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        Microsoft: We Will Steal Google's Lunch
        
        
        
        
		A Microsoft corporate vice president talked about the  company's business prospects, including competition with Google, at a Barclays  event on Tuesday.
Robert Youngjohns, Microsoft's president of North American  sales and marketing, fielded questions at the Barclays Capital Technology  Conference in San Francisco.  As might be expected of a marketing executive, Youngjohns was fairly bullish  about Microsoft's prospects, particularly with regard to cloud computing and  the enterprise software markets.
Youngjohns also played up Microsoft flagging efforts to  catch up with Google's search market share. With regard to search, some people  say that Microsoft should just concede to Google, Youngjohns said. However,  Microsoft isn't giving up because it needs to "attack someone who is  attacking us," he explained.
"We think we can change the rules around search and  that's why we're charging so hard with Bing," Youngjohns said. He added  that Microsoft wants to "steal [Google's] lunch on search" and that  "we clearly are concerned about [Google's] Android and Chrome."  Microsoft will leverage its ecosystem of products to compete with Google, he  explained. 
Microsoft is also going strong after releasing a number of 2010  products. Last month, the company released Exchange 2010 as a final product, as  well as betas of Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010, among others. Microsoft's  challenge now is "to get customers excited about deploying our recent  releases," Youngjohns said, noting that many customers still see Microsoft  through its older products, like Office 2003.
The two key applications that businesses typically need are  collaboration and workplace management tools, Youngjohns said. Microsoft  addresses those needs with its SharePoint and Dynamics products, respectively,  as well as Microsoft Office, he explained. 
While CIOs in the past have said that Microsoft's enterprise  software "wasn't ready for prime time," that perception is changing  with the new releases of Windows Server and SQL Server, Youngjohns said. He  added that Microsoft has cases studies showing that Windows Server 2008 R2 is  ready for mission-critical, tier-1 application support.
On the server virtualization front, Microsoft has been  achieving market differentiation through its System Center  management products, Youngjohns said. Desktop virtualization is an area where  there's been a lot of interest, but companies have not realized infrastructure  cost savings by deploying that technology, he added. 
Youngjohns touted Microsoft's Windows Azure cloud computing  initiative as "fundamentally different from other cloud computing  structures." Microsoft offers its customers the ability to deploy on  premises, in the cloud or use a hybrid approach. In particular, Microsoft has  been seeing "very heavy interest in hosted Exchange," he said. He  expected to see applications that require scale, like e-mail, increasingly  moving into the cloud. Microsoft's transition to serving customers through the  cloud hasn't been difficult to do because it already sells long-term annuity  agreements to businesses, he added.
Finally, Youngjohns presented Windows 7's release in October  as a positive note for Microsoft, especially among consumers. The netbooks  market was initially seen as problematic for Microsoft, but "we've done  really well" there, he said. 
Enterprise  sales of PCs with Windows 7 represent a different case because it takes between  six months to 18 months to migrate from Windows XP to Windows 7, he said. He  added that IT departments also have to do user training, which can seem like a  limiting prospect if you have 20,000 to 30,000 users.
An audio recording of Youngjohns' talk can be accessed at  Microsoft's investor relations Web page here. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.