Maybe Microsoft Should have co-CEO's Mulally and Nadella, two could be much better than one

Normally you think of a company with a CEO, the one who has the most power.  The software company that I co-founded, we have three equal executives who make decisions, and it is comforting to have two people “watching your six."

To watch your behind, used in aviation as a warning by your wingmen.
Watch your 6 nighthawk, you have a bogie on your tail

We’re a bunch of data center geeks so having two sets of eyes watching you is much better than one.  This concept is a bit too radical though for most people most know this concept as a Triumvirate.

A triumvirate (from Latin, "triumvirātus") is a political regime dominated by three powerful individuals, each a triumvir (pl. triumviri). The arrangement can be formal or informal, and though the three are usually equal on paper, in reality this is rarely the case. The term can also be used to describe a state with three different military leaders who all claim to be the sole leader.

On the other hand a a Co-CEO is more common.

Co-CEOs: Are Two Better than One?
April 2 2012 by Russ Banham
Two for the Road: The Rise of Co-CEOsAre Two Better than One?
“Co-CEOs are ideal in many situations, especially when the executives provide oversight of each other’s actions and have complementary skill sets,” says Stephen Ferris, a finance professor and Rogers Chair of Money, Credit and Banking at the University of Missouri’s Trulaske College of Business. Ferris has studied the efficacy of the co-CEO model and argues that it is a highly effective way of running a business. “Co-CEOs are ideal in many situations, especially when the executives provide oversight of each other’s actions and have complementary skill sets,” he explains. “It’s actually a very successful model.” From his research on more than 100 shared-governance examples, 

Reading CNET news latest post on Microsoft CEO Hunt, it says that Mulally and Nadella are leading candidates ahead of others.

Ford boss edging out Nokia's Elop in race to replace Ballmer at Microsoft, report says

New reports suggest Ford's Alan Mulally and Microsoft exec Satya Nadella are ahead of rivals including Nokia boss Stephen Elop in the race to replace Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.

Everyone is focusing on who is the one, but maybe Microsoft should have two CEOs.  If Microsoft had Nadella and Mulally the two combined could easily outperform Ballmer’s one CEO performance.

Microsoft makes its first Wind Power Purchase in Texas

GigaOm’s Katie Fehrenbacher reports on Microsoft’s Wind Power Purchase for data centers.

Microsoft to buy Texas wind energy to power its San Antonio data center

 

6 HOURS AGO

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Wind-Powered Politics: Vestas at the DNC
SUMMARY:

Microsoft gets into the game of buying clean power directly from a power company for a data center in Texas.

Microsoft is buying clean energy to help power a data center for the first time. On Monday morning the tech giant announced that it has entered a deal to buy 110 MW of wind energy from a wind farm that will be located just outside of Forth Worth, Texas, and will be connected to the power grid that supplies power to Microsoft’s San Antonio datacenter.

A Test for Whether You Support Innovation, would you promote someone who breaks the rules

When I joined Microsoft an executive spoke at new employee orientation.  There are two stories that come to mind.

First story.  The executive had been a long time developer in Excel and had decided he wanted to get his MBA.  He was accepted into Harvard and was ready to resign.  Given he was employee #105 at Microsoft it is expected he would talk to Bill before leaving.  Bill asked him why he wanted to get his Harvard MBA.  His response is he wanted business experience.  Bill responded if you want business experience, I'll give you business experience.  You are now the General Manager of Microsoft Word.  The executive of course didn't go to Harvard and he eventually became a VP of Office.

Second story.  Same executive.  Same employee orientation.  He starts telling a story.  I'll tell it slightly different than he did.  

He was a senior developer on Excel and was working on a new feature.  As part of the feature being complete he wanted to put it on the toolbar.  Here is an image of Mac Excel 2011's tool bar.

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And a bit of early history of Excel.  I remember this history from the Apple side when I worked there and Excel quickly became the standard spreadsheet program.

Microsoft originally marketed a spreadsheet program called Multiplan in 1982. Multiplan became very popular on CP/M systems, but on MS-DOS systems it lost popularity to Lotus 1-2-3. Microsoft released the first version of Excel for the Macintosh on September 30, 1985, and the first Windows version was 2.05 (to synchronize with the Macintosh version 2.2) in November 1987.[61] Lotus was slow to bring 1-2-3 to Windows and by 1988 Excel had started to outsell 1-2-3 and helped Microsoft achieve the position of leading PC software developer. This accomplishment, dethroning the king of the software world, solidified Microsoft as a valid competitor and showed its future of developing GUI software. Microsoft pushed its advantage with regular new releases, every two years or so.

Back to the feature, the developer wanted to put it on the toolbar, so he met with the program managers and product managers to discuss where to put his feature.  They told him no, his feature would be in pull down menu, not on the tool bar, because the tool bar at the time was reserved for formatting features - font, justification, %/$, etc.  After weeks of trying the developer gave up trying to convince the program/product managers to put his feature on the tool bar.  Late one night, he checks in the code for his feature into the build, and he adds code to put his feature in the tool bar.

The next day the build is released to test teams and development, and there is his new feature on the format tool bar.  The program/project managers were of course upset and told him he must remove the feature from the tool bar.  He refuses.  They get more angry.  He tells them he will remove the feature from the tool bar after they run usability tests with end users.  They still insist he remove the feature.  He stands his ground.  Eventually the program/product managers agree to run usability tests.  And, the results show the new feature is the popular feature on the tool bar.  Know which one it is?

