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What if Steve Ballmer Left Microsoft Today?

by - source: Tom's Hardware UK

Is Ballmer critical to Microsoft's future?

A few days ago, we posted an article exploring Steve Jobs’ role within Apple and how critical he is for Apple’s current and future success. With Bill Gates out of the picture and his apprentice leading the show, Microsoft is one generation ahead of Apple, but one generation behind Intel. Conceivably, Ballmer has maintained stability and profitability, but I wonder if we expect tech companies to have  celebrities and legacy at the very top to thrive? Would we miss Steve Ballmer if he dropped out of Microsoft today?

Steve Ballmer has a resume that qualifies him to run the business side of virtually any company on the globe and puts him into the desirable position to gain the power to change our lives in many aspects. In some way, he has been doing this for the past 30 years already, since June 11, 1980, when he joined Microsoft. He has been CEO for more than 10 years now and it is fair to say that everything you like and hate about Microsoft products you may use is very much tied to a decision Steve Ballmer made in the past.

Still, there is this inherent feeling that Steve Ballmer cannot be identified with Microsoft. Microsoft is still identified with co-founder Bill Gates and despite the fact that Gates is rumored to have lost interest in Microsoft’s everyday business, that situation may never change. Gates is still the face of Microsoft’s core product line. Ballmer is not.

So, who is Steve Ballmer? 

If Ballmer dropped out of Microsoft tomorrow, for what would he be remembered?  Personally, my first thought would be he is famous monkey dance, after which he so enthusiastically and breathlessly said “I love this company.” I remember the way how he dissed Linux as “cancer.” I can also recall moments of more than dozen speeches I had the privilege to listen to, speeches that were more business than product and more strategy than vision. Personally, I miss listening to Gates, as far-fetched his visions sometimes were. But Gates always commanded a stage presence in keynotes as well as personal meetings that was filled with an almost spooky type of respect and had everyone listening. The kind of respect you experience when Steve Jobs is present.

If you compare Ballmer to other personalities in the industry, we notice that he is one generation ahead of Apple, but he is one generation behind the leadership changes at Intel, for example – where Otellini has followed Craig Barrett and co-founder Andy Grove. Grove, Gates and Jobs were very similar – people with unique visions who built astounding businesses on top of great ideas at a gold rush time. They built a left a legacy behind for which they are remembered. Barrett had a tough time following in Grove’s footsteps and Grove’s way to lead, and it’s even more challenging for Otellini. I remember Pat Gelsinger, one of Intel’s key people behind the 486 and Pentium processor and President of EMC today, once telling me that Grove’s mentor ship was like a treatment at the dentist without Novocain, and that meetings with him required the best game face as you knew that you began every discussion with  a ”deficit of intelligence.”

Ballmer and Otellini also command respect, no question about it. However, when you visit Intel today, Otellini feels much more approachable than his predecessors. You may meet him running around the offices and watch people greeting him with a casual “hi, Paul.” The closest you ever came to Grove was visiting his spotless cubicle. I personally was only able to meet and talk to Grove once, but it was a memorable experience, even if Grove did not hesitate to tell me that he did not like half of my questions shot them down with a brief “next?”

Where Grove is generally remembered as the origin of the x86 processor as we use it today, where Jobs is remembered for the Mac, iPod, iPhone and possibly the iPad, and were Gates is remembered for Windows and Office, it is tough for their successors to build their own legacy. Paul Otellini has done a great job turning around Intel in 2005/2006, even if the company laid off or moved 20,000 people, and Steve Ballmer just recently saved Microsoft from the Windows Vista disaster and maintained a stable course, as well as a product line and profitability that is the envy of an entire industry. For the company, Otellini and Ballmer have done what was expected of them, even if there are persistent complaints about sluggish stock performance. But I wonder, if Ballmer as well as Otellini are caught in a trap of being just apprentices of the great minds that have shaped their companies forever?

