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Tag: Stephen Elop

  • Stephen Elop Talks Plans For Windows Devices

    As previously reported, Microsoft announced that it is cutting 18,000 jobs within the next year, starting with 13,000 of them within the next six months.

    CEO Satya Nadella laid out the plans in an email to staff, which the company also made available to the public. He said more details would be forthcoming at the company’s earnings call next week.

    Microsoft Executive Vice President of Devices & Services and ex-Nokia CEO Stephen Elop also sent an email to staff, which is also publicly available. He talks about the company’s “alignment of phones” as the Nokia team “integration” continues.

    The focus, he says, will be making the market for Windows Phone. Soon, he says, they’ll drive volume for these devices, targeting “affordable smartphone segments” with Lumia, and shifting Nokia X designs and products to Windows Phone devices (as opposed to Android). No surprise there.

    For the higher-price segments, Elop says the company will focus on “breakthrough products” from both the Windows team and the Applications and Services group.

    Changes, he says, will impact corporate structure.

    Elop’s full email is below:

    Hello there,

    Microsoft’s strategy is focused on productivity and our desire to help people “do more.” As the Microsoft Devices Group, our role is to light up this strategy for people. We are the team creating the hardware that showcases the finest of Microsoft’s digital work and digital life experiences, and we will be the confluence of the best of Microsoft’s applications, operating systems and cloud services.

    To align with Microsoft’s strategy, we plan to focus our efforts. Given the wide range of device experiences, we must concentrate on the areas where we can add the most value. The roots of this company and our future are in productivity and helping people get things done. Our fundamental focus – for phones, Surface, for meetings with devices like PPI, Xbox hardware and new areas of innovation — is to build on that strength. While our direction in the majority of our teams is largely unchanging, we have had an opportunity to plan carefully about the alignment of phones within Microsoft as the transferring Nokia team continues with its integration process.

    It is particularly important to recognize that the role of phones within Microsoft is different than it was within Nokia. Whereas the hardware business of phones within Nokia was an end unto itself, within Microsoft all our devices are intended to embody the finest of Microsoft’s digital work and digital life experiences, while accruing value to Microsoft’s overall strategy. Our device strategy must reflect Microsoft’s strategy and must be accomplished within an appropriate financial envelope. Therefore, we plan to make some changes.

    We will be particularly focused on making the market for Windows Phone. In the near term, we plan to drive Windows Phone volume by targeting the more affordable smartphone segments, which are the fastest growing segments of the market, with Lumia. In addition to the portfolio already planned, we plan to deliver additional lower-cost Lumia devices by shifting select future Nokia X designs and products to Windows Phone devices. We expect to make this shift immediately while continuing to sell and support existing Nokia X products.

    To win in the higher price segments, we will focus on delivering great breakthrough products in alignment with major milestones ahead from both the Windows team and the Applications and Services Group. We will ensure that the very best experiences and scenarios from across the company will be showcased on our products. We plan to take advantage of innovation from the Windows team, like Universal Windows Apps, to continue to enrich the Windows application ecosystem. And in the very lowest price ranges, we plan to run our first phones business for maximum efficiency with a smaller team.

    We expect these changes to have an impact to our team structure. With our focus, we plan to consolidate the former Smart Devices and Mobile Phones business units into one phone business unit that is responsible for all of our phone efforts. Under the plan, the phone business unit will be led by Jo Harlow with key members from both the Smart Devices and Mobile Phones teams in the management team. This team will be responsible for the success of our Lumia products, the transition of select future Nokia X products to Lumia and for the ongoing operation of the first phone business.

    As part of the effort, we plan to select the appropriate business model approach for our sales markets while continuing to offer our products in all markets with a strong focus on maintaining business continuity. We will determine each market approach based on local market dynamics, our ability to profitably deliver local variants, current Lumia momentum and the strategic importance of the market to Microsoft. This will all be balanced with our overall capability to invest.

    Our phone engineering efforts are expected to be concentrated in Salo, Finland (for future, high-end Lumia products) and Tampere, Finland (for more affordable devices). We plan to develop the supporting technologies in both locations. We plan to ramp down engineering work in Oulu. While we plan to reduce the engineering in Beijing and San Diego, both sites will continue to have supporting roles, including affordable devices in Beijing and supporting specific US requirements in San Diego. Espoo and Lund are planned to continue to be focused on application software development.

