The Real Secret To Microsoft's Success

Tickers in this Article: MSFT, AAPL, GOOG, IBM
For people of a certain persuasion, it’s fun to make fun of Microsoft (Nasdaq:MSFT). It's outdated and occasionally bloated software. An operating system version so despised that most users refused to upgrade from its predecessor and instead waited for its replacement. A browser that once held 95% of world market share, but is now number one in only Japan, South Korea, Gabon and Greenland. And mobile phones that barely register in a universe dominated by iPhone and Android.

Many (alright, some) of us are old enough to remember when Microsoft was the very definition of novel, its youthful founders and their unorthodox culture flying in the face of a formal, understated business world that had limited use for, or knowledge of, computers. Today, Microsoft is a grey-flannel pillar of the Dow, and that’s a welcome occurrence. The alternative would have been for the brash software upstart to be of no consequence today.

Still, at times it seems the consensus sentiment about Microsoft prompts questions such as “How on Earth do they make so much money?” After all, Microsoft isn’t the most innovative company in the world, nor the most limber. However, critics seem to forget something: a) Microsoft is the world’s largest software maker, and b) people have great utility for software.

In a sense, Microsoft is much like Jay Leno and Nickelback in that the level of criticism directed at its object is directly proportional to its success and pervasiveness. Microsoft revenue topped $78 billion last year. With a 28% profit margin, which is considerably larger than that of either Apple (Nasdaq:AAPL) or Google (Nasdaq:GOOG), two companies that popular opinion assumes have overtaken Microsoft.

That popular opinion derives from a false assumption: that a new product line with frequent updates is the surest path to success in the technology sector. Not true. Take Surface, Redmond’s answer to Apple’s iPad. It isn’t the kind of product that makes nor breaks a company with the power and magnitude of Microsoft. Rather, it’s a way to stay relevant in the consumer electronics market – of course, the idea is for Surface to create enough profit to justify the expenses behind it, but a couple million satisfied Surface owners have only a minimal effect on Microsoft’s net profit numbers. The same goes for the formidable Xbox, whose sexiness as a gaming console vastly outweighs its contributions to Microsoft’s overall financial picture.

The truth is somewhat more pedestrian. Perhaps it’s because Microsoft is so ubiquitous, a constant reminder in the daily lives of those who use its products. Every time you turn your computer on, Microsoft’s logo is staring at you, even if you’re a Mac or Linux user who nevertheless uses Microsoft’s Office suite. Shouldn’t a company with so wide and deep a footprint make it its business to endlessly delight and fascinate us, with a youthful exuberance and a penchant for self-promotion? You know, like Google does?

The fact is, 39 years after its incorporation, Microsoft is as staid and disciplined as IBM (NYSE:IBM), ITT (NYSE:ITT), Litton Industries and the other companies that rounded out the upper reaches of the Fortune 500 back in 1975. The software giant is primarily in the business of making money, which sounds tautological at first read, but really isn’t. Microsoft is no longer in the raw experimentation stage common to young and growing companies. Rather, its modus operandi is to create profitability streams, then maintain and expand them. Primary among those are two divisions and two divisions alone: Business and Windows. Together, they were responsible for 96% of Microsoft’s profits last quarter. (The remaining divisions are Server & Tools, Online Services and Entertainment & Devices.) Each of the divisions responsible for the overwhelming bulk of Microsoft’s profit deserves its own summary.

The name of Microsoft’s “Business Division” may sound unhelpfully generic, but it refers to the part of the operations that’s responsible for creating the stupendously profitable Office. The suite started as an adjunct, a method for showcasing Microsoft’s revolutionary operating system. But since Office’s 1990 debut, the applications that comprise it have become just about mandatory for anyone wanting to conduct business. Over a billion people now use Office, to the point where Word and Excel are practically synonymous with word processing and spreadsheets, respectively. Multiply that user base by $140 per license for the stripped-down Home & Student version of Office, a product whose marginal cost is close to zero, and it’s easy to see why Microsoft does everything in its power to maintain Office’s profitability (and why competitors from OpenOffice to Google Docs want nothing more than to chip away at Office’s 90% market share.)

The Business Division’s only serious competitor for dominance at Microsoft is the company’s Windows Division, whose latest contribution to the marketplace is Windows 8. Coincidentally, Windows’ share of the worldwide operating system market is as large as Office’s share of productivity suites is – right around 90%. Almost half of those users use Windows 7, and about a third are one generation behind at Windows XP. Windows 8 retails for $120, with marginal costs comparable to if not considerably less than those for Office.

