Apple is Simply Better Managed than Microsoft


Most folks know that Apple is now worth more than Microsoft.  Although few realize the huge difference.  After years of dominating as the premier “PC” company, Microsoft is now worth only about 2/3 the value of Apple – $224B versus $310B this week (or, said differently, Apple is worth about 50% more than Microsoft.)  Apple’s run by Microsoft the last year has been like a rock out of a slingshot.  But that’s largely because Apple grew revenues almost 50% in fiscal 2009 and 2010, while Microsoft saw revenue decline 3% in 2009, and only grow 7% in 2010, putting revenues up a net 3% over the 2 years. 

What few realize is how much Microsoft spent trying to grow, but failed.  A look at 2009 R&D expenditures showed Microsoft outspent all tech competitors in its class – spending 8 times what Apple spent! RD cost MSFT and others 2009 Source:  Silicone Alley Insider Chart of the Day from BusinessInsider.com

What did customers and investors receive for this whopping Microsoft spend? An updated operating system and set of office automation tools to run on existing products.  Nothing that created new demand, or incremental sales.  On the other hand, for its much lower spending Apple gave investors upgrades to iPods, the iPhone and the operating system for the later released iPad. 

Simply put, Microsoft opened the check book and spent like crazy in its effort to defend its historical PC products business.  And the cost was more than just dollars.  That “focus” cost Microsoft its position in other growth markets; like smartphones.   Few recall that as recently as 2008 Microsoft was the leading smartphone platform: Smartphone platform share 1.10

In order to defend its “core” business, Microsoft under-invested in smartphones and over-invested in its historical personal computing products.  Now, PC growth has stalled as people are switching to new products based on cloud computing – like smartphones and tablets. 

Apple is cleaning up with its investments, while Microsoft is hoping it can catch up by enticing its former executive, now the CEO at Nokia, to revamp their line using the Windows Phone 7 operating system.  Good luck, because the market is already way, way out front with Apple and Android products

Number smartphone apps by competitor 3.2011

That was the past.  What we’d like to know is whether Apple will keep growing like crazy, and whether Microsoft will do what’s necessary to grow as well.  And that’s where some recent announcements point out that Apple, quite simply, is better managed.  So it will grow, and Microsoft won’t.

ZDNet reported on the “changing of the guard” at Apple in March.  Due to its different investment approach, iOS is now bigger than the MacOS at Apple.  The “legacy” product – that made Apple into a famous company in the 1980s – has been eclipsed by the new product.  And the old technology leader is graciously moving on to do research in a scientific community, while Apple pours its resources into developing products for the future. 

Don’t forget, the Lisa was a product that Steve Jobs personally took to market – yet didn’t succeed.  He personally remained involved, converting Lisa into the wildly successful 1980s Mac (see AOL Small Business story on history of Lisa and Mac.)  You gotta love it when that CEO, and his leadership team and all the managers, can transition their loyalty and put resources into the future product line in order to keep growing!  MacOS is not dead, nor is it going to be devoid of resources.  But the future of Apple lies in growing the new platform, and that is where the best talent and dollars are being spent.

Comparatively, Microsoft announced this week it was changing its Chief Marketing Officer (SeattlePI.com.)  And, not surprisingly, they did NOT select someone with smartphone, tablet or even gaming expertise for the role.  Instead of identifying a leader who is deep into understanding the growth markets, Microsoft appointed as the next CMO the fellow who had been responsible for selling – wait – guess – Office, Sharepoint, Exchange and the other historical, legacy Microsoft products.  Those products which have had no growth – only maintenance sales.  Instead of reaching into the future for its leadership, CEO Ballmer once again reached into the past.

If you ever wonder why Apple is worth so much more to investors than Microsoft, just think about this moment in the marketplace.  Apple is investing its best talent and resources into new products in new markets that are demonstrating growth.  Microsoft, struggling with its growth, keeps placing “old guard” leaders into top positions, attempting to defend the historical business – hoping to recapture the old glory. 

