Pros and cons of Ford's CEO Alan Mulally taking over at Microsoft

Advertisement
By Associated Press | Updated: 9 October 2013 10:28 IST
Back when Microsoft was the biggest name in technology, CEO Bill Gates leveled an attack on the auto industry: If carmakers were as innovative as computer companies, he said, a car would cost just $27.

That was 16 years ago.

Today, PC sales are falling as consumers show a preference for mobile devices, and Microsoft is struggling. Meanwhile, U.S. car companies are resurgent. General Motors, the world's No. 2 carmaker, is gaining ground on No. 1 Toyota. And Ford, after 16 quarters in the black, expects to see $8 billion-plus in profit this year.

It's a testament to the changing times that Microsoft is reportedly considering Ford Motor Co. chief Alan Mulally as CEO Steve Ballmer's replacement when he steps down in less than a year.

Advertisement

Mulally says he's made no changes to his plan to stay at Ford through the end of 2014. But he hasn't denied rumors that Microsoft Corp. is courting him. Ford's board of directors will gather in Dearborn, Michigan, starting Wednesday. One of the items on the agenda will be a discussion of Mulally's future at the company.

Advertisement

Here are the pros and cons of Mulally taking the wheel at Microsoft, a company whose stock price has been stuck in neutral for more than a decade:

The pros
He has fresh eyes
As an outsider, Mulally could correct problems that an insider might not even see, like Microsoft's culture of interdivisional competitiveness or the fragmentation of its businesses. While its lucrative enterprise-computing services rival its bread-and-butter Windows business in revenue, Microsoft is losing billions chasing Google with its own Bing search engine. The company has also booked hundreds of millions in losses on its Surface tablet computer.

Advertisement

In contrast, Mulally helped Ford become the only Detroit automaker to survive the recession without a government bailout. He forced engineers to start building global cars like the Focus instead of wasting billions making individual cars for each region. He sold or shuttered brands such as Volvo, Jaguar and Mercury, and plowed cash into cars with edgier designs - such as the Fusion sedan - even in the midst of the downturn.

He told feuding executives to embrace the new plan -or leave. Most stayed and learned to appreciate Mulally's weekly meetings and focus on cooperation and transparency.

Advertisement

James Schrager, a professor at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business, says Mulally was a "genius" at "working person-to-person on the management side." The CEO helped Ford figure out "who we really are as a company, where we're going to spend all our time and money and what we really have to achieve to be special to our customers."

He's been here before
When Ford hired Mulally in 2006, the company was drifting. Its flagship money-makers -trucks and SUVs - were suffering as consumers sought more fuel-efficient cars to combat rising gas prices. Similarly, Microsoft's still-dominant Windows operating system faces serious headwinds as consumers switch to tablets, a trend that threatens to scuttle its core business providing operating system software for PCs.

"Once something works, it's hard to change your behavior," says analyst Roger Kay, president of Endpoint Technologies Associates Inc. "Microsoft is in the same position. It's running like a billing machine. At some point, they're going to have to add value if they want to generate some more money."

Mulally is already being compared to Lou Gerstner, the former RJR Nabisco CEO who took over as IBM's chief executive in 1993 and - despite his lack of industry experience- helped transform IBM from a money-losing personal computer maker to a profitable technology services company.

He knows Microsoft and Ballmer
For a car executive, Mulally has unusually close ties to Microsoft. Microsoft's Windows Embedded software powers the Ford Sync dashboard entertainment system launched during Mulally's tenure.

Technology analyst Rob Enderle says Mulally acted on trends that Microsoft was slow to notice. "Of the car companies, they got mobile (communications) first."

Mulally spent most of his career at Boeing in Seattle, not far from Microsoft's headquarters in Redmond, Washington.

Ballmer, 57, has said his father worked for Ford for more than 30 years. And Mulally and Ballmer are friends. Ballmer even spoke with Mulally over coffee about a wide-ranging reorganization that Microsoft announced in July.

