[YAHOO PH]Microsoft's next Steve: Windows boss faces biggest test
SEATTLE - For Steven Sinofsky, the stern but creative engineering
manager who runs Microsoft Corp's flagship Windows division, Feb. 29
is showtime.
On that day, in Barcelona, Sinofsky will preside over the public test
release of the Windows 8 operating system, the most important new
version of Microsoft's cornerstone product in a decade. Optimized for
touch computing and low-power microprocessors, Windows 8 will run on
tablets as well as desktops and laptops - and maybe even on phones in
the future.
If it takes off, it could extend one of the most lucrative franchises
in business history and restore some cachet to the fading Microsoft
brand.
It could also propel Sinofsky to the top job at the company when CEO
Steve Ballmer eventually steps down.
Frank Artale, managing director at Seattle-based venture capital firm
Ignition, which was founded by a group of former Microsoft executives,
said Sinofsky has both "the tech chops" and the "panache and
showmanship" needed for the job.
Supporters credit Sinofsky with bringing order to the
sometimes-chaotic software development process at Microsoft - partly
by cutting layers of management through what is now referred to
internally as "Sinofskyization" - and getting products out the door.
Critics say he lacks the necessary charisma for the top job, and
question whether he has the technical brilliance of Gates or the
incisive analytical ability and forceful personality of Ballmer .
Most agree, though, that a strong performance for Windows 8 would all
but make him the heir apparent.
Microsoft declined to make Sinofsky available for interview.
Big stage
The Mobile World Congress in Barcelona will be the biggest stage yet
for Sinofsky, 46, who is largely unknown outside of tech circles.
Born in New York but raised in Florida, where his father ran a sports
goods store, Sinofsky joined Microsoft as a software design engineer
straight out of graduate school in 1989. He quickly caught the eye of
then-chief executive Gates, who took him on as his technical
assistant.
It was in that role that Sinofsky, while visiting his alma mater
Cornell in early 1994, wrote to Gates to recount how the students and
teachers had already come to see email and the Internet as "ubiquitous
and expected as regular phone service."
Gates credits Sinofsky, and his contemporary J. Allard - the force
behind the Xbox - for helping him to see the full extent of the
Internet revolution.
Following his stint in Gates' office, Sinofsky was assigned to the
Office team, which rivals Windows as the company's most profitable
product. He was elevated to vice president in 1998, and after
successfully driving the development of Office 2003 and Office 2007,
he established a reputation as a "shipper," a high honor at the
company which values getting finished products into the market more
than anything else.
He was moved over to the Windows unit in 2006, taking charge of it in 2009.
Despite his powerful position, Windows colleagues say Sinofsky - known
by his internal e-mail handle as 'SteveSi' - still takes the time to
reply to emails personally and is usually chatty in the hallways,
though he may not always be the figure that people want to see coming
the other way.
Meetings with Sinofsky can be tough, colleagues say, but he doesn't
swear like Gates or scream like Ballmer.
Sinofsky has blogged at length about his management ideas, and even
taught a management class at Harvard Business School. Some of his best
blogs were used as the basis for a book called 'One Strategy:
Organization, Planning, and Decision Making,' published by Wiley in
2010, which he co-authored with a Harvard academic.
Sinofsky stresses balancing what he calls "bottom-up" ideas from
coders on the frontline with the "top-down" needs of managers who have
to make sure the product matches the strategy.
"It's a bottom-up plan that is built and locked in a systematic way,"
said a former senior executive, who worked with Sinofsky in the
Windows unit. "Everyone gets input on the plan, but once the plan is
set, it's set."
Sinofsky is no longer involved in the day-to-day minutiae of coding:
"My code was always nice and orderly, but I probably couldn't write
enough code fast enough to really be the very best at programming," he
wrote in 2005. But he has the knowledge needed to crack the whip on
those who are.
"The techs know they can't sandbag him," said one current staffer in
the Windows unit.
Sinofsky joined the Windows unit at the tail end of 2006, just after
the ill-fated Vista was released to PC manufacturers and being
prepared for its full public launch in January 2007. His first job was
to develop a more ordered process for the next release. That work came
to fruition three years later with Windows 7, which has now sold 525
million copies.