    We plan to right-size our manufacturing operations to align to the new strategy and take advantage of integration opportunities. We expect to focus phone production mainly in Hanoi, with some production to continue in Beijing and Dongguan. We plan to shift other Microsoft manufacturing and repair operations to Manaus and Reynosa respectively, and start a phased exit from Komaron, Hungary.

    In short, we will focus on driving Lumia volume in the areas where we are already successful today in order to make the market for Windows Phone. With more speed, we will build on our success in the affordable smartphone space with new products offering more differentiation. We’ll focus on acquiring new customers in the markets where Microsoft’s services and products are most concentrated. And, we’ll continue building momentum around applications.

    We plan that this would result in an estimated reduction of 12,500 factory direct and professional employees over the next year. These decisions are difficult for the team, and we plan to support departing team members with severance benefits.

    More broadly across the Devices team, we will continue our efforts to bring iconic tablets to market in ways that complement our OEM partners, power the next generation of meetings & collaboration devices and thoughtfully expand Windows with new interaction models. With a set of changes already implemented earlier this year in these teams, this means there will be limited change for the Surface, Xbox hardware, PPI/meetings or next generation teams.

    We recognize these planned changes are broad and have very difficult implications for many of our team members. We will work to provide as much clarity and information as possible. Today and over the coming weeks leaders across the organization will hold town halls, host information sharing sessions and provide more details on the intranet.

    The team transferring from Nokia and the teams that have been part of Microsoft have each experienced a number of remarkable changes these last few years. We operate in a competitive industry that moves rapidly, and change is necessary. As difficult as some of our changes are today, this direction deliberately aligns our work with the cross company efforts that Satya has described in his recent emails. Collectively, the clarity, focus and alignment across the company, and the opportunity to deliver the results of that work into the hands of people, will allow us to increase our success in the future.

    Regards,

    Stephen

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Microsoft Now Officially Owns Nokia’s Devices & Services Business

    Well, it’s official. Microsoft announced on Friday (as expected) that it has completed its acquisition of Nokia’s Devices and Services business. It’s been approved by shareholders, and all the government regulatory bodies.

    Microsoft can now go forward full-throttle with its plans for the buy.

    CEO Satya Nadella said, “Today we welcome the Nokia Devices and Services business to our family. The mobile capabilities and assets they bring will advance our transformation. Together with our partners, we remain focused on delivering innovation more rapidly in our mobile-first, cloud-first world.”

    Former Nokia CEO Stephen Elop will now report directly to Nadella, and will serve as executive vice president of the Microsoft Devices Group. He will oversee the business, which includes Lumia smartphones and tablets, Nokia mobile phones, Xbox hardware, Surface, Perceptive Pixel (PPI) products, and accessories.

    The company is also getting experienced personnel in over 130 locations in 50 countries, including at factories.

    “Nokia certainly has a tremendous depth of experience in the design, the manufacturing and delivery of devices,” Elop said. “Nokia over the years has literally delivered billions of devices. Just in the last year alone, some hundreds of millions.”

    The two companies have been partners for over two years, building Windows Phone-based devices, so it’s not as if they’re going to have to face any major obstacles in building and working together.


    Pictured: Nadella (left) and Elop (right)

    In its announcement, Microsoft says:

    Microsoft will continue to deliver new value and opportunity, and it will work closely with a range of hardware partners, developers, operators, distributors and retailers, providing platforms, tools, applications and services that enable them to make exceptional devices. With a deeper understanding of hardware and software working as one, the company will strengthen and grow demand for Windows devices overall.

    As with any multinational agreement of this size, scale and complexity, Microsoft and Nokia have made adjustments to the deal throughout the close preparation process. As announced previously, Microsoft will not acquire the factory in Masan, South Korea, and the factory in Chennai, India, will stay with Nokia due to the tax liens on Nokia’s assets in India that prevent transfer. As a result, Microsoft will welcome approximately 25,000 transferring employees from around the world.

    Microsoft notes the obvious in that the acquisition will allow it to accelerate its share of smartphones and feature phones, and certainly does so instantly.

    “The opportunity for Microsoft to be both a devices and services company, so that it can deliver the complete proposition to its consumers, is at the heart of this,” Elop said.

    Microsoft reminds Nokia customers that it will honor all existing warranties.

