Microsoft is giving away Windows to any existing customers for free until
July 26, 2016. This is a dramatic shift from how previous versions of
Windows have worked. Beyond this, it has also had a big effect on how
Microsoft's finances work.
Giving away the operating system for
free seems like it makes no sense. Traditionally, Microsoft has made
money by selling Windows (or, as an extension, Office) to consumers and
businesses. Now, it just sells Windows to businesses and gives it away
to consumers.
The reasoning behind this is simple, and has been articulated by Microsoft many times: Windows on one billion devices.
Getting Windows 10 onto one billion devices -- roughly the same number
as Apple has on iOS -- is tough. Windows is a computer operating system,
not a phone operating system. This was great when PCs ruled, but that
is no longer true.
However, the PC market is still massive --
around 270 million units per year -- and Microsoft has a good chance of
getting Windows 10 onto one billion devices. But to do it, the company
had to make a compromise and give it away for free.
To make
that decision -- which was likely the idea of CEO Satya Nadella --
possible, Microsoft has had to invent new lines of revenue.
Office 365, for example, works better when a lot of people use it
because it's subscription-based. Instead of getting a one-time fee --
usually around $100 (£70) per copy -- Microsoft now gets $5.99 (£5.99)
every month which, in a little over a year, generates more money than
the old model.
This change means that Microsoft has had to look
for different ways to monetise Windows. The Windows Store is one
example of this and, according to Microsoft, it's becoming a hit
(annoyed developers aside).
Microsoft needs the most amount of
people to use the Windows Store to make it viable. Apple's App Store,
which is worth tens of billions of dollars a year, is valuable because
one billion people have access to it.
Apple recently announced
its holiday quarter results and made a big deal out of its "Services"
division which, in essence, was the App Store. According to Apple, its
services business is worth $31 billion (£22 billion) per year.
Microsoft wants to get some of that $31 billion -- or, more accurately,
create its own -- and giving away Windows is a key part of that mission
because the more people you have using your operating system, the more
money you can make from it.
But why does Microsoft want to change its business model?
The PC market, despite shipping 270 million units, is on the decline as people buy smartphones.
Microsoft's smartphone business is in trouble having shipped just 110
million units in its entire lifetime compared to around 4.5 billion iOS
and Android shipments.
Essentially, Microsoft has had little
choice but to give away Windows for free, to anyone, to increase usage
in a world that is increasingly hostile to PCs.
Microsoft has
also been distributing its apps on other platforms and now has over 300
million Office downloads on iOS and Android. The company originally made
the apps exclusive to Office 365 customers but has since opened it up
to anyone.
A big kick in revenue from cloud service -- around
$6.3 billion (£4.4 billion) in the last quarter -- also helped the
company navigate this change.
So what happens if the plan goes wrong?
Microsoft is running a big risk giving away Windows for free and, come July, could choose to do any number of things.
The company says it currently has over 200 million Windows users but
that number needs to increase fivefold -- and that isn't likely to
happen in the next four or five months.
ZDNet speculates that Microsoft could do one of three things:
Go back to the original model of charging users a license to get
Windows. Extend the period of time Windows 10 is free for. Change out
the free offer for a different offer.
Any of these three options is viable and the only way to find out what
the company will do is wait until July 26, but the most likely guess at
this time is that Microsoft chooses option two, bites the bullet, and
offers another six months of free Windows 10 to on-board as many users
as possible.
However, the free offer will have to end eventually and Microsoft could be a very different company by that time.
According to Microsoft's holiday quarter report, the Windows Store is
growing, the third-party apps are a hit, cloud revenues are up, and the
Surface line is looking bright -- but will these be enough to bring
Microsoft into a new age?
We'll have to wait until July 26, 2016 to find out.
By: Business Insider.
Review: Emerging Market Formulations & Research Unit, Flagship Records.
For The #FacebookTeam