Too bad the market has already shifted and doesn’t care what Microsoft thinks.

When it comes to networking, cloud computing and the future of how we all are going to be productive Microsoft just isn’t in the game.  And its attempt to have a fast falling Nokia save it by distributing second rate mobile products that are late to market while iPhones and Androids keep extending their lead won’t make Microsoft great again. Especially when the leadership keeps wanting, in its heart, to sell more PCs.

Apple is just better managed, because it keeps looking to the future, while Microsoft simply can’t seem to get over its past.  Good thing Steve Ballmer is already rich.  Too bad all the Microsoft employees aren’t.

Buy Apple, Sell Microsoft


The Wall Street Journal  headlined Monday, “Apple Chief to Take Leave.”  Forbes.com Leadership editor Fred Allen quickly asked what most folks were asking “Where does Steve Jobs Leave Apple Now?” as he led multiple bloggers covering the speculation about how long Mr. Jobs would be absent from Apple, or if he would ever return, in “What They Are Saying About Steve Jobs.”  The stock took a dip as people all over raised the question covered by Steve Caulfield in Forbes’ “Timing of Steve Jobs Return Worries Investors, Fans.”

If you want to make money investing, this is what’s called a “buying opportunity.”  As Forbes’ Eric Savitz reported “Apple is More Than Just Steve Jobs.” Just look at the most recent results, as reported in Ad AgeApple Posts ‘Record Quarter’ on Strong iPhone, Mac, iPad Sales:”

  • Quarterly revenue is up 70% vs. last year to $26.7B (Apple is a $100B company!)
  • Quarterly earnings rose 77% vs last year to $6B
  • 15 million iPads were sold in 2010, with 7.3 million sold in the last quarter
  • Apple has $50B cash on hand to do new product development, acquisitions or pay dividends

ZDNet demonstrated Apple’s market resiliency headlining “Apple’s iPad Represents 90% of All Tablets Shipped.”  While it is true that Droid tablets are now out, and we know some buyers will move to non-Apple tablets, ZDNet predicts the market will grow more than 250% in 2011 to over 44 million units, giving Apple a lot of room to grow even with competitors bringing out new products. 

Apple is a tremendously successful company because it has a very strong sense of where technology is headed and how to apply it to meet user needs.  Apple is creating market shifts, while many other companies are reacting.  By deeply understanding its competitors, being willing to disrupt historical markets and using White Space to expand applications Apple will keep growing for quite a while.  With, or without Steve Jobs.

On the other hand, there’s the stuck-in-the-past management team at Microsoft.  Tied to all those aging, outdated products and distribution plans built on PC technology that is nearing end of life.  But in the midst of the management malaise out of Seattle Kinect suddenly showed up as a bright spot!  SFGate reported that “Microsoft’s Xbox Kinect beond hackers, hobbyists.”  Seems engineers around the globe had started using Kinect in creative ways that were way beyond anything envisioned by Microsoft! Put into a White Space team, it was possible to start imagining Kinect could be powerful enough to resurrect innovation, and success, at the aging monopolist!

But, unfortunately, Microsoft seems far too stuck in its old ways to take advantage of this disruptive opportunity. Joel West at SeekingAlpha.com tells us “Microsoft vs. Open Kinect: How to Miss a Significant Opportunity.”  Microsoft is dedicated to its plan for Kinect to help the company make money in games – and has no idea how to create a White Space team to exploit the opportunity as a platform for myriad uses (like Apple did with its app development approach for the iPhone.)