It may sound arrogant from my perspective to say so, but the current time in the industry, more than any other before, suggests that we do look for celebrity executives to represent the products we are using. Do we need faces for companies that shape our personal life? I believe so. Even if you may point to Google, where Eric Schmidt is now CEO. But there are still Larry Page and Sergey Brin, which very much represent the innovation and culture Google was built on.

What is particularly amazing about Steve Ballmer is the fact that he could have become the face of Microsoft as there have been plenty of new products in the past 10 years, yet he chose to let other people take over ownership of those products. Think about the Xbox 360. People like Robbie Bach are much more identified with this device than Ballmer. Windows 7 or Bing have no ties to Ballmer. Even if he did not take credit for those products and left it to others, I am convinced that it would have been for the good of the company to take ownership of those products on a public level – not just on a business level in executive meetings.

It may be too late for Ballmer to become the face for Microsoft and it may actually be time for Microsoft to change leadership soon – in a time where products are more and more personal to more and more people and require familiar faces to identify them with.

So, who would be best to take Ballmer’s spot? I’ll invite you to join the conversation below, but here is my bet. I personally believe that it is easier to teach and support enthusiastic engineers with business decisions than teach business people what’s truly exciting about tech. I would always choose an engineer at the top. For Microsoft my first choice would probably be chief software architect (and Bill Gates successor in this role) Ray Ozzie, who has a certain legacy and the charisma that is necessary to lead a company like Microsoft. On Intel’s side, my vote would be chief technology officer Justin Rattner.

hat are your thoughts?  

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excalibur1814 19/07/2010 21:18
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The above is a great article, however, it's a space filler. Steve Jobs is not a man that I'd like to admire at any point and Bill Gates, well, I do admire 'that' guy. As for Steve, I'm not too sure. He pulled a quick recovery win Windows 7 over Vista and if the tech pages actually see Win Mobile 7 for what it is, I'm sure that will win as well.

At the end of the day, any big director can be replaced by someone new and the world continues.

kobbra 19/07/2010 21:56
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Granted Steve Ballmaer doesn't have the appeal of Bill Gates or his "holliness" stevie, but he is the guy that gets the job done(no pun intented). I mean he was the first bussiness manager Gates hired, and he works at Microsoft for 30 years, so that should tell you something about his capabilities. And he also seems a cool guy, I remember watching on youtube a video of a student who came to him with a macbook laptop, for ballmer to give an autograph, which he did with a smile on his face-I bet that if you take an windows laptop to steve jobs, more likely he will smash your head with it. As excalibur said it any manger can be replaced but I think that not many of them are as funny as steve ballmer is:))

dry joke: Q- What comes from combing steve jobs and bill gates?
A- a gateman
you know, jobs at the gates,... a gateman
as I said a dry joke

kobbra 19/07/2010 21:58
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*combining

malphas 19/07/2010 22:10
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Microsoft needs a tech/vision type guy in charge (a la Gates/Jobs), not a salesman/accountant. Obviously you need the hardheaded business type people too (and Gates and Jobs both are to a fair extent also, I guess) but I can't see any sort of creative idea or identification with his customers going through Ballmer's head at all - all the guy cares about is gouging customers for as much as possible, beating out competition at any cost, and looking after shareholders.

Anonymous 19/07/2010 22:11
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Q- What comes from combing steve jobs and bill gates?

A- Nits? Dandruff?

kobbra 19/07/2010 22:26
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yuzi87 :
Q- What comes from combing steve jobs and bill gates?A- Nits? Dandruff?



guess so:)) the joys of the english language: miss a few letters and you completely mess up the sentence

LePhuronn 19/07/2010 22:51
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kobbra :
I remember watching on youtube a video of a student who came to him with a macbook laptop, for ballmer to give an autograph, which he did with a smile on his face



And also the same guy who pretended to stamp on an employee's iPhone at a conference.