    Image via Microsoft

  • Stephen Elop To Take Over Xbox Division At Microsoft

    Stephen Elop To Take Over Xbox Division At Microsoft

    When rumors of Microsoft’s next CEO began to circulate, Stephen Elop was said to be on the shortlist of candidates. It was reported that his leadership would lead to Microsoft getting rid of numerous businesses that weren’t core to its enterprise strategy. One of those businesses was Xbox, and now he’s about to get a lot more intimate with the division he was once reportedly going to kill.

    TechCrunch got a hold of an internal memo from current Xbox boss Julie Larson-Green in which she announced her departure from the Devices and Studios group. Stephen Elop will be taking her place as head of the division once the Nokia merger is complete.

    With Elop’s move to the Devices and Studios group, he will be overseeing more than just Xbox. The division is responsible for all the hardware that Microsoft produces, including Surface and Windows Phone. With Microsoft now producing its own hardware thanks to its acquisition of Nokia, it only makes sense for Elop to head up this part of the company.

    So, what does this mean for the division? It’s a little too early to tell at this moment, but I think fans of Surface, Xbox and Windows Phone have nothing to worry about. Elop may have gotten rid of Xbox if he were CEO, but he’s not CEO. The final decision to get rid of any particular division rests with new CEO Satya Nadella and his close relationship with both Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer will probably ensure its future.

    In short, Microsoft’s Devices and Studios group will probably keep doing what it’s been doing as it changes hands. Elop will probably have his hands full dealing with Windows Phone and Nokia so the Xbox and Surface teams will likely be left to their own devices.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Here’s What’s Going On With The Microsoft CEO Situation

    As you’re probably aware, Microsoft announced back in the summer that CEO Steve Ballmer would be stepping down after another twelve months. The company’s Board of Directors would begin a search for his replacement.

    The company has now given an update on the search, and no, they haven’t found the replacement yet.

    As Microsoft said from the beginning, they’re looking both inside of the company and outside for the right person to fill Ballmer’s shoes.

    John W. Thompson, chair of the Board’s search committee, says he’s pleased with the search’s progress.

    “The Board has taken the thoughtful approach that our shareholders, customers, partners and employees expect and deserve,” he says. “After defining our criteria, we initially cast a wide net across a number of different industries and skill sets. We identified over 100 possible candidates, talked with several dozen, and then focused our energy intensely on a group of about 20 individuals, all extremely impressive in their own right. As you would expect, as this group has narrowed, we’ve done deeper research and investigation, including with the full Board. We’re moving ahead well, and I expect we’ll complete our work in the early part of 2014.”

    “At the same time, Microsoft has continued to drive hard,” he adds. “Our employees produced strong quarterly results, announced in October. They released new versions of Windows, our Surface products and many other offerings. And the launch of Xbox One was experienced around the world. All of us on the Board appreciate their continued focus and commitment.”

    You can take a look at the quarterly results here.

    “As a Board, we are determined and confident that the company’s third CEO will lead Microsoft to renewed and continued success,” Thompson says. ” We’re looking forward to 2014 and the opportunities and decisions that lie ahead.”

    Ford CEO Alan Mulally had been a major contender to fill the role, but a couple weeks ago, Ford Board Director Edsel Ford indicated that Mulally would be staying with Ford through the end of 2014 at least. That doesn’t quite fit the timeframe Microsoft is talking about.

    Two other frequently mentioned candidates are Satya Nadella and Tony Bates. Nadella leads Microsoft’s Cloud and Enterprise group, and Bates leads its Business Development and Strategy.

    Former Nokia CEO (and current softie) Stephen Elop has also been mentioned in various reports (with rumors swirling that if he were to get the job, he would consider getting rid of Bing and Xbox).

    There has also been an unnamed person said to be on the shortlist of potential candidates.

    Image: YouTube

  • Shareholders Reportedly Approve Microsoft Nokia Deal

    Nokia shareholders today reportedly voted to approve the company’s sale of its phones unit to Microsoft.

    “At an extraordinary general meeting in Helsinki, the chairman of the meeting said 99.7 per cent of investors to have voted before the meeting had approved the transaction,” the Financial Times reports. “Those investors held four-fifths of the shares registered for the meeting.”

    Microsoft announced the acquisition plans back in September. Part of that was that Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, a former Microsoft employee, would step aside to become Nokia Executive Vice President of Devices & Services under Microsoft. His name has commonly been tossed around as a potential replacement for Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, who is stepping down.

    Ballmer gave his final shareholder speech today, in which he noted that Xbox and Bing are key components of the company, amid rumors that Elop would look to get rid of them if he becomes CEO.

