rather than shifting investments early into new markets.

This Microsoft reorganization appears to be rearranging the chairs on the Titanic.  The mobile iceberg has slashed a huge gash in Microsoft's PC hull.  Leadership keeps playing familiar songs, but the boat cannot float without those historical PC profits. Investors would be smart to flee in the lifeboat of recent share price gains. 

Why Jeff Bezos is our greatest living CEO

The Harvard Business Review recently published its list of the 100 Best Performing CEOs.  This list is better than most because it looks at long-term performance of the CEO during his or her time in the job – with many on the list in service more than a decade.

#1 was Steve Jobs.  #2 is Jeff Bezos – making him the greatest living CEO.  It is startling just how well these two CEOs performed.  During Jobs' tenure Apple investors achieved a return of 66.8 times their money.  During Mr. Bezos' tenure shareholders achieved a remarkable 124.3 times return on their money.  In an era when most of us are happy to earn 5-10%/year – which equates to doubling your money about once a decade – these CEOs exceeded expectations 30-60 fold!

Both of these CEOs achieved greatness by transforming an industry.  We all know the Apple story.  From near bankruptcy as the Mac company Mr. Jobs led Apple into the mobile devices business, and created a transformation from Walkmen, Razrs and PCs to iPods, iPhones and iPads – to the detriment of Sony, Motorola, Nokia, Microsoft, HP and Dell. 

The Amazon story is all the more remarkable because it has been written in the far more mundane world of retail – not known for being nearly as fast-changing at tech.

Lest we forget, Amazon started as an on-line seller of books frequently unavailable at your local bookstore.  "What's a local bookstore?" you may now ask, because through continuous upgrading of its capability to build on the advances in internet usage – across machines, browsers, wi-fi and mobile – Amazon drove into bankruptcy such large booksellers as B.Dalton and Borders – leaving Barnes & Noble a mere shell of its former self and on tenous footing.  And the number of small bookshops has dropped dramatically.

But Amazon's industry transformation has gone far beyond bookselling.  Amazon was one of the first, and by most users considered the best, at offering a complete on-line storefront for any retailer who wants to sell goods through Amazon's site.  You can set up your inventory, display products, provide user information, manage a shopping cart and handle check out all through Amazon – with minimal technical skill.  This allowed Amazon to bring vastly more products to customers; and without adding all the inventory or warehousing cost.

As digital uses grew, Amazon moved beyond the slow-paced publishers to launch the Kindle and give us eReaders displacing paper books and periodicals.  But this was just the first salvo in the effort to promote additional on-line buying, as Amazon next launched Kindle Fire which at remarkably low cost gave people a tablet already set up for doing retail shopping at Amazon.

As Amazon launched its book downloads and on-line services, it built its own cloud services business to aid businesses and people in using tablets, and doing more things on-line; which further reinforced the digital retail world in which Amazon dominates.

And make no doubt about it, Kindle Fire – and the use of all other tablets – is the WalMart and other traditional brick-and-mortar retail killer.  Amazon is now a player in all pieces of the transition which is happening in retail, from traditional shopping to on-line. 

Demand for retail space in the USA began declining in 2009 and has not stopped.  Most analysts blamed it on the great recession.  But in retrospect we can now see it was the watershed year for customers to begin looking more, and buying more, on-line.  Now each year growth in on-line retail continues, while demand at traditional stores wanes.

Just look at this last holiday season.  To (hopefully) drive revenue stores were opening on Thanksgiving, and doing 24 and 48 hours of non-stop staffing and promotions to drive sales.  But it was mostly in vain, as traditional retail saw almost no gains.  Despite doing more and more of what they've always done – trying to be better, faster and cheaper – they simply could not change the trend away from shopping on-line and back into the stores.

For the last year the #1 trend in retailing has been "showrooming" where customers stand in a store with a smartphone comparison pricing on-line (most frequently Amazon) to the product on the shelf.  Retailers were forced to match on-line prices, despite their higher overhead, or lose the business.  And now Target has implemented a policy of price-matching Amazon for all of 2013 in hopes of slowing the trend to on-line purchasing.