The Bottom Line

All-in-one entertainment systems (Xbox One) and free audio- and video-conferencing around the world (Skype) may be exciting, the kind of things that make life in the 21st century more enjoyable, but their impact on Microsoft’s income are minimal. Instead, the company’s secret to staggering riches lies in the daily business of allowing users to create and manipulate documents; and providing the software that performs a computer’s most important function – permitting data to make it from your computer’s hardware components to its display. It isn’t alluring, but it pays the bills ... to an extent few companies in history can match.
by

Greg McFarlane


Greg  McFarlane
Greg McFarlane is the co-founder of Control Your Cash, a personal finance website for people who want "results, not coddling." He's also the author of its companion book, Control Your Cash: Making Money Make Sense, a full personal finance primer in one volume. Greg has been with Investopedia for three years and also writes for several tourism and general interest magazines. Originally from Vancouver, Greg splits his time among Las Vegas, Costa Rica and Maui with his wife and three cats. The opinions expressed are his own.

McDonald's Can No Longer Thrive on Just Burgers And Fries

Tickers in this Article: MCD, WEN, YUM, SBUX
Picking what to eat at McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD) is often a stroll down memory lane. Top sellers such as the Big Mac, Quarter Pounder and Filet-o-Fish all date from the burger chain’s heyday in the 1960s and 1970s. The McRib, another classic fan-favorite that's notably released only periodically throughout the year, debuted back in 1981, while the McCafe began in 1993.

Other menu items the Oakbrook, Ill., company has tried, including the Angus Third Pounder, the Premium McWrap sandwiches and most recently, the Mighty Wings, have failed to whet consumers’ appetite.

The company, which for most of its history has been considered an innovator in the fast food industry, is now largely a follower while smaller rivals have picked up the slack. Wendy’s (Nasdaq:WEN), which had struggled for years, recently scored with the Pretzel Bacon Cheeseburger. Yum Brands’ (NYSE:YUM) Doritos Locos Tacos netted $1 billion in sales. Burger King, which has long played second fiddle to McDonald’s, threw down the gauntlet last year when it introduced Satisfries. Not only did the lower calorie French fries help boost sales, but they also bolstered the chain’s reputation among health-conscious consumers.

Under CEO Don Thompson, the House that Ronald built has been trying to get back on track and largely failing. Same-store sales, a key retail metric measuring the performance at stores open for at least a year, fell in January for a third straight month. They dropped 0.3% in February and 1.4 % in the U.S. alone, which was worse than analysts expected.

While the chain blamed the cold winter weather for its woes with some justification, its problems go deeper. Consumers these days, especially Millennials, just don’t like McDonald’s. Goldman Sachs found they prefer Starbucks (Nasdaq:SBUX) by a wide margin, giving it a brand equity of 73; that's ten points higher than McDonald’s. Even when compared with other burger joints, McDonald’s is found lacking by consumers who prefer the taste of Wendy’s and to a lesser extent, Burger King. A 2013 survey by restaurant consulting firm Technomic found that almost 51% of consumers rated Wendy’s "excellent" in terms of food quality, about 44% had that opinion of Burger King and some 37% felt that way about McDonald’s.

It isn’t just consumers who are upset with McDonald’s; franchisees are unhappy too. Reports in Bloomberg News and elsewhere have noted they are miffed about rising costs and falling profits. A bloated menu chock full of items that few customers actually want is resulting in drive-throughs that are the slowest in the industry. Franchisees are also griping with some justification that the costs of running a McDonald’s are far higher than those of competitors. Customer service has become so bad that one executive called it “broken” and the Wall Street Journal noted that complaints about rude employees have soared.

These challenges are weighing on McDonald’s shares, which have barely budged over the past year. Though analysts note the stock is cheap with a price-to-earnings multiple of about 17, making it a bargain compared with Burger King’s 42 and Wendy’s 80, it’s hard to recommend an investment in the Home of the Golden Arches.

McDonald’s, though, seems to be trying to learn from its competitors. Newly designed play areas are similar to those found in Chick-fil-A, and the chain could learn a lot from the closely held Georgia company. People camped out ahead of a new Chick-fil-A opening in New Jersey because the first 100 customers earned free chicken sandwiches for a year. It’s a genius promotion that Chick-fil-A has done for years.

When was the last time the public got this excited about anything new McDonald’s has done? The chain is also experimenting with having customers custom order their burgers. But isn't this a little late? Wawa, a closely-held convenience store chain, has allowed customers to order customized sandwiches over computers for years.

Speaking to Wall Street analysts on the company’s earnings conference call in January, Thompson spoke of the need to “re-establish the trust of customers…That means basic execution at a restaurant level, marketing engagement at a much stronger level and also to make sure that our menu is relevant."

Of course, that’s easier said than done.

