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How Redmond Can Avoid A Windows Phone 7 Trainwreck

Diverse IT pundits agree on one thing – Windows Phone 7 to be announced on Monday is going to be a train wreck. The only question is how big and how fast. First, eWeek establishes why Windows Phone 7 will be way behind the state of the smartphone art with this ten point presentation. Now Microsoft will argue that many of these deficiencies will be resolved in future updates – but cut and paste, true multi-tasking, IE7 as browser,  and no-Flash support among other “missing features” would have gotten RIM  Torch or HTC EVO laughed out of town by the Gadget Press.

And CIO reports that Goldman Sachs, in downgrading Microsoft stock from Buy to Neutral on the eve of the announcement, is warning that such trends as Late to market, Missing features, Competitors with better devices are symptomatic of a clash between Redmonds consumer vs enterprise development cultures. Goldman says fix this  “friendly fire” problem  or expect continued conflict and losses in the market. And finally Gartner sees only a small uptick for perhaps a year and then Windows Mobile declining even further in the market. In sum, Microsoft is going to need a turnaround Mobile announcement on Monday.

How Microsoft can get its Mobile Mojo Back

If there is one consensus among analysts about Microsoft – is that Redmond knows how to package and market. The second fact is MSFT has oodles of cash – about $41B at last quarterly report. Finally Microsoft Research has innovations++ squirreled away in its recesses – just waiting for a Bing-Go like signal. So don’t count Microsoft out at the Mobile Launch. Here are some marketing tricks available to Redmond:
1)Much moolah will allow Microsoft to offer its phones at a 40%-off reduced price – until the first update to Windows Phone 7 users will be able to buy at a 30-50% discount. Microsoft already prices all its desktops and laptops at half or better than the correspondingly equipped Mac Books -so just repeat the ploy for Windows Phone 7 but with a “retire date” for the discount.
2)Windows Phone 7  will be behind Android, iPhone, and RIM in a number of missing features that Redmond says it will have available in the next quarter or two. So keep the purchase price down until then plus offer that first software update to Windows Phone 7 as free including any associated hardware upgrades. Guaranteed future-proofing for a half year or more.
3)Microsoft will be behind all the major vendors in the number of  apps available. So give away for the next half year, the users choice of 3-5 free apps. This will help launch the sales of phone units, will attract developers whose downloaded apps will be paid for by Redmond, and will get the gadget  community all excited about ranking the 5 Best  Apps for Windows Phone 7 buyers. Its free marketing excitement. Behind the scene pay the top 3 apps a bonus.
4)Relax the Microsoft Marketplace exclusive selling place –  allow other selected retailers  to get into the Windows Phone 7 retail space and help drum up business.
5)Make sure that Windows Phone 7 has direct connect capabilities with Zune,  Xbox and Kinect
– be these Wifi, apps, or some other combo; allow users to interact and move among the Microsoft consumer stable as easily as possible. Play down the lack of true multi-tasking with these interconnects.
6)Get Adobe Flash running on Windows Phone 7 ASAP – Flash  has 3 big benefits.  Hundreds of thousands of games and apps become nearly instantly available; filling in the big app void with Apple. It also has the possibility of discrediting Apple  and Android if Windows Phone 7 runs  Flash faster  than Android and much better than “Mr. Innovations” Steve Jobs ever gave credit for. Finally, it shores up the IE7 based browser on Windows Phone 7 which will be the worst of the mobile browsers.
7)Up the on-board CPU and memory – Microsoft is famous for winning by using the next-gen  hardware upgrades. Follow the old playbook; speaking of which RIM is doing that to iPad and Android tablets with its RIM Playbook using  dual core chips. Do the same.
8)Tethering and Syncing are the near-futures in Mobile – be there with some of that capability from Ford Sync or Microsoft Research and match/beat Android/Apple feature sets.
9)Offer a good deal with broadband providers – again, do this on a short term, get acquainted basis of a half year or so. Just make sure that the sales numbers for 4Q2010 are very competitive.
10)Integrate, integrate, integrate – make the Windows Phone 7 devices the remote or portal  to the Cloud, Exchange, Office, Zune, Xbox, Sharepoint, SQLServer etc. And surprise people with connections to 3rd party services like Amazon EC2,  Lotus Notes,  and others. Become the point of integration for Web, Cloud, personal computing.

In sum, Microsoft has a number of options available  to avoid what appears to be inevitable – a  trainwreck with Windows Phone 7.  But it is  tightrope walking whose skills may have atrophied because  Microsoft has not had to do so  in 20 years – not since the Windows 3.0 days.  Steve and company may have simply forgotten why as much as how.

1 thought on “How Redmond Can Avoid A Windows Phone 7 Trainwreck”

  1. I would say to little to late.

    WP7 will slowly fail sence Andriod and Apple are simply to good to try and compete with at this stage.

    MS should put their money into other things as they have lost the mobile race and if there not fast enough the CLOUD will eat them alive to in 3-5 years time ;-)

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