In the end, ZDNet joined my chorus looking to oust Ballmer (possibly a case study in how to be the most misguided CEO in corporate America) by asking “Ballmer’s 11th Year as Microsoft’s CEO – Is it Time for Him to Go?”  Given Ballmer’s massive shareholding, and thus control of the Board, it’s doubtful he will go anywhere, or change his management approach, or understand how to leverage a breakthrough innovation.  So as the Cloud keeps decreasing demand for traditional PCs and servers, Brett Owens at SeekingAlpha concludes in “A Look at Valuations of Google, Apple, Microsoft and Intel” that Microsoft has nowhere to go but down!  Given the amazingly uninspiring ad program Microsoft is now launching (as described in MediaPost “Microsoft Intros New Corporate Tagline, Strategy“) we can see management has no idea how to find, or sell, innovation.

We often hear advice to buy shares of a company.  Rarely recommendations to sell.  But Apple is the best positioned company to maintain growth for several more years, while Microsoft has almost no hope of moving beyond its Lock-in to old products and markets which are declining.  Simplest trade of 2011 is to sell Microsoft and buy Apple.  Just read the headlines, and don’t get suckered into thinking Apple is nothing more than Steve Jobs.  He’s great, but Apple can remain great in his absence.

What business are you in? Overcoming Identity – Apple & Hewlett Packard (HP)

"What business are you in?" is one of the most common business questions asked.  People usually want a simple answer, like "I make widgets" or "I provide widget services."  A simple answer allows people to easily cubbyhole the business, and remember what it does.  And many think it provides for a well run business – through a simple focus – sort of like the Kentucky Fried Chicken ad "We only do chicken, and we do chicken right."  Because the business's Identity is easy to understand employees can focus on Defending that Identity.

But in reality when your Identity is tightly tied to a product or service bad things happen when demand for that item wanes — or demand turns flat while supply is ample (or possibly growing).  Competitors start trading punishing blows back and forth, and profits wane as competition intensifies.  Business leaders start acting like gladiators trapped in a coliseum pit, undertaking ever more dangerous actions to survive amidst punishing competitiveness.  Many don't survive.  As results are increasingly threatened, the business's Identity is under attack, and the tendency to Defend that Identity is extremely strong.  Such defense usually grows, even as results continue deteriorating.

There is an alternative.  Instead of trying to always be what you always were, you can do something different.  Think about Hewlett Packard.  HP started as an instrumentation company, making electronic tools, such as oscilliscopes, for engineers.  But as the market shifted, HP's leaders have moved the company into new business – allowing the company to keep growing

HP profit-2005-2010
Source:  Business Insider

By entering new businesses, some organically and some via acquisition, HP has been able to continue growing sales and profits.  By letting each of these businesses do whatever they need to do to succeed, by giving them permission to do what the market demands and providing these new businesses with resources, HP has been able to compete in old businesses, while developing new businesses toward which the Success Formula can migrate.  Thus, HP has become a company with a less simple Identity – but it also has been able to continue years of profitable growth.

Too often, opening these White Space projects for growth causes the traditional business to feel threatened.  Those in the old Success Formula will often say that the company is "abandoning its past" and "walking away from a very profitable business."  Like the old story of Homer, this is a "siren's song" – very dangerously pulling you toward the rocks which can sink your ship – because each month profitabiilty is becoming more and more threatened.  While it might have been a profitable business in the past, as growth slows profitability is less and less likely in the future.  As sales growth slows it is important the business do its best to develop a new Success Formula so it can maintain growth.

"Has Apple Forgotten the Mac?" is a recent PCWorld article.  The authors point out that as Apple's revenues have transitioned toward new businesses, such as music and now mobile computing/telephony, the Mac business receives less attention and resources.  Those who support the Mac business question if Apple should spend more resources on what has recently returned to profitability.

This is the kind of internal threat that can be very risky.  While the Mac is a great product, with a loyal following, and regained profitability – we can see that in the future there will be less and less need for such desktop and laptop products.  Apple is migrating toward the new mobile future – and as a result it must reduce the resources on the Mac business.  Each year, more resource needs to be allocated toward the new, faster growing businesses, and less invested in the slower growing traditional computing products.