Circuit City went bankrupt, which saved Best Buy as it picked up their lost business.  But now Best Buy is close to failure.  Same store sales at WalMart have been flat.  JCPenney recruited Apple's retail store wizard as CEO – but he's learned when you have to compete with Amazon life simply sucks.  Nobody in traditional retail has found a way to reverse the on-line shopping trend, which is still dominated by Amazon.

We all can learn from these two CEOs and the companies they built.  First, and foremost, is understand trends and align with them.  If you help people move in the direction they want to go life is easy, and growth can be phenomenal.  Trying to slow, stop or reverse a trend doesn't work, and is expensive. 

Second, don't ask customers what they want, instead give them what they need.  Customers may be on a trend, but they will frame their requests in the old paradigm.  By creating new trend-promoting products and solutions you can capture the customer and avoid head-to-head competition with the "old guard" titans selling the increasingly outdated solutions.  Don't build better brick-and-mortar, make brick-and-mortar obsolete.

So, what's stopping you from growing your business like Apple or Amazon?  What keeps you from being the next Steve Jobs, or Jeff Bezos?  Can you spot trends and provide trend-supporting solutions for customers?  Or are you stymied because you're spending too much time trying to defend and extend your old business in the face of game changing trends.

Microsoft Win8 Tablet Is Not a Game Changer

While there is an appropriately high interest in the Win8 Tablet announcement from Microsoft today, there is no way it is going to be a game changer.  Simply because it was never intended to be.

Game changers meet newly emerging, unmet needs, in new ways.  People are usually happy enough, until they see the new product/solution and realize "hey, this helps me do something I couldn't do before" or "this helps me solve my problem a lot better."  Game changers aren't a simple improvement, they allow customers to do something radically different.  And although at first they may well appear to not work too well, or appear too expensive, they meet needs so uniquely, and better, that they cause people to change their behavior.

Motorola invented the smart phone.  But Motorola thought it was too expensive to be a cell phone, and not powerful enough to be a PC.  Believing it didn't fit existing markets well, Motorola shelved the product.

Apple realized people wanted to be mobile.  Cell phones did talk and text OK – and RIM had pretty good email.  But it was limited use.  Laptops had great use, but were too big, heavy and cumbersome to be really mobile.  So Apple figured out how to add apps to the phone, and use cloud services support, in order to make the smart phone fill some pretty useful needs – like navigation, being a flashlight, picking up tweets – and a few hundred thousand other things – like doctors checking x-rays or MRI results.  Not as good as a PC, and somewhat on the expensive side for the device and the AT&T connection, but a whole lot more convenient.  And that was a game changer.

From the beginning, Windows 8 has been – by design – intended to defend and extend the Windows product line. Rather than designed to resolve unmet needs, or do things nobody else could do, or dramatically improve productivity over all other possible solutions, Windows 8 was designed to simply extend Windows so (hopefully) people would not shift to the game changer technology offered by Apple and later Google. 

The problem with trying to extend old products into new markets is it rarely works.  Take for example Windows 7.  It was designed to replace Windows Vista, which was quite unpopular as an upgrade from Windows XP.  By most accounts, Windows 7 is a lot better.  But, it didn't offer users anything that that made them excited to buy Windows 7.  It didn't solve any unmet needs, or offer any radically better solutions.  It was just Windows better and faster (some just said "fixed.")

Nothing wrong with that, except Windows 7 did not address the most critical issue in the personal technology marketplace.  Windows 7 did not stop the transition from using PCs to using mobile devices.  As a result, while sales of app-enabled smartphones and tablets exploded, sales of PCs stalled:

PC shipments stalled 6-2012
Chart reproduced with permission of Business Insider Intelligence 6/12/12 courtesy of Alex Cocotas

People are moving to the mobility provided by apps, cloud services and the really easy to use interface on modern mobile devices.  Market leading cell phone maker, Nokia, decided it needed to enter smartphones, and did so by wholesale committing to Windows7.  But now the CEO, Mr. Elop (formerly a Microsoft executive,) is admitting Windows phones simply don't sell well.  Nobody cares about Microsoft, or Windows, now that the game has changed to mobility – and Windows 7 simply doesn't offer the solutions that Apple and Android does.  Not even Nokia's massive brand image, distribution or ad spending can help when a product is late, and doesn't greatly exceed the market leader's performance.  Just last week Nokia announced it was laying off another 10,000 employees.