Ballmer is a cock. He loves Microsoft because he's institutionalised - 30 years under the same roof will do that to you. If he knew anything about cutting-edge tech and where the 21st century can take us, Office wouldn't be the bloated mess it is, Silverlight wouldn't even exist, Internet Explorer would've been standards-compliant 3 versions ago (and IE6 wouldn't have allowed to stagnate) or dumped entirely in favour for a lean Webkit-based browser.

Under Ballmer, Microsoft is reactive and slow under its own weight. Under Gates it was proactive and cutting-edge.

Credit to him for saving public face with Windows 7, but ANY CEO would've done that - the Windows 7 team saved Microsoft from Vista, Ballmer just said "yeah, this is much better".

However much I may dislike Steve Jobs for his blatant deception and total marketing bullshit, the guy is still a genius, charismatic visionary and Microsoft would really benefit from somebody like that.

malphas 20/07/2010 12:13
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LePhuronn :
However much I may dislike Steve Jobs for his blatant deception and total marketing bullshit, the guy is still a genius, charismatic visionary and Microsoft would really benefit from somebody like that.


Uh... what? Did Steve Ballmer just break into your house and hold a pistol to your head as you were typing your comment or something?

LePhuronn 20/07/2010 12:33
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malphas :
Uh... what? Did Steve Ballmer just break into your house and hold a pistol to your head as you were typing your comment or something?



I would respond to your question if I understood what you were talking about.

Ballmer held a gun to my head forcing me to call him a cock and accusing him of stagnating Microsoft? Yeah, that sounds like the retard monkey he's always come across as.

And if you meant JOBS not Ballmer than I challenge you to deny Jobs is a charismatic genius - how else would he have create a rabid following of mindless sheep eating up every his every bullshit word and product? How else would he have put Apple on the map at the beginning with the Mackintosh, and saved it from bankruptcy with the iPod? If he's not a genius, how does he take establish, commonplace concepts (like the portable stereo and tablet computing) and rework them into a license to print money?

I can't stand the guy, but it doesn't mean I don't applaud and respect his mind.

*awaits the fanboi accusations*

Anonymous 20/07/2010 02:56
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squallypie 20/07/2010 10:41
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niniii00 = jobs and gucci = ballmer?

beauuuuuuuuuuuutiiipuuuuull marketin :O

steve ballmer is a cool guy and so is steve jobs.. but they do loose their minds in some areas, which gets heavily criticized later on.. but hey, their contributions are what shaped apple and microsoft today, let it be negative or positive!!

correct me if im wrong :$

CPfreak 20/07/2010 11:03
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Quote :hat are your thoughts?

yeah, my thoughts are hat. Master yoda.

david__t 20/07/2010 12:45
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If a company ever gets to the stage where their whole future and stock value is based on the health of one guy then they should start worrying. Apple is in this position. Microsoft & Intel are not. With a complex beast like an operating system or a CPU, no 1 person could ever be responsible anyway - at least nobody other than tech / R&D engineers who we never hear about. Besides, what exactly are we giving Steve "Credit" for? Every Apple device looks the same from iPhone to iPad to iMac - the size changes and the look is identical. The real heroes who actually make all the tech fit in to such a small package are the ones who should get all the credit - not Steve.

malphas 20/07/2010 16:27
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LePhuronn :
I would respond to your question if I understood what you were talking about.Ballmer held a gun to my head forcing me to call him a cock and accusing him of stagnating Microsoft? Yeah, that sounds like the retard monkey he's always come across as.And if you meant JOBS not Ballmer than I challenge you to deny Jobs is a charismatic genius - how else would he have create a rabid following of mindless sheep eating up every his every bullshit word and product? How else would he have put Apple on the map at the beginning with the Mackintosh, and saved it from bankruptcy with the iPod? If he's not a genius, how does he take establish, commonplace concepts (like the portable stereo and tablet computing) and rework them into a license to print money?I can't stand the guy, but it doesn't mean I don't applaud and respect his mind.*awaits the fanboi accusations*


Yup, my bad. Thought you were still talking about Ballmer in the last paragraph of your post for some reason.

Anonymous 22/07/2010 03:23
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