Disclosure - At the time of writing, the author did not own shares of any company mentioned in this article.
by

Jonathan Berr


Jonathan Berr
Jonathan Berr has been a financial journalist since 1997 and is a former reporter with Bloomberg News and TheStreet.com. At Bloomberg, he was awarded the Loeb award, one of the most prestigious prizes in journalism, for uncovering SEC violations at Raytheon. Berr was also part of a team at DailyFinance that was cited for feature writing by the New York Press Club. He has been a regulator contributor to both MSN Money and AOL's DailyFinance. His freelance writing has appeared in numerous publications including American Banker, The New York Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Business Week, the Boston Globe, and Risk and Insurance. Among his passions are his family and his skill in translating gobbledygook into plain English. He is a proud resident of the state of New Jersey.

An Assessment of Quancheye Global Tech

We, at williammckinleycapital.com, have picked 'Quancheye Global Tech' to be our current domain name and hosting vendor. Hence we presume that this short review of 'Quancheye Global Tech' is maybe going to be very useful for other folks from all over the World in need of domain name and web hosting solutions. We say people from all over the World, because the simple fact is that 'Quancheye Global Tech' presently offers domain and hosting services in several datacenter locations: in America (Chicago, IL), in Great Britain (Maidenhead, 20 miles outside London), in Scandinavia (Stockholm) and in Australia (Sydney). That way, embracing almost the whole Earth. At least from the point of view of the World Wide Web. So, here is what you could expect from 'Quancheye Global Tech' in short:

Shared Website Hosting Solutions

The initial thing we, at williammckinleycapital.com, have noticed is the inexpensive prices of the shared web page hosting accounts supplied by 'Quancheye Global Tech'. Shared doesn't sound very well, does it? Well, that's what it is called: shared web hosting. The good thing here is that the website hosting packages furnished by 'Quancheye Global Tech' are driven by an in-house created, futuristic cloud web hosting platform (each hosting service, like email, databases, webspace hosting Control Panel, storage space, DNS, stats, and so on, is being served by a different bunch of servers in a cluster). This is something EVERY cPanel web hosting corporation on the Globe will have enormous problems with, because cPanel is a one single server based web hosting environment (each web hosting service, such as electronic mail, databases, web space hosting CP, storage space, DNS, stats, etc., is being run on a single web hosting server), cPanel is not open source (therefore the cPanel web page hosting companies are not able to add new functionality and manipulate it the way they want it) and there is no open source file platform (they need to invent their own file system), which is the foundation of any cloud web hosting service. Let's return to the shared web hosting plans, which are powered by an authentic clustered webspace hosting platform. With a shared web hosting plan, each customer pays just for his/her plan, thus preserving the website hosting price very low (since many clients share the same server). In a nutshell, a shared hosting account, which runs on a clustered hosting system, permits you to pay just for the resources that you actually demand, escaping a scenario where you pay for a powerful site hosting plan that you cannot truly utilize, or for a small web page hosting plan that cannot host your site. The option to upgrade your account from one plan to another with only two mouse clicks grants you the flexibility to kick off with a basic plan and upgrade as your web site grows. Thus, you spare money that you can expend on promoting the site while it is still brand new. Each and every web hosting account provided by 'Quancheye Global Tech' arrives with an online web site building tool and more than 40 popular script-driven software applications such as WordPress, Joomla, Zen Cart and Moodle that will spare you hundreds of dollars for web design services. 'Quancheye Global Tech' distributes shared web hosting accounts in several different countries across the Globe. There is one server farm facility in Chicago covering the US and Canada; 2 European data centers - in England and in Sweden; and another one in Australia, which covers the Asia Pacific region. In this way, approximately the whole Globe is encompassed to supply you and your visitors with a steady and fast site hosting solution at a convenient location. On the whole, the shared hosting accounts provided 'Quancheye Global Tech' are very well furnished and are available at a very cheap price (starting from $5.83 for the Starter package).

