Login:
Password:

Gates, Ballmer to Employees: All is Well

By BetaNews Staff, BetaNews

June 16, 2006, 3:08 AM

(continued from previous page)

Following a news conference announcing that Microsoft chairman Bill Gates would be leaving his role as chief software architect in two years to focus on his Foundation, both Gates and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer sent company-wide e-mails to employees. The memos provide a look into what the future will bring when the software era of Bill Gates comes to an end.

E-mail from Bill Gates on June 15, 2006:

I wanted to take a moment to share some of my thoughts, as well.

As Steve's mail indicates, I've decided that two years from now, in July 2008, I want to devote more time to the work of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Right now and for the next two years, my full-time job is here at Microsoft, and my part-time job remains the Foundation. Beginning in July 2008, I will switch that, to be full-time at the Foundation, while remaining involved with Microsoft as Chairman and an advisor on key development projects on a part-time basis.

To prepare for this change, we have a well-thought-out transition process. Again, I will continue at Microsoft full-time for the next two years, but over the course of those two years, my day-to-day responsibilities will shift to a team of incredible technical leaders who are already doing amazing things at the company.

I feel very lucky that we've got extraordinary technical leaders at the company, like Ray Ozzie and Craig Mundie, who can step up to assume the roles that I've played. I've known Ray for the last 20 years, and he has created some of the most important developments in the industry. Craig and I have worked together for nearly 14 years, and he's been a technical visionary and a leader on policy throughout his career. With Ray and Craig stepping up, I feel very confident that the technical stewardship of Microsoft is in very capable hands.

And I feel the same way about our business leadership. Our core businesses are strong and we have a clear vision for how we will meet new challenges and opportunities. We just had our first $12 billion quarter, and we continue to generate almost a billion dollars in profit every month. We are about to launch breakthrough versions of Windows, Office and Exchange, which are already generating a lot of excitement.

Six years ago, Steve and I made a major transition when he stepped up to be CEO. He's done a fantastic job by every measure, whether it's the people he's brought in, the new ways he's running the company, or just the objective results – like doubling our revenue in six years. Steve has driven us to make bold bets on things like Xbox, Real Time Communications, business applications, IPTV, and many others including the Live platform. Steve is the best CEO I could imagine for Microsoft – he is changing the company in ways it needs to be changed. He is bringing in new leadership at all levels. And, he is focused on the long-term – making Microsoft a great company not just today but for decades to come.

With Steve's organization of the company into three divisions led by our incredible presidents – Jeff Raikes, Robbie Bach, and Kevin Johnson – we've laid a solid foundation for greater autonomy, agility and entrepreneurial spirit in our product groups. And with the great addition of Kevin Turner as our COO, our leadership team has never been stronger.

Our deep technical strength is one of the key reasons I believe Microsoft is well-positioned for great success in the years ahead. I'm very pleased that in addition to Ray, Craig, David and Rick, Steve has asked J Allard, Bob Muglia, and Steven Sinofsky to play an expanded role in shaping the company's business and technology strategy. And when you consider all of our remarkable Technical Fellows, Distinguished Engineers, all of the brilliant researchers working at our MSR labs around the world, and all the technical people in the business groups, I can safely say that our technical talent has never been stronger or deeper.

Obviously, this has been a very hard decision for me. Microsoft will always be a huge part of my life, and I'm lucky to have two callings that are so important and so challenging.

On a personal note, I know that my work on global health and education issues at the Foundation would never have been possible without the enormous success of Microsoft, so I want to thank you and all of the employees past and present who have contributed so much to this company.

For these last 31 years, I've had the best job in the world. I've worked with some of the brightest and most passionate people in the world. Together, we've built a great company whose products have empowered people around the world.

We're only at the beginning of what software can do, and I'm excited about the impact that Microsoft can have. I'm going to take an extended vacation this summer with my family, but I'll be back in late August and I look forward to working with all of you for the next two years and beyond, to make those dreams a reality.

Thanks.

Bill

<< Prev | 1 | 2

Add a Comment (21 Comments)

BetaNews reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason. Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic. Foul language and personal attacks will not be tolerated.

Name (required):

E-mail (required):

Enter Your Comment:

By vabla009

edited Jun 16, 2006 - 8:21 AM

I don't know why...but I feel literally sad while reading this news. In fact am about to cry. Its perhaps beacuse I can't accept that one of the most colourful and charismatic personalities in the history of Mankind is stepping down from his duty. Bill gates has changed many of our lives, has shown new vision to an unsatble and fragmanted world. I hope the ending of an era of innovation, care and willingness to give something to the world will overcome by the fact that Bill Gates will give more time to his charity. Thanks and I wish you all the best Mr. Gates.