Apple's Identity was once all Mac.  And that nearly bankrupted the company – as it almost ran out of cash back at the century's turn.  Only by overcoming its Identity as a single product company, and rapidly moving into White Space with new products in new markets, was Apple able to regain its profitable growth path. 

HP and Apple both show us that an Identity, created early in the lifecycle, is very powerful.  But inevitably markets shift, and the results possible from a simple, easy to understand identity will decline.  Only by overcoming that original Identity via entering new markets – and using White Space to evolve the Success Formula, can a business hope to have long-term revenue and profit growth.

White Space overcomes D&E – Apple and Microsoft

Apple's most recent earnings surprised almost everyone, to the topside. At SeekingAlpha.com "Apple Soars: Is this a Great Country or What" the author points out that all analysts are now calling for Apple's equity value to continue increasing.  Most expect prices to achieve $330 – $350/share.  Right now Apple is worth about $235B.  At $330/share it is worth $300B.  Microsoft is worth $273B.  That means within the next few months the expectation among investors is that Apple's value will eclipse Microsoft's.

Why?  Because Apple has much faster growing revenue sources than Microsoft.  Despite a plethora of products, Microsoft still depends for sales and profits on PC operating system and office automation products.  And that market simply isn't growing.  Even Microsoft optimists are depending upon a "PC replacement cycle" to drive more sales rather than any real growth in demand.

While Microsoft has spent the last decade Defending & Extending (D&E Management) its PC business, its value has been flat.  Meanwhile, Apple has developed other revenue sources:

Apple-rev-by-segment-3.10
Source:  Silicon Alley Insider

In 2000 Apple relied on Mac sales.  But now, it has 2 businesses that are as large as the computer business. While defending the Mac business has maintained its sales, using White Space to launch other businesses has more than tripled Apple's revenue.  Today the iPod/iTunes business is as large as the Mac business, and the iPhone business is as large as well.  Both are growing.  And with estimates that already a million iPads have been sold – with some estimates of reaching 6 million units in 2010 – who knows how big the publishing business could become for Apple. 

As SeekingAlpha.com points out in "Everybody Loves Apple but Who's Left to Buy It" there are ample reasons to forecast substantial revenue and profit growth for Apple – causing it to lure many more investors to own the stock.  Not only hardware sales are going up, but in both the music and smartphone business Apple has the envious draw of pulling follow-on download sales – songs, videos, and apps.  Thus, each device pulls a series of ongoing revenue bites. 

Readers should also note how fast this has happened.  What has happened to your business in the last decade?  In the last 3 years?  As we can see, Apple created a $20B/year business since 2007 just in the iPhone.  Another $16B/year business in iPod/iTunes during the last decade.  That's over $36B/year of revenue from new sources, all organic (no acquisitions) in under 10 years.  And that's the power of White Space.  Instead of planning how to defend an understood and predictable market (like Microsoft) Apple studied new market needs, then launched a product and gave the team Permission to do what it took to succeed – unencumbered by the  history of the Mac, or Apple or any of the Lock-ins that were part of the old Success Formula.  This White Space teams then spawned revenue streams that are envied by everyone.

My recent Forbes column (Microsoft's Dismal Future) portended this week's earnings announcement and the changing fortunes of these two companies Lacking White Space, Microsoft is an uninteresting company with limited growth forecasts and negligible value growth.  By using White Space Apple is growing much faster, and will soon have a higher value than "the world's largest software company." 

Effective use of scenario planning, competitor analysis, disruptions and White Space can launch growth in any company.  You don't need a "hot economy" to generate growth.  And Apple has been demonstrating this quarter after quarter for nearly a decade – with several more good quarters coming.

Overcoming Hurdles and Growth Stalls – Microsoft vs. Apple

Sustaining growth is really hard.  Consulting firm Bain & Company just published the statistic that only 12% of companies were able to grow revenues and profits more than 5.5% from 1998 to 2008 (read more in the Harvard Business Review downloadable book excerpt Profit from the Core.) Given that all companies want to grow, it seems remarkable so many stall.

