MICROSOFT DISMISSES OFFICE 2019 as old in videos promoting OFFICE 365 SUBSCRIPTIONS
Of course Microsoft would rather you pay them regularly for Office, just as you would for any other household utility.
When Microsoft announced the standalone versions of Office last year, known as Office 2019, Microsoft’s attitude seemed decidedly lukewarm ( go. pcworld.com/half). We were wrong: Now it’s downright hostile.
Microsoft released three videos ( go. pcworld.com/3vid) recently to try and demonstrate that the Ai-powered, alwaysupdated version of Office 365 trounces the standalone Office 2019 in tasks ranging from automatically filling in geographic data in an Excel spreadsheet to automatically adding
relevant skills to a Word resume that can then be sent to a recruiter. In each of the “showdowns,” Office 2019 forces the user to perform the tasks manually, while Office 365 either automatically performs the task or connects to the Internet to simplify it.
According to Jared Spataro, corporate vice president for Microsoft 365, Office
2019 is “frozen in time”: “They [the Office 2019 apps] don’t ever get updated with new features, and they’re not cloudconnected,” Spataro wrote. “Also, Office 2019 doesn’t support real-time coauthoring across apps, and it doesn’t have the amazing Ai-powered capabilities that come with Office 365.”
Microsoft has been busy adding intelligence to Office, with innovations like smarter search and Ideas ( go.pcworld.com/ nwsr) being added to simplify Office’s deep feature set, to video transcription ( go. pcworld.com/vdtr), to the Resume Assistant feature ( go.pcworld.com/rsis) being shown off within the Word video. The message, so far, has been relatively understated: Office 365 enables these features, while Office 2019 does not. Now that positioning has become much more explicit.
Office 2019—with what Microsoft calls a “perpetual license”—is $149.99 for Office Home & Student 2019 ( go.pcworld.com/ ofpr), which includes Word, Excel, and Powerpoint for a single PC. The Office 365 equivalent—office 365 Personal ( go.pcworld. com/365p), which includes Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook, Publisher, Access, plus Onedrive and Skype—costs $69.99, though you’ll have to renew every year to edit your documents and gain new features. Microsoft has historically encouraged users and businesses to budget for the ongoing costs of an Office subscription, just as you would for water and power utilities or property taxes.
What this means to you: For years, users questioned the value of upgrading to new versions of the standalone Office suite—a spell-checker was a spell-checker, after all. Microsoft would like you to accept that a connected Office suite provides not only up-to-the-minute access to a dynamic world of data, but also new services that you might not even imagine. What’s interesting is that Microsoft now rather baldly considers its past versions of Office to be the competition: “Heads Up: Why Microsoft Doesn’t Want Consumers to Buy Office 2019” was the subject of a Microsoft email announcing the new strategy.
Microsoft would like you to accept that a connected Office suite provides not only up-tothe-minute access to a dynamic world of data, but also new services that you might not even imagine.