Microsoft has a secret weapon

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. File picture: Robert Galbraith

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. File picture: Robert Galbraith

Published Jan 29, 2016

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In reporting better-than-expected fourth quarter earnings Thursday, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella touted his company's success in the cloud.

“Businesses everywhere are using the Microsoft Cloud as their digital platform to drive their ambitious transformation agendas,” he said.

What he didn't mention was the role that one of the company's much older products played in the success of this new technology: Microsoft Exchange Server, which many of the world's largest companies rely on for email services.

When companies begin moving data to the cloud, typically a network of servers managed by an outside company, a common first step is to move email, often with other office software tools but sometimes on its own.

For companies already relying on Microsoft Exchange and Outlook for sending and receiving email, information technology managers say, turning to the same company to handle that data in the cloud seems like a logical move.

That's what happened at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

The school was looking to streamline its technology by moving to the cloud, starting with email, because it is “a pain to operate,” said Bob Plankers, a virtualisation architect at the university. “Aside from email servers, you need to worry about spam and virus scanning,” he added.

For the transition, Plankers said he chose Microsoft's cloud-based Office 365 product because the university already used Outlook.

“It's just a really natural thing,” said Matt McIllwain, an investor at Madrona Venture Group, about companies starting their cloud transition with email and other widely used office software from Microsoft. “It's easier and can be more cost effective to run it on the cloud, and let Microsoft worry about your Exchange servers.”

On track

Such thinking helps explain how Microsoft has become the second largest provider of cloud infrastructure, services and software, well ahead of Salesforce, Oracle and Google, according to a Goldman Sachs analysis.

The company announced Thursday that it was on track to generate $9.4 billion in annual cloud-based revenue, up from $5.5 billion a year ago.

Microsoft remains far behind market leader Amazon, but it has become the fastest-growing major cloud provider. Its key Azure business has more than doubled year on year, well above the 65 percent growth rate of market leader Amazon, according to Goldman.

Microsoft has worked hard to exploit the advantage its mail software provides. “Maybe one of the first steps is you want to move your email. That's fine,” says Takeshi Numoto, corporate vice president for cloud and enterprise marketing. “That gets us more opportunity to engage with customers.”

Investor McIllwain called that strategy smart, because customers who move their Outlook email to Microsoft's cloud typically use a Microsoft directory service that controls access to that email. It then becomes simple to use that same directory to provide designated employees access to other data and services that are later moved to Microsoft's cloud.

The strategy isn't foolproof, however. Over seven months last year, Clif Bar, an Oakland, California-based snack provider, moved all its Outlook email, along with other applications like document management and workflow, to Azure.

The company nevertheless moved its enterprise resource management to the cloud services of another longtime partner: Oracle.

As cloud services rapidly expand, Microsoft will have to demonstrate that its products are equal to, or better than, those of its competitors in both quality and price.

Currently, many companies favour Microsoft because it offers more flexibility in terms of moving software around, say from a company's own data centre to the one it has outsourced to Azure, said Frank Gillett, an analyst at Forrester Research. But Amazon's AWS offers more types of tools, and has a longer track record selling cloud services, he said.

REUTERS

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