Typical wisdom has it that Microsoft;s brass would never opt for to break up the firm — even in the name of making it more agile.After all, when Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson,
Office Pro Plus, as part of the U.S. Department of Justice antitrust case against Redmond, ruled in 2000 that Microsoft should be forced to be halved (into an operating system and application organization — a judgement later overruled — Chairman Bill Gates & Co. was dead-set against such a plan.But might a Gates-less Microsoft be rethinking whether a more decentralized Microsoft might be better able to fend off its growing list of competitors?In a July 27 article in the Wall Street Journal about Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer,
Microsoft Office 2010 License, there are hints that the new man-in-charge at Microsoft might be contemplating far-reaching changes to the provider;s organizational structure. From the article:“At the center of Mr. Ballmer;s dilemma is ongoing tension over whether Microsoft;s huge internet business divisions should have wide freedom to set their own course — or be more centrally planned,
Microsoft Office Pro Plus 2010, a strategy that could meld expertise across the firm in ways that provide an advantage over rivals with narrower technology portfolios. In the (Ballmer 2007 “The CEO Evolution”) memo, according to Microsoft executives, Mr. Ballmer cites lessons from both the Wal-Mart and GE experiences.“‘We;re not a conglomerate, but we;re not a monolithic operating business,; Mr. Ballmer said in a recent interview. ‘The question is, “are we always hitting the right balance?”‘”Perhaps Ballmer and his lieutenants are not thinking about something as drastic as cleaving Microsoft into three (or more) independent entities — Platforms & Services, Enterprise and Entertainment and Devices. After all,
Microsoft Office Home And Student 2010 Key, when Microsoft was contemplating buying Yahoo,
Office 2010 Pro Plus Product Key, a number of folks wondered whether Microsoft might be planning to meld its Online Systems Enterprise with Yahoo to create a separate business or wholly owned subsidiary.Or maybe Ballmer and his inner circle are simply thinking about letting more groups have more autonomy in crafting their product plans (a la the Xbox and Zune units).If Ballmer does end up reassembling the org chart, I wouldn;t be surprised to see the Windows Mobile unit (at least the part focusing on the enterprise side of the house) move over to the Windows side of the world (and out of the Xbox/Zune organization).Do you think Microsoft could — and should — proactively break itself into mini Microsoft;s? Should it at least allow newly incubating product units to work independently from the mother ship until they are ready to ship? Or would such a course backfire and take away the (what some claim are unfair) information-sharing advantages that various Microsoft units currently enjoy because they are all part of a single entity?