    Ford CEO Alan Mulally’s name has also been tossed around as Ballmer’s replacement, and Kara Swisher is reporting that he is the “inside bet at Microsoft”.

    The Nokia sale, which includes 3.79 billion Euros ($5 billion) for th devices and services business and 1.65 billion Euros ($2.18 billion) for patents patents (a total of 5.44 billion Euros or $7.17 billion) is expected to close early next year.

  • Could Microsoft Soon Give Bing The Axe?

    Former Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, who is one of the top candidates in a recently narrowed down list to take over Steve Ballmer’s job as Microsoft CEO, would reportedly consider killing Bing and selling the company’s Xbox business.

    Should Microsoft get of rid of Bing? Xbox? Let us know what you think in the comments.

    That is according to a new report from Bloomberg, citing people with “knowledge of this thinking.” Elop would reportedly want to narrow this company’s focus, and get rid of distractions. Peter Burrows & Dina Bass report:

    Besides emphasizing Office, Elop would be prepared to sell or shut down major businesses to sharpen the company’s focus, the people said. He would consider ending Microsoft’s costly effort to take on Google with its Bing search engine, and would also consider selling healthy businesses such as the Xbox game console if he determined they weren’t critical to the company’s strategy, the people said.

    Earlier this week, investors drove Microsoft shares to their highest price since mid-2000, after Nomura Holdings Inc. analyst Rick Sherlund said the sale of Bing and Xbox, along with other moves, could lift fiscal 2015 earnings by 40 percent.

    Elop came over to Microsoft when the company announced its intent to buy Nokia’s phones unit a couple months ago. He had worked for Microsoft previously, and his name was already being thrown around a lot as a candidate for Ballmer’s replacement. He stepped aside as Nokia President and CEO to become Nokia Vice President of Devices & Services.

    A spokesperson called Bloomberg’s report a “foray into fiction,” but it’s not like even Microsoft’s PR has a window to Elop’s brain. It’s unclear how these people with “knowledge of his thinking” do, but it’s not outside of the realm of possibility that there’s something to the report.

    We won’t delve much into the Xbox side of things here (though that’s a interesting story in itself), but everybody knows that Bing has been an incredibly expensive venture for Microsoft, and has made little gain in terms of search market share against Google.

    Last month, Microsoft did report 25% growth in its online services division, which includes Bing. The loss fell 12%.

    Peter Bright at Ars Technica, who challenges the legitimacy of the Bloomberg report to begin with, writes, “As a standalone business, Bing is heading in the right direction but for the time being, it is still a money pit. Getting rid of it would improve Microsoft’s finances to the tune of about a billion dollars and change each year, something around a five percent improvement in operating income.”

    “The problem with this superficial analysis is that Bing isn’t a standalone business,” he adds. “I’m sure Microsoft would be happier if it could stand alone—if nothing else, it would help put an end to the ‘Microsoft should get rid of Bing’ chatter—but there’s more to the value and importance of Bing than just the bottom line.”

    He goes on to make the case that Microsoft essentially needs Bing for the data, and for feature integration into its operating systems to compete with Google and Apple. This is certainly a valid point as Android and iOS continue to get smarter.

    It’s true that Microsoft needs to have the kind of personal connection to users that Google and Apple (especially Google) are able to get by other means. Search is obviously a major component of such a connection. Social is another, however, and with Bing, Microsoft gets a special window into the Facebook and Twitter realms that Google does not, thanks to the companies’ partnerships (Bing and Twitter just renewed their’s).

    And if Microsoft killed Bing, where would that leave Yahoo?

    It is worth noting that Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen also reportedly thinks Microsoft should get rid of Xbox and Bing.

    What do you think? Is Bing helping or hurting Microsoft? Do you think Microsoft should consider getting rid of it? Let us know in the comments.

    Image: Flickr (Wikimedia Commons)

  • Microsoft CEO Search Reportedly Narrowed to Five Candidates

    Since Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announced his retirement back in August, Microsoft’s board has been quickly searching for someone to replace him by the end of the year.

    Several candidates have popped up in the past few months, most notably Stephen Elop and Alan Mullaly (pictured). Elop is the former CEO of Nokia, which Microsoft bought shortly after Ballmer’s retirement announcement. Mullaly has been the CEO of Ford since 2006.

