Monday, July 13, 2009
Microsoft to Bring Office 2010 Online
It's a move that takes the fight to Google, but what's the business model?
Today,
Microsoft opened the technical preview for Office 2010 touting, perhaps most significantly,
online access and collaboration. Reports indicate that Microsoft plans to offer
free access to basic versions of the productivity software, and features such
as storage and backup for a fee. The company also plans to play to its
strengths with its business clients, giving them the option to store data in
Microsoft's cloud or to keep it in their own data centers.
This is, of course, just the latest salvo in the ongoing tussle between
Microsoft and Google. But at the core of the conflict is the question of what
customers are ultimately willing to pay for. Google loves to give products away
for free, betting that the more people rely on the Internet, the more
opportunities it'll have to serve the ads that have already earned its
billions. Microsoft, on the other hand, still hopes that customers will pay for
software itself, although it is being forced to make adjustments to its basic
business model by, for example, offering basic access for free.
Given Google's dominance of the Web it's easy to see Microsoft as the underdog.
But if Microsoft can offer a convincing online version of its productivity
software it'll discourage many people from trying the alternatives out there,
including Google Docs.
It'll
also mean that Microsoft can then focus on charging for specialized features,
such as security, and service-level guarantees, which enterprises have proven
they're willing to buy. The option of paying for storage and backup services
also works, since, even in the cloud-computing world, people are already used
to paying for their hardware usage.
Microsoft may well be tempted to make the online
version of Office work best for Internet Explorer. But Google has to take a
different approach--its applications need to work well in Internet Explorer,
Safari, Chrome, and Firefox (I haven't tested Docs on Opera). And you can bet
that Google plans for its applications to be as widely accessible on mobile
devices as possible.
Google
has helped undermine the idea that the average user should pay for productivity
services. Though it doesn't offer as many features as Microsoft, Google's
products are deeply integrated and designed to be ubiquitously accessible.
Comments
mobile karen
08/31/2009
Posts:5