NewImage

Autosum.  The executive/developer is Chris Peters.

BELLEVUE, Wash. -- Chris Peters was vice president of Microsoft's Office division, responsible for 400 software developers and more than $4 billion in annual revenue. Last year, he startled his colleagues by taking a leave of absence to train for a new career-pro bowling.

Now, Mr. Peters spends many afternoons at Sun Villa Bowl, an aging bowling alley tucked between a grocery store and a Mormon temple in this eastside Seattle suburb. On a recent weekday, Mr. Peters, 41 years old, is the only bowler present below what used to be called retirement age. He raises a red ball to his side, steps off, slides and releases. The ball skids down the lane, hooks hard to the left and explodes into the pocket. Strike!

"You can tell when it leaves your hand," he says. "It's so satisfying."

More satisfying, for now, than his old job at Microsoft. Mr. Peters says he realized as he neared his 40th birthday that he had lost his passion for the all-consuming, 16-year career that made him rich but led him to neglect almost everything else, including his health and family.

Now to finish the second story.  Chris did warn the audience that his actions getting Autosum is not something that should be done unless you are sure you are right.  If you are right, you should push for doing the right thing.

This may sound OK.  But, you need to take into account that Chris was Microsoft employee #105 with huge credibility in the company, and so valued Bill would give him running Microsoft Word to keep him from leaving the company to get his Harvard MBA.

What Chris did with putting Autosum was innovative and still one of the most valued features on the Excel Tool Bar. Do you think he would be promoted?

 

Ouch 572 total views for 6 Microsoft GFS videos over past 4 months

I ran across some of the Microsoft GFS videos.  Some have had a lot of views.

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Then I saw the list of the last 6 videos over the past 4 months and the total views = 109 + 56 + 69 + 131 + 47 + 160 = 572.  I've posted videos of my kids at a school play that have more views. :-)

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    Business Impact

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    Cloud computing reduces business costs by delivering the software, platform, and IT infrastructure services via the Internet. It not only reduces the need for server and storage ca…
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    Sustainability

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    Microsoft is committed to driving software and hardware innovations that help people and organizations reduce their impact on the environment. Consumers and business customers…
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    Cloud-Scale Reliability

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    Securing the Microsoft Cloud

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    Watch Pete Boden, General Manager for Online Services Security and Compliance, as he discusses top concerns we hear from customers around security, privacy and compliance. P…
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    Sustainability in the Microsoft Cloud

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    Join Rob Bernard, Microsoft's Chief Environmental Strategist, as he discusses our commitment to sustainability, and how technology helps Microsoft and our customers achieve more susta…
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    Server Design Strategy

    • 4 months ago
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    Watch Kushagra Vaid, General Manager of Data Center Compute Infrastructure, as he discusses how we engineer the array of servers and storage devices that our process cloud-…

Some of the older videos have way more views.  Wonder what happened to decrease the viewership.

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Reflections on a Video Game Maker, Microsoft's 4th Billionaire - Gabe Newell

Microsoft has three billionaires - Bill Gates, Paul Allen, and Steve Ballmer.  Steve Ballmer will soon be leaving day to day operations like Bill and Paul.  Of all the other ex-Microsoft employees there are the wealthy who cashed out - Scott Oki, Charles Simonyi, Nathan Myhrvold, Jim Allchin, Paul Maritz, Mike Maples, and many more millionaires.  There is though one other ex-Microsoft person who is a billionaire, and what is more impressive is he took his Microsoft millions and turned it into over a billion launching another company.

Some may be impressed by the money, but what is more impressive is how Gabe Newell did things different than most.

Gabe is making lots of noise and news lately launching a game platform on Linux.  Gabe knows how to build a game platform as this is what he did at Microsoft 20 years ago.

For 13 years through to the mid-’90s, Gabe Newell was “producer on the first three releases of Windows” at Microsoft. At the time, according to Newell, “it was common wisdom that it wasn’t possible to write a good game in Windows because of, well, unnamed technical reasons.” In 1993 Doom was released, and according to Newell it became the number one most-used program in the entire US, ahead of Windows. When you consider that Id Software was a company of just 12 people, and Microsoft already had hundreds of developers working on Windows, this was quite an achievement.

A young and handsome Gabe Newell, probably from around the mid-'90sNewell was disappointed that this game ran in MS-DOS, rather than Windows, and thus tasked some of his engineers to create a Windows port. According to an interview back in 2007, he then apparently called John Carmack at Id Software to say that Microsoft would do the port for free, and thus the port was eventually released as Doom 95. It is possible that the success of Doom, and Doom 95, showed developers that it was indeed possible to write top-notch games on Windows. It’s also worth noting that WinG, the precursor to DirectX, was maturing at the same time — perhaps it was a combination of factors that finally made Windows the de facto gaming platform.

Here is a video where Gabe reflects on the industry.

Watching the video there are many lessons to be learned.

I have an interest following Gabe.  Gabe was my first interview at Microsoft.  He took one look at my Apple experience and re-routed my whole days of interviews.  Within 5 days I had an offer and joined in Apr 1992.  My life would be quite a bit different if I had stayed at Apple.  I doubt I would have stayed at Apple for as long as I stayed at Microsoft (until 2006).