But while most managers blame lack of growth on the economy, truth is we can learn a lot from those who DID sustain growth.  What doesn't work, and what does, can be found by starting with a great OpEd column about Microsoft published in The New York Times "Microsoft's Creative Destruction." Former Microsoft Vice President Dick Brass provides insight to why Microsoft has become a market laggard in new products – despite enormous revenues, profits and new product development spending. Calling Microsoft "a clumsy, uncompetitive innovator," he says products are "lampooned" and the company is "failing." Harsh words. 

He points out that profits are almost entirely from legacy products Windows and Office.  "Microsoft has lost share in Web browsers, high-end laptops and smartphones. Despite billions in investment, its Xbox line is still at best an equal contender in the game console business."  He explains how internal managers set up false hurdles, often claiming quality was the primary issue, for ClearType and a tablet PC. He claims the internal executives "sabotaged" new projects and he blames inability to meet market needs on "internecine warfare."

But all of that could be said about Apple as well. It once was just like Microsoft.  In the 1990s Apple stopped everything but new Macs from making it to market.  Remember that the first PDA (personal digital assistant) was Apole's Newton? Killing that product became a priority for several Apple executives, and caused the ouster of then CEO John Scully

So the Microsoft described behaviors can happen anyplace. When organizations begin to focus on Defending & Extending their "core" business it leads to hurdles and growth stalls. "Operational improvements" leads to "focusing" on doing what the business always did, perhaps just a touch better (like a next generation operating system [Vista], or a new variation on Office [2007].) The culture, decision-making processes and operating cost model all are geared to doing more of the same. Without intending any downside, in fact in pursuit of improved competitiveness in the "core" products, the business begins erecting hurdles to doing anything new, or different

This problem isn't limited to Microsoft  Although we can clearly see the impact and feel pessimistic about Microsoft's future. It has afflicted many companies, and is why they cannot adjust to market shifts. Even if loaded with executives and enormous budgets for R&D, technology or marketing. Don't forget how Apple looked even worse than Microsoft in 2000.

And that's why so few companies maintain growth. The desire to do more, better, faster, cheaper of what we've always done is overwhelming. Defending & Extending the existing business always looks marginally better, and marginally less risky, than doing something new, or different. In trying to maintain growth by getting better at what you've always done – you kill it.

Why? Because Defend & Extend management does not take account of market shifts. New products, new competitors, new technologies, new business models, new customer approaches — the list is endless of variations which competitors bring to the marketplace. And these variations change the market. Trying to stay on the same course becomes suicide when customers begin moving on.

And that's where Apple has excelled. When Steve Jobs took over he quit trying to Defend & Extend the Mac platform. To the contrary, he reduced the number of Mac models.  Instead of planning based on old market share and sales, he pushed a rigorous scenario planning exercise to create a robust view of future markets – and what needs customers would like solved. He then led Apple to study competitors, both in-kind and on the fringe, to identify new markets being developed and new solutions being tested.  He then Disrupted Apple – by cutting the Mac platforms and investing heavily in other market opportunities like music (iPod and iTunes).  And he encouraged product managers to rush new products to market in order to obtain market feedback, using White Space teams to rapidly learn what would sell. And he repeated this again and again, agreeing to a joint development project with Motorola before entering into mobile phone testing and launch (iPhone.)

Microsoft's proclivity toward D&E management is putting its future at grave risk. All signs are it will become another fateful, negative statistic. But it doesn't have to be that way. Microsoft can learn a lesson from its resurrected competitor and follow The Phoenix Principle. It can escape from xBox, and other new product, second-tier status if it will get a lot more robust about scenario planning, quit acting like the only game in town and start obsessing about competition.  Disrupt its culture and decision making, and start using White Space to rapidly get new products in the market and learn how to match them with market needs to succeed!