Private Virtual Hosting Servers

As your site gets more well known, more visitors will open it at one and the same time, thereby making bigger server load. Shared website hosting packages put specific restrictions so that all the web hosting accounts on the hosting server have their share of the system reserves. Therefore, for more well known web pages, a virtual web server (VPS) would be a finer decision. A Virtual Private Server provides the best balance between efficiency and price. It echoes a dedicated web hosting server and with 'Quancheye Global Tech' all Virtual Private Servers on offer ship with root access and a bouquet of Operating Systems (CentOS, Ubuntu, Debian) and web page hosting Control Panel tools (Hepsia, cPanel, DirectAdmin) to pick from. Please pay careful attention to the Hepsia hosting Control Panel. In contrast with cPanel (which costs $10.00 USD a month atop the chosen VPS hosting server package's cost), Hepsia is added at no extra monthly charge (it's free with all private virtual server accounts and performs with all Linux OSs: CentOS, Ubuntu, Debian, while cPanel performs exclusively with CentOS) and features an incredible Domain Manager via which you can register, migrate, renew and manage domains (cPanel does not include such a tool at all)! The more advanced clients can manage the VPS through an SSH console, but tenderfeet can also administer it effortlessly through a Parallels Virtuozzo or OpenVZ virtualization platform, installing server-side software applications, rebooting particular services or the whole private virtual web hosting server. Give heed to this circumstance: the major benefit of the virtual private web server hosting packages is that if the server load surpasses the package's quota, extra resources can be allotted to this particular virtual private hosting server for a given stretch of time if they are available on the physical web server. All in all, a VPS server vastly surpasses the capacities of any shared webspace hosting account and the extra reserves offer an even more steady and dependable service. With 'Quancheye Global Tech', the prices for the virtual server hosting accounts begin at just $25.00 for the Base VPS package. All virtual server plans are available in Chicago, London and Sydney, providing optimum performance for your web sites.

Semi-dedicated Web Hosting Servers

To clients with little or no practice, a virtual web server may appear tough to manage. That's perhaps why 'Quancheye Global Tech' also stores semi-dedicated servers in its main American server farm facility in Chicago. Administering these accounts is comparable to administering a standard shared site hosting package via a Control Panel interface. They have all the specs of a shared web site hosting package such as a free-of-charge site building tool and a script installer, but the system resource quota provided by a semi-dedicated server web hosting package is many times bigger than that of a shared site hosting account. For instance, the CPU power that can be utilized is nearly 5 times as much as compared to the shared site hosting plans. When contrasted with a shared webspace hosting package, the number of database queries included within the semi-dedicated hosting accounts is enormous: 90 000 / hour. An unmetered hosted TLD allowance is a standard as well. The semi-dedicated hosting accounts do not arrive with full server root privileges (we, at williammckinleycapital.com, count this as a little defect), but the advantage is that they are managed via the very same web space hosting Control Panel user interface as the shared webspace hosting accounts. This indicates that a familiar GUI is accessible by all users who do not have enough self-condifence to administer a virtual hosting server, yet require more power and reserves than a private virtual web hosting server can deliver. This is like that due to the fact that the semi-dedicated web servers share the resources of the very same powerful avant-garde web servers as the ones which accommodate the VPS server hosting packages, still, the number of the semi-dedicated web servers is quite small (somewhere between 20 to thirty per physical server), while the virtual web hosting servers can reach a much higher number (eighty to 120 per physical server). Having that information in mind, the semi-dedicated servers supplied by 'Quancheye Global Tech' can be branded as being very affordable (as far as cost is concerned), starting from $30.00 for the Semi Dedicated 1 package.

Dedicated Web Servers

According to williammckinleycapital.com, big websites such as social networks, community and corporate portals or popular online stores with thousands of clients call for a much more powerful webspace hosting environment. It appears that the chaps from 'Quancheye Global Tech' have come to the same conclusion as well. To live up to its clients' requirements, 'Quancheye Global Tech' provides an array of dedicated hosting servers that can manage millions of daily hits. That estimation rests on the hardware specifications the web hosting servers sport: multi-core processors, up to 4 gigabytes of RAM, 2000 gigabytes of disk space and Gigabit NICs will definitely guarantee the quick and steady work of any type of site. In 'Quancheye Global Tech's opinion, the original hardware specifications can be upgraded for more resource-requiring sites. We, from williammckinleycapital.com, consider that all dedicated server plans offered by 'Quancheye Global Tech' are also appropriate for starting a hosting reseller business as each web server offers free invoicing software and a free domain reseller account. Unfortunately, the dedicated hosting servers offered by 'Quancheye Global Tech' are all unmanaged. We, at williammckinleycapital.com, think of this as a little defect, which can be corrected by paying a monthly tax of $32.00 USD. So, if you need assistance, the Managed Services upgrade includes several additional services such as a regular backup, software installation, dedicated web server monitoring and troubleshooting procedures. An assortment of webspace hosting CP (CP) user interfaces are offered with each of the web hosting servers - Hepsia, cPanel and DirectAdmin. Our (williammckinleycapital.com's) forecast is that the superb drag-and-drop File Manager offered by the Hepsia website hosting CP will perhaps render the use of any FTP software program pointless. Our (williammckinleycapital.com's) inference is that the dedicated servers delivered by 'Quancheye Global Tech' don't seem to be very affordably priced (still the Hepsia site hosting Control Panel and the unmetered hosted domain allowance will undoubtedly make you smile), beginning from $150.00 for the Budget plan.

 Quancheye Global Tech