    Today, Reuters is reporting that Microsoft has narrowed its CEO search down to just five people. The report cites unnamed “sources familiar with the matter” as stating that Microsoft originally fielded a list of 40 candidates for the position.

    Elop and Mullaly are reportedly still top candidates for the position. In addition, Reuters’ sources list three Microsoft executives as possible CEO candidates – Tony Bates, Satya Nadella, and one other unnamed employee. Bates is the current EVP of Microsoft Business Development, and was formerly the CEO of Skype before its acquisition by Microsoft. Nadella is the EVP of Microsoft’s Cloud and Enterprise division.

    Though Microsoft was reportedly hoping to have a new CEO by the end of the year, Reuters’ sources have stated that the CEO search could still “take a few more months.” That report also states that unnamed “sources familiar with the conversations” have revealed that the board’s CEO search committee has been “speaking with” dissenting shareholders during the search.

  • Microsoft Explains The Rationale Behind Its Nokia Purchase

    By now, it’s no secret that Microsoft is purchasing Nokia’s Devices and Services business. With the purchase, Microsoft will integrate Nokia’s hardware business into its own to help push Windows Phone 8 forward. The market isn’t being too kind on the news this morning, but Microsoft assures its investors that the purchase will benefit them in the end.

    As part of Steve Ballmer’s email to Microsoft employees this morning, he shared a slideshow that details his company’s rationale for purchasing Nokia’s Devices and Services business. The rationale is split into four areas – accelerate phone share, strengthen overall opportunity, smart acquisition and strong execution plan.

    Starting with the first – accelerate phone share – Microsoft says that its Nokia partnership on the Lumia line of Windows Phones has already seen massive success. Since Q3 2012, the number of Windows Phone units shipped has steadily increased each quarter with over 7 million Nokia Windows Phones being shipped in Q2 2013. Microsoft also notes that it has more than 10 percent of the marketshare in nine markets, and is outselling Blackberry in 34 markets.

    The second – strengthen overall opportunity – is all about using Windows Phone to improve the health of the entire Windows ecosystem. Microsoft believes that the traditional role of Windows in enterprise software will help elevate Windows Phone into the workplace as well as the home through what it calls the “consumerization of IT” through programs like BYOD. Furthermore, it believes that increased smartphone sales will lead to increased tablet sales and increased tablet sales will lead to increased PC sales.

    Interestingly enough, Microsoft notes in this section that it needs to create viable alternatives to services offered by Apple and Google. Microsoft’s current spat with Google over YouTube on Windows Phone is already well known, but it sounds like Microsoft wants to recreate every Google and Apple service for Windows Phone. The more cynical among us will note that Microsoft just wants users to remain in their world, but the company notes that it needs “a first-rate Microsoft phone experience for its users.” Creating its own apps will hopefully accomplish just that.

    The third – smart acquisition – assures investors that the purchase of Nokia’s Devices and Services business was a sound decision. The company notes that the purchase used offshore cash so as not to have any impact on investors. It also notes its Windows Phone business will break even through services once it’s able to sell through 50 million devices, and the Nokia purchase will help them reach this threshold faster.

    The fourth and final – strong execution plan – is pretty much a repeat of the organizational email Ballmer sent this morning. It notes that Nokia will continue operating as it has been with minimal interference coming from the merger. The Nokia executive team will join Microsoft, but actual phone development will continue unabated in Finland.

    On a final note, Microsoft says that it will seek approval for its acquisition from all major international regulatory bodies. If everything goes smoothly, it expects approval by early 2014. By that point, most of the integration should be complete and Microsoft may even have a new CEO.

    [Image: Microsoft]

  • Microsoft’s Nokia Purchase Is Causing Another Organizational Shuffle

    Early this morning, Microsoft announced its intention to purchase Nokia’s Devices and Services business for $5 billion. It also paid $2.18 billion to license Nokia’s patents. It’s a deal that many are surprised didn’t come sooner, but Microsoft may have been waiting until it announced its reorganization before making the purchase.

    In an email sent to all Microsoft employees by outgoing CEO Steve Ballmer, he lays out the rationale behind the Nokia purchase. More importantly, however, he announces some additional organizational restructuring that will take place once the Nokia purchase is finalized.

    As already announced, Stephen Elop will be returning to Microsoft from Nokia as the head of the company’s Devices team. He will oversee the creation of new Windows Phones while also working alongside current Devices and Studios head Julie Larson-Green on the Xbox One and Surface tablets.