Score: 0

By wat0114

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 4:27 PM

Okay, I agree he's a quality individual who has done tremendous charity work over the years, but to feel genuinely sad and on the verge of tears over his departure so he can concentrate on his haircut :) is taking things a bit far isn't it??

Score: 0

By lsproc

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 3:33 PM

I couldn't agree with you more. I am the kind of person who likes any chance to hate Microsoft but a person does not make up an entire company. Its the many people that do. Good luck.

Score: 0

By Mark Gillespie

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 9:51 AM

Leaving his job to spend more time concentrating on his haircut.

Score: 0

By wat0114

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 4:29 PM

Good to see some people here have a sense of humour :)

Score: 0

By lil2short2see

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 11:43 AM

your nice...

Score: 0

By Mark Gillespie

edited Jun 16, 2006 - 4:14 AM

But then they WOULD say that.

Their not going to say "We're in serious trouble, Vista is still chock full of bugs, it's gonna slip, the XBox360 is selling like cold cakes, Linux and MacOSX are nibbling at our marketshare, consumers have lost faith in our ability to ship affordable, reliable software.."

Score: 0

By xyzcb1

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 7:02 AM

do you ever know about MSFT's finance? Even if they don't make a penny for the next 10 years, they will be fine.

Score: 0

By Frostek

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 7:43 AM

I hear this so many times.

On *paper* yes, they would be fine.

However, shareholders and stock markets would not like this one little bit... with the obvious results.

Score: 0

By Paul Skinner

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 5:39 AM

Did you ever see WinXP 6-9 months before shipping?
I won't defend the poor quality XboX360 though.

Score: 0

By Mark Gillespie

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 5:57 AM

Yes, I was part of the XP beta programme. It was much more together at this stage. Beta 2 of XP was very high quality, pretty bug-free.

Vista has a LONG way to go still.

Score: 0

By aredo

edited Jun 16, 2006 - 7:01 AM

XP Beta2 very high quality, pretty bug-free ?? Are you kidding ?
Until SP1 came out the OS was so full of bugs, it shipped with over 60,000 known bugs.

Score: 0

By lsproc

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 3:36 PM

I really hate it when people blame a poor quality product on the fact it happens all the time. Its due to the huge market share that Windows has. Lets say that 90% of us were running Macs. We would have tons of updates cause more hackers would target it. Thats why Norton AV gets hacked more than AVG. Its just down to market share.

Score: 0

By Mark Gillespie

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 9:50 AM

For an OS of that size 60,000 is typical.

How many bugs SHOULD it have? The 60,000 is for Windows, including all the extra bunded stuff (Notepad, Hyperterminal, Windows MediaPlayer), and also included defects raised in previous versions of Windows, but not fixed in XP.

It's basicaly a headline for the guilable.

Score: 0

By deadmonkey

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 5:47 AM

Did you see WinXP 6-9 months AFTER shipping? heh.

Score: 0

By tpaman1975

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 12:09 PM

Honestly any good consumer, and especially anyone in the IT industry, knows to stay away from a OS release until the first patch. Look how long it took them to truly perfect 98. Need I say more?

Score: 0

By Mark Gillespie

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 4:35 PM

Win9x is flawed to the core.

Score: 0

By PC_Tool

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 5:26 PM

Windows 98 was the most stable OS Microsoft released before goign wholly to the NT kernel.

98Se was iffy, and ME was utter total crap.

But of the Non-NT based Windows, 98 was by far superior to the others.

Notice I am not saying it wasn't flawed, that depends heavily on ones perspective.

Score: 0

By Mark Gillespie

edited Jun 17, 2006 - 4:58 AM

The more code they loaded onto the flakey underpinnings of Win9x, the more flakey it got...

Score: 0

By lsproc

posted Jun 16, 2006 - 3:41 PM

Yes. 98 is still not perfect. And they wont release a patch for one bug. Thanks for the comment though. Good point. My XP disk is SP1 and then I nlited a SP2 one

Score: 0

By Mark Gillespie

posted Jun 19, 2006 - 2:45 AM

it's just 1 simple bug, it's a crucial operating system component, which may cause serious compatability problems.

Microsoft have done the right thing, and said "enough is enough", and called it a day, after supporting it for 8 years..

Score: 0