Sinofsky-ization
Sinofsky writes in his blog about cutting the number of managers
between him and the lowest rung of the Windows unit to three or four
from seven previously.
This streamlining, along with rigorous planning, has become his
signature at Microsoft, but has ruffled some feathers at the company
because it has reduced the number of general manager positions, where
people got to use a wide variety of skills, and focused instead on the
core functions of making software: developing, testing and managing
specific programs.
But few dispute the results.
"For sure it flattens the organization, it definitely eliminates
fiefdoms," said the former Windows executive.
Artale, who led program management in the Windows unit in the 1990s
while Sinofsky had the parallel role at the Office unit, added: "Steve
is very much a product guy. He lives and breathes the product. He owns
it. The product will reflect his personality and his style."
Physically and temperamentally, Sinofsky is almost the opposite of CEO Ballmer.
A trim 5' 8", usually sporting a tidy t-shirt and V-neck pullover, the
balding Sinofsky steered clear of the limelight at this year's
Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, while the burly, effervescent
Ballmer boomed his way through a series of press conferences.
Known for his love of roadside Americana, Sinofsky took time out to
dine alone at the In-n-Out Burger on the other side of Interstate 15
from Las Vegas Boulevard and the hurly-burly of the show.
A former gym rat and jogger who now prefers yoga for exercise,
Sinofsky lives in a condo in the historic center of downtown Seattle,
unlike most Microsoft executives who favor large houses in the leafy
suburbs east of Lake Washington, an easier drive to Microsoft's
Redmond campus.
Public records show he donated $10,000 to the campaign against a state
tax on the wealthy in Washington state in 2010, alongside Ballmer who
gave $425,000. Gates, though, supported the tax, which had been
proposed by his father.
Sinofsky's Microsoft shares are worth about $35 million, according to
regulatory filings.
Although not a natural performer, Sinofsky enjoys showing off his
product. His perky unveiling of the first test version of Windows 8
last September showed he has a rapport with developers, even getting a
laugh out of them by joking that Microsoft updates its 'Task Manager'
program "every 15 years or so." But he isn't to everybody's taste.
"I don't think people care for his presentation style. He's one of
those super-intelligent types that come off as a little dry," said
Ryan Lowdermilk, who hosts a popular podcast for apps builders and
attended the unveiling of Windows 8 to developers last year. "But
developers respect people who ship product. That's what people like
about him the most."
One-to-one, he is all business. Several reporters have received an
icy, wordless glare when they ask a tough question.
Mini-Microsoft, the anonymous insider whose blog is a locus of
informed criticism of the company, has called him
"Spock-meets-Spartan."
Next CEO?
In his 13th year as CEO, Ballmer has presided over huge growth in
sales and profit, but he's had his critics from the day he started the
job. Despite hitting four-year highs last week, the stock is still at
the same level it was a decade ago, and Microsoft's market value is
only just over half of Apple's.
The criticism reached a peak last May, when outspoken hedge fund
manager David Einhorn - whose Greenlight Capital owned only about 0.1
percent of Microsoft shares at the time - said the company had a
strong future but it was time for Ballmer to step down and "give
someone else a chance."
Contacted on Monday, Einhorn declined to add to those remarks or to
comment on Sinofsky.
A successful Windows 8 could help silence the critics. It would also
give a big boost to Sinofsky.
Not everyone thinks he's is the right man for the job.
"Bill Gates had the most amazing mind I've ever encountered. You could
show him a PowerPoint slide and he would ask why it was different from
the one you showed him three years ago," said another former Microsoft
executive. "Steve Ballmer is the most intuitively mathematical person
I've ever worked with. Steve (Sinofsky) is neither of those things."
But unless Microsoft goes outside of the company for its next leader,
which would be a surprise, Sinofsky dominates the field. Some feel the
company should recognize that publicly, and be more clear about its
succession planning.
"Sinofsky is an executor, he can deliver," said one large
institutional shareholder. "They (Microsoft) should be able to provide
more transparency to the depth of bench - to demystify the inner
circle of management. In the absence of providing that, you get
non-productive chatter. It would serve them well to nip that in the
bud."
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