As a Top 5 holder of Microsoft's shares, Ballmer's support is essential, and Mulally would clearly have it.

In a 2009 contribution to Time magazine's Time 100 issue, Ballmer praised Mulally effusively, saying his support for the auto chief was "both emotional and rational."

"He understands the fundamentals of business success as well as any business leader I know," Ballmer wrote.

The cons
He's a software sophomore
As a trained aeronautical engineer with an MIT management degree, Mulally lacks the programming chops of the troops he would be leading.

Patrick Moorhead, president of Moor Insights and Strategy, says that's a knock against him: "In today's tech world, I think we've seen the best leaders, whether in software or hardware or consumer devices, have very deep background in technology."

The analyst favors Tony Bates, a self-taught programmer and the former Skype CEO who is now Microsoft's executive vice president of business development, strategy and evangelism. Microsoft acquired Skype in 2011 for $8.5 billion.

He's old school
At 68, Mulally would strike a grandfatherly presence among Microsoft employees. The average age of Microsoft workers is 34, according to compensation research firm PayScale Inc. While that's higher than companies such as Google (29) and Facebook (28), a younger leader may help Microsoft attract and inspire new recruits.

Yahoo Inc., for example, regained some of its cool and saw its stock price double after hiring as CEO Marissa Mayer, who's 38. After arriving more than a year ago, she quickly moved to boost morale and improve Yahoo's recruiting and retention of talented workers, the lifeblood of any tech company.

"If (workers) see a younger CEO, there's more reason to believe they can get ahead," Moorhead says.

He already has a legacy
Mulally has cemented his reputation and could retire from Ford into a lucrative world of speaking engagements and board positions.

While Mulally is fit and enthusiastic, a turnaround of Microsoft could take five years or more. He would have to decide if he wants to be a CEO into his mid-70s.

"Unless Ford completely collapses, Alan's tenure at Ford is going to be regarded as one of the greatest CEO stints in corporate history," says Morningstar analyst David Whiston. "If he goes to Microsoft in a totally new industry and it doesn't work out, that could tarnish his legacy a little bit."

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Moto Book 60 Pro With Up to Intel Core Ultra 7 CPU Launched in India
  2. Amazon Great Indian Festival 2025: Smartphone Deals Teased Ahead of Sale
  3. IFA 2025: Motorola Edge 60 Neo Unveiled Alongside Moto G06, Moto G06 Power
  4. Lenovo Unveils Second-Gen Legion Go Handheld With Big Upgrades, Bigger Price
  5. Bun Butter Jam to Begin Streaming on This OTT Platform Soon
  6. Samsung Galaxy Tab S11, Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra Price in India Announced
  7. Samsung Galaxy S24 5G With Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 Chip to Launch in India Soon
  8. OnePlus 15 Will Swap Hasselblad-Tuned Cameras for This New Image Engine
  1. Qualcomm Partners BMW to Bring New Automated Driving System to BMW iX3 SUV
  2. James Webb Spots Bizarre Planet-Forming Disk Full of Carbon Dioxide
  3. IFA 2025: Lenovo Legion Pro 7 (2025) With Nvidia RTX 5080 GPU Unveiled Alongside ThinkBook VertiFlex Concept
  4. Google Reportedly Lists New Outdoor and Indoor Nest Cam Models Alongside Nest Doorbell in Google Home App
  5. Samsung Galaxy Tab S11, Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra Price in India Announced; Pre-Orders Open Ahead of Sale
  6. Nubia Air Launched at IFA 2025 With Sleek 5.9mm Profile and 5,000mAh Battery: Price, Specifications
  7. Facebook Is Trying to Bring Back Pokes Playing on the 2010s Nostalgia
  8. NFT Trading Rose to New High in August Even as Sales Dipped: Report
  9. Nothing Ear 3 Teaser Drops Ahead of Imminent Launch
  10. Motorola Edge 60 Neo Launched Alongside Moto G06, Moto G06 Power at IFA 2025
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.