Reviews of Win8 have been mixed.  And that should not be surprising.  Microsoft has made the mistake of trying to make Win8 something nobody really wants.  On the one hand it has a new interface called Metro that is supposed to be more iOS/Android "like" by using tiles, touch screen, etc.  But it's not a breakthrough, just an effort to be like the existing competition.  Maybe a little better, but everyone believes the leaders will be better still with new updates soon.  By definition, that is not game changing.

Simultaneously, with Win8 users can find their way into a more historical Windows inteface.  But this is not obvious, or intuitive.  And it has some pretty "clunky" features for those who like Windows.  So it's not a "great" Windows solution that would attract developers today focused on other platforms.

Win8 tries to be the old, and the new, without being great at either, and without offering anything that solves new problems, or creates breakthroughs in simplicity or performance.

Do you know the story about the Ford Edsel?

By focusing on playing catch up, and trying to defend & extend the Windows history, Microsoft missed what was most important about mobility – and that is the thousands of apps.  The product line is years late to market, short on apps, short on app developers and short on giving anyone a reason to really create apps for Win8.

Some think it is good if Microsoft makes its own tablet – like it has done with xBox.  But that really doesn't matter.  What matters is whether Microsoft gives users and developers something that causes them to really, really want a new platform that is late and doesn't have the app base, or the app store, or the interfaces to social media or all the other great thinks they already have come to expect and like about their tablet (or smartphone.) 

When iOS came out it was new, unique and had people flocking to buy it.  Developers could only be mobile by joining with Apple, and users could only be mobile by buying Apple.  That made it a game changer by leading the trend toward mobility. 

Google soon joined the competition, built a very large, respectable following by chasing Apple and offering manufacturers an option for competing with Apple. 

But Microsoft's new entry gives nobody a reason to develop for, or buy, a Win8 tablet – regardless of who manufactures it.  Microsoft does not deliver a huge, untapped market.  Microsoft doesn't solve some large, unmet need.  Microsoft doesn't promise to change the game to some new, major trend that would drive early adopters to change platforms and bring along the rest of the market. 

And making a deal so a dying company, on the edge of bankruptcy – Barnes & Noble – uses your technology is not a "big win."  Amazon is killing Barnes & Noble, and Microsoft Windows 8 won't change that.  No more than the Nook is going to take out Kindle, Kindle Fire, Galaxy Tab or the iPad.  Microsoft can throw away $300million trying to convince people Win8 has value, but spending investor money on a dying businesses as a PR ploy is just stupid.

Microsoft is playing catch up.  Catch up with the user interface.  Catch up with the format.  Catch up with the device size and portability.  Catch up with the usability (apps).  Just catch up. 

Microsoft's problem is that it did not accept the PC market was going to stall back in 2008 or 2009.  When it should have seen that mobility was a game changing trend, and required retooling the Microsoft solution suite.  Microsoft dabbled with music mobility with Zune, but quickly dropped the effort as it refocused on its "core" Windows.  Microsoft dabbled with mobile phones across different solutions including Kin – which it dropped along with Microsoft Mobility.  Back again to focusing on operating systems.  By maintaining its focus on Windows Microsoft hoped it could stop the trend, and refused to accept the market shift that was destined to stall its sales.

Microsoft stock has been flat for a decade.  It's recent value improvement as Win8 approaches launch indicates that hope beats eternally in some investors' breasts for a return of Microsoft software dominance.  But those days are long past.  PC sales have stalled, and Windows is a product headed toward obsolescence as competitors make ever better, more powerful mobile platforms and ecosystems.  If you haven't sold Microsoft yet, this may well be your last chance above $30.  Ever.