    Alongside Elop, some key engineering talent at Nokia will be joining Microsoft as well. Jo Harlow will be lead the Smart Devices team, Timo Toikkaken will lead the Mobile Phones team, Stefan Pannebecker will lead the Design team, and Juha Putkiranta will lead the integration of Nokia’s Devices and Services business into Microsoft.

    The Windows Phone 8 operating system team will remain unchanged throughout the transaction. Terry Myerson will lead the team, and the goal is to have the Nokia acquisition cause little to no disruption to their work.

    Sales, Finance, Legal, HR, Communications, Customer Care, Business Development and other functions will be merged across both companies. Ballmer notes that Microsoft’s number one priority at the moment is to merge his company’s and Nokia’s global marketing team. He says that it’s very important for the two companies to “pursue a unified brand and advertising strategy as soon as possible.”

    On a final note, Microsoft says that it has no plans to relocate any of its new employees acquired through the Nokia purchase. In other words, the Nokia team will remain in Finland and Microsoft will coordinate with them as they work together towards improving the Windows Phone 8 ecosystem.

    [Image: I, -Majestic-/Wikimedia Commons]

  • Microsoft Buys Nokia’s Phones Unit, Brings Elop Back

    Microsoft Buys Nokia’s Phones Unit, Brings Elop Back

    Microsoft and Nokia announced that the former will acquire the latter’s devices and services business for 3.79 billion Euros ($5 billion), and will pay 1.65 billion Euros ($2.18 billion) to license Nokia’s patents, bringing the total transaction price to 5.44 billion Euros ($7.17 billion) in cash.

    The deal will also bring Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, a former Microsoft employee, back to the company at a time when his name is being thrown in as one possible replacement for outgoing CEO Steve Ballmer. Elop is stepping aside as President and CEO to become Nokia Executive Vice President of Devices & Services.

    “Building on our successful partnership, we can now bring together the best of Microsoft’s software engineering with the best of Nokia’s product engineering, award-winning design, and global sales, marketing and manufacturing,” he said. “With this combination of talented people, we have the opportunity to accelerate the current momentum and cutting-edge innovation of both our smart devices and mobile phone products.”

    “It’s a bold step into the future – a win-win for employees, shareholders and consumers of both companies. Bringing these great teams together will accelerate Microsoft’s share and profits in phones, and strengthen the overall opportunities for both Microsoft and our partners across our entire family of devices and services,” said Ballmer. “In addition to their innovation and strength in phones at all price points, Nokia brings proven capability and talent in critical areas such as hardware design and engineering, supply chain and manufacturing management, and hardware sales, marketing and distribution.”

    “We are excited and honored to be bringing Nokia’s incredible people, technologies and assets into our Microsoft family. Given our long partnership with Nokia and the many key Nokia leaders that are joining Microsoft, we anticipate a smooth transition and great execution,” Ballmer added. “With ongoing share growth and the synergies across marketing, branding and advertising, we expect this acquisition to be accretive to our adjusted earnings per share starting in FY15, and we see significant long-term revenue and profit opportunities for our shareholders.”

    Risto Siilasmaa, Chairman of the Nokia Board, is taking over as interim CEO.

    “For Nokia, this is an important moment of reinvention and from a position of financial strength, we can build our next chapter,” said Siilasmaa. “After a thorough assessment of how to maximize shareholder value, including consideration of a variety of alternatives, we believe this transaction is the best path forward for Nokia and its shareholders. Additionally, the deal offers future opportunities for many Nokia employees as part of a company with the strategy, financial resources and determination to succeed in the mobile space.”

    Following are the exact terms of the deal as outlined in the companies’ announcement:

    Under the terms of the agreement, Microsoft will acquire substantially all of Nokia’s Devices and Services business, including the Mobile Phones and Smart Devices business units as well as an industry-leading design team, operations including all Nokia Devices & Services-related production facilities, Devices & Services-related sales and marketing activities, and related support functions. At closing, approximately 32,000 people are expected to transfer to Microsoft, including 4,700 people in Finland and 18,300 employees directly involved in manufacturing, assembly and packaging of products worldwide. The operations that are planned to be transferred to Microsoft generated an estimated EUR 14.9 billion, or almost 50 percent of Nokia’s net sales for the full year 2012.

    Microsoft is acquiring Nokia’s Smart Devices business unit, including the Lumia brand and products. Lumia handsets have won numerous awards and have grown in sales in each of the last three quarters, with sales reaching 7.4 million units in the second quarter of 2013.

