Brain drain at Microsoft turns into outright hemorrhage, as three more key players depart

“Keeping track of the revolving doors to Redmond’s executive washrooms is turning into a full-time pursuit,” Woody Leonhard reports for InfoWorld.

“Cloud visionary Ray Ozzie announced his departure in October. Cloud-savvy Bob Muglia announced his retirement as president of the Server and Tools Division — including the Azure effort — a couple of weeks ag. Last May, Robbie Bach left as president of the Entertainment Division. Xbox and Zune tech luminary J Allard left at the same time,” Leonhard reports. “Last September, Stephen Elop left as president of the Business Division, including Office. Brad Brooks, the head of Windows marketing to consumers, left last week.”

Leonhard reports, “Now in the past 24 hours we’ve seen details about the defections of three more heavy hitters.”

• Matt Miszewski: Former general manager of worldwide government in the Microsoft Dynamics group
• Dave Thompson: Corporate VP of online services, in charge of Office 365 and Microsoft’s business foray into the cloud
• Alek Kolcz: Sole Principal Scientist at Bing

Full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: The smarter rats never see the bottom.

49 Comments

  1. We can all joke but this may well be the beginning of the end for monkey boy. That is unless the M$ board of directors are still comatose. If monkey boy does go, and the Redmond Rat Finks manage to crawl back to relevance, they’ll still have a long climb to reach Apple. I think that the good thing is that they’ll actually help keep Apple from becoming fat and complacent.

  2. Bill Gates is not coming back. He may have been a highly-driven game player, but he never knew one thing about technology, or product innovation. His story was unleashing his daddy’s expertise at predatory contracts, partnerships, licensing, and monopoly behavior, on the naive world of 1980’s tech business.

  3. @bkire
    You ask how is this relevant to Apple. How is it NOT relevant. You must be kidding. And if MDN DIDN’T post this news I’d be ticked. This directly reflects Apple’s success and M$’s failure. They can’t take the heat because they know their out tech’ed in every way there.

  4. Putting hyperbole aside, I am sure Microsoft has some top-notch people working for them, but they are frustrated and hampered by the sales guys telling them how to do their jobs, setting technically impossible goals, and continually trying to put band-aids on a hopelessly outdated operating system.

  5. Backward compatibility has finally caught up to Micro$oft. That whole enterprise market can be a real anchor. People might not like it, but Apple sets a course and says follow or leave. Enterprises hate that. They want to decide when and how they move forward, thus forcing Micro$oft to maintain such a long history of compatibility that it bloats and hamstrings it’s product offerings.

  6. Two points:

    1. Why would Microsoft have a “general manager of worldwide government”? Do they own the UN or something?

    2. Why would anybody need to “go to the cloud” to edit their photos? What would be the advantage? That commercial makes no sense at all.

  7. …”Why would Microsoft have a “general manager of worldwide government”? Do they own the UN or something?”

    Clearly, it means sales (worldwide government sales).

    As for the Sole Principal Scientist at Bing, obviously, the title is just Principal Scientist (Sole was added, probably by InfoWorld, to emphasize that he was working alone, since ‘Principal’ may imply that he was the head of several of them).

  8. If much of your salary has been paid in shares over the past decade, you don’t want to work for negative wages as the stock price plummets. If you leave now, MS has to convert those shares to cash.

    Even good people in a good job will leave under these conditions.

  9. Don’t panic. Nothing is wrong. We beat expectations…just ahead of Apple again…ahem. We shipped 2 million phone things. Nothing is wrong. Ballmer is doing great and all is well.

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