Los Angeles Times

Microsoft is shuffling the corporate deck

In a world where the PC no longer rules, firm undergoes biggest retooling in 3 years.

- Bloomberg

Microsoft Corp. Chief Executive Satya Nadella unveiled the company’s biggest reorganiza­tion in three years, combining the divisions that focus on devices and software for businesses while moving the Windows operating system unit into the cloud operations.

It’s a sweeping set of changes that includes the departure of Windows chief and Microsoft veteran Terry Myerson and the appointmen­t of Scott Guthrie to oversee the combined Windows and cloud business.

Nadella is also putting Office chief Rajesh Jha in charge of the newly created Experience­s & Devices team. This group will focus on how people interact with various computing devices, using multiple senses, Microsoft said in a memo.

Nadella is reshaping the Redmond, Wash., company to fit a world where the PC is no longer the center of computing.

The changes reflect the shrinking role of Windows, the operating system that runs most of the world’s PCs, as computing shifts toward areas like cloud, mobile, productivi­ty and artificial intelligen­ce software.

The shuffle moves work on Windows to the same team handling Microsoft’s Azure cloud software. The Windows devices team combines with Office software, with the goal of building laptops and tablets that appeal to users of Microsoft’s applicatio­ns, including its Word and Excel programs and newer tools such as email and Skype.

“A unified platform-driven approach to product developmen­t and delivery should be beneficial for Microsoft,” Mark Moerdler, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein, said in a report. He added that the changes are also likely to reduce duplicatio­n of engineerin­g efforts and should save the company money.

PC sales have been on the decline for years. After peaking in 2011 at 364 million devices shipped, the market has contracted every year since then.

Microsoft’s own effort to revitalize hardware, with its well-reviewed Surface devices, hasn’t been able to turn back that tide.

Still, under Nadella, who took over in 2014, the company has stayed relevant and boosted sales by focusing on cloud services and subscripti­on versions of its popular work tools. Revenue is forecast to climb 11% this fiscal year to $107.3 billion, after rising 5% in 2017.

The cloud unit under Guthrie is also gaining some of the company’s artificial intelligen­ce work most closely tied to corporate customers.

That division is also taking responsibi­lity for some of Microsoft’s virtual-reality and augmented-reality developmen­t and products. Microsoft has sought to sell those technologi­es to cloud customers as new ways to oversee workers, manage equipment and offer training in corporate environmen­ts.

Myerson leaves after 21 years, and almost three years in what some have called the hardest job at Microsoft: trying to build a device business after the company exited from phone handsets — all while charting the future of Windows in a world that is moving away from the computing model that it led. Before those roles, Myerson ran Windows Phone and the Exchange email server.

 ?? Jason Redmond AFP/Getty Images ?? MICROSOFT CEO Satya Nadella at the annual shareholde­rs meeting. The company has stayed relevant by focusing on cloud services and its popular work tools.
Jason Redmond AFP/Getty Images MICROSOFT CEO Satya Nadella at the annual shareholde­rs meeting. The company has stayed relevant by focusing on cloud services and its popular work tools.

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