    As part of the transaction, Nokia is assigning to Microsoft its long-term patent licensing agreement with Qualcomm, as well as other licensing agreements.

    Microsoft is also acquiring Nokia’s Mobile Phones business unit, which serves hundreds of millions of customers worldwide, and had sales of 53.7 million units in the second quarter of 2013. Microsoft will acquire the Asha brand and will license the Nokia brand for use with current Nokia mobile phone products. Nokia will continue to own and manage the Nokia brand. This element provides Microsoft with the opportunity to extend its service offerings to a far wider group around the world while allowing Nokia’s mobile phones to serve as an on-ramp to Windows Phone.

    Nokia will retain its patent portfolio and will grant Microsoft a 10-year non-exclusive license to its patents at the time of the closing. Microsoft will grant Nokia reciprocal rights to use Microsoft patents in its HERE services. In addition, Nokia will grant Microsoft an option to extend this mutual patent agreement in perpetuity.

    In addition, Microsoft will become a strategic licensee of the HERE platform, and will separately pay Nokia for a four-year license.

    Microsoft will also immediately make available to Nokia EUR 1.5 billion of financing in the form of three EUR 500 million tranches of convertible notes that Microsoft would fund from overseas resources. If Nokia decides to draw down on this financing option, Nokia would pay back these notes to Microsoft from the proceeds of the deal upon closing. The financing is not conditional on the transaction closing.

    Microsoft also announced that it has selected Finland as the home for a new data center that will serve Microsoft consumers in Europe. The company said it would invest more than a quarter-billion dollars in capital and operation of the new data center over the next few years, with the potential for further expansion over time.

    Clearly, the two companies see this deal as the best way for both of their brands to combat the major players in the mobile and tablet space – Apple and Google – building off their existing relationship, which has seen Windows Phone on Nokia device for the past couple years.

    Image: Flickr (Wikimedia Commons)

  • Microsoft Reportedly Paying Billions for Nokia Deal

    Nokia dominated the tech headlines last week, when it unveiled a new strategic partnership with Microsoft to bring Windows-based smartphones to the market. CEO Stephen Elop said that there was now a "third horse" in the race. 

    While there may be more than three horses, this horse will certainly be one to watch. Elop made some more interesting comments on Sunday, indicating that Microsoft had won a bidding war with Google for the deal, paying out an undisclosed amount, but in the billions. He also suggested that Nokia’s first Windows phones will come out this year, according to a report from IDG News Service

    Google may have lost out in a bidding war, but that hasn’t stopped the company from trying to hire Nokia engineers. A recruiter for Google put out a job ad aimed specifically at Nokia software engineers via Twitter. 

    Microsoft potentially has a great deal to gain from its partnership with Nokia, not only in the mobile space itself, but in the search space as well. Phones that result from the deal will come with Bing as the default search. If sales are good, it could significantly increase Bing’s search market share. That, of course, would mean greater search advertising revenue. 

    Conspiracy theorists out there have suggested that Microsoft somehow covertly sent former employee Elop to take over Nokia, so it could get this deal. According to the IDG report, Elop "sought to dispel" such rumors. 

    Nokia named Chris Weber as its new North American President last week. 

     

  • Microsoft Exec On Cloud Computing: “We’re All In”

    Expect to see a lot more headlines with the words "Microsoft" and "cloud" both in them over the coming years.  Stephen Elop, President of the Microsoft Business Division, indicated today that his company is very, very interested in virtualization technology.

    Stephen ElopElop was speaking at a Microsoft event in Amsterdam when, according to Dan Grabham, he said, "The world really is changing.  The trend that is the most significant, the most disruptive, is the advent of cloud computing.  I’d like to compare it to the arrival of GUI, or the internet arriving through the browser . . . all of a sudden we’re seeing customers en masse [adopting] cloud computing."

    And Microsoft isn’t exactly interested in watching this trend from the sidelines.  Rather, it seemingly wants to go head-to-head with Google and every other company interested in the cloud computing space.

    Elop asserted, "We’re all in," explaining that "70 per cent of Microsoft engineers are working on something to do with the cloud," and that as many as 90 percent of them should be working on cloud-related projects within the next few years.

    For the record, Microsoft Senior Vice President and General Counsel Brad Smith wrote an official blog post today titled "Unlocking the Promise of the Cloud in Government," too.