Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)

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People
Financials

Company Information

Steven A. Ballmer, CEO/Director

One Microsoft Way

Redmond, WA 98052-6399

US Map it

Phone: (425) 882-8080

Fax: (425) 936-7329

www.microsoft.com

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Microsoft

William H. Gates, III
Industry:
Technology
Biography:
William H. Gates III, 51, a co-founder of Microsoft, has served as Chairman since our incorporation in 1981. Mr. Gates served … View More
Paul G. Allen
Industry:
Media and Publishing
Biography:
Paul G. Allen, 55, has been Chairman of Charter's board of directors since July 1999, and Chairman of the board of directors … View More
WHERE THEY CAME FROM
Microsoft didn’t begin, as the tech-startup stereotype goes, in a garage. Instead, it bloomed in the desert. In 1975 childhood pals Bill Gates and Paul Allen teamed up in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the home of their first customer, Micro Instrumentation & Telemetry Systems, to develop a programming language for M.I.T.S.’s Altair 8800—an early personal computer sold through Popular Electronics—and from there, Microsoft was born.

In 1980, Microsoft scored a key win by buying an operating system known as QDOS, renaming it, and licensing it to I.B.M. for an early line of PCs. The I.B.M. deal opened doors for Microsoft, which quickly turned its software into a de facto industry standard. By 1984, Bill Gates was on the cover of Time. Microsoft went public two years later.

That’s when the company really began to grow. As Windows became ubiquitous, Microsoft’s business software trounced competing products like WordPerfect and Lotus 1-2-3. In the mid-1990s, Microsoft expanded beyond software, partnering with NBC to start MSNBC and launching its MSN internet portal. By 1998, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser—packaged with its own operating system—had surpassed rival browser Netscape.

Microsoft moved into the videogame business in 2001, and today its Xbox 360 gaming console leads the market, outselling comparable machines from competitors Sony and Nintendo. In 2006, Microsoft positioned the Zune digital media player to go head-to-head with Apple’s iPod. And in January 2007, Microsoft released its long-anticipated Vista operating system after years of delays.

Microsoft’s corporate culture is nearly as famous as its products. With its sprawling 400-acre campus, Microsoft has been described as a cultlike company filled with khaki-clad developers working 24 hours a day. Microsoft has more than 71,000 employees worldwide and has been dubbed a “velvet sweatshop” by some members of the press.

WHAT THEY DO
As the world’s largest software company, Microsoft is in the videogame business, the internet-search business, the television business, the cell phone business, the automotive business—oh, and the personal computer business. Over the past three decades, the Redmond, Washington, behemoth has conquered the PC market, thanks to its Windows operating system and Office software suite, and since has moved on to attempt the same with videogames, media players, and internet applications.

WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
Microsoft has a reputation for being a bully. The company once thrived by creating a monopoly around its operating systems and software; as a result, it has faced numerous charges of unethical and uncooperative business practices.

By 1998, those practices became the subject of a major lawsuit. The U.S. Department of Justice, backed by 18 states, filed antitrust charges against Microsoft, claiming that the company stifled competition and limited consumer choice. Microsoft settled in 2001 by agreeing to end exclusive contracts with manufacturers and to allow competing software to be included with its operating systems—a move that rattled Microsoft’s stock price.

A slew of individual settlements followed: In 2003, Microsoft paid AOL Time Warner (Netscape’s owner) $750 million to settle a private antitrust lawsuit, while in the same year, Sun Microsystems netted $1.6 billion in its patent and antitrust lawsuit settlements.

WHAT’S NEXT
Microsoft is on a quest to dominate all things digital. Analysts have warned that its bread and butter—packaged software—is dying out and being replaced by subscription-based services and Web applications. And while the company relies on Windows and Office software for most of its profits, Microsoft is pushing firmly into growing markets for entertainment and Web services—the territory of rivals Apple and Google. —Clancy Nolan

Portfolio Articles
  • Microsoft Adds More Perks to Live Search
    Users of Microsoft's Live Search, the third most popular search engine on the internet, can now win various prizes as part of an incentives package to attract new users.
    Oct 01 2008
  • Google to Microsoft: Game On
    The Chrome browser is nothing. Microsoft should really worry about Windows—Google's true target.
    Sep 02 2008
  • The Tech Two-Step
    Jerry Yang is the latest to join a growing cadre of dance-prone tech C.E.O.'s.
    Aug 07 2008
  • Yaho-hum
    It will take more than this to keep Yahoo's new board members happy. Meanwhile, investors still hang onto Microsoft hope.
    Jul 22 2008
  • Rescue Memo: Jerry Yang
    Grab Ballmer at Sun Valley and sell for $33 a share.
    Jul 09 2008

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Employees

Number of Employees: 91,000
Revenue per Employee: $732,886

Top Executives

Raymond E. Ozzie, Other Executive Officer
Robert J. (Robbie) Bach, Divisional President
Frank H. Brod, Divisional Vice President/Chief Accounting Officer

Bradford L. Smith, Senior VP/Secretary/General Counsel/Other Executive Officer
Stephen A. Elop, President, Divisional

Craig J. Mundie, Other Executive Officer
Christopher P. Liddell, CFO/Senior VP
Lisa E. Brummel, Divisional Senior VP

Robert L. Muglia, Senior VP, Divisional

Board of Directors

William H. Gates, III, Founder/Chairman of the Board/Director
Reed Hastings, Director

Bradford L. Smith, Senior VP/Secretary/General Counsel/Other Executive Officer
Dina Dublon, Director

Helmut Panke, Director
Jon A. Shirley, Director
David F. Marquardt, Director

Charles H. Noski, Director

Financials

Quarterly
Annual

Income Statement 07/2008 04/2008 01/2008 10/2007
Sales 2.26 Bil. 1.98 Bil. 3.06 Bil. 2.24 Bil.
Gross Operating Profit 13.58 Bil. 12.47 Bil. 13.3 Bil. 11.52 Bil.
Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) 7.29 Bil. 4.94 Bil. 6.96 Bil. 6.35 Bil.
Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) 6.69 Bil. 4.81 Bil. 6.82 Bil. 6.22 Bil.
Total Net Income 4.3 Bil. 4.39 Bil. 4.71 Bil. 4.29 Bil.
Basic EPS, Total 0.46 0.47 0.5 0.46
Diluted EPS, Total 0.46 0.47 0.5 0.45

BALANCE STATEMENT 07/2008 04/2008 01/2008 10/2007
Cash and Equivalents 10.34 Bil. 11.82 Bil. 7.46 Bil. 6.64 Bil.
Total Assets 43.24 Bil. 41.49 Bil. 37.78 Bil. 35.85 Bil.
Total Liabilities 29.89 Bil. 27.03 Bil. 22.06 Bil. 22.74 Bil.
Total Capitalization 1.9 Bil. 37.55 Bil. 34.43 Bil. 32.14 Bil.

Cash Flow 07/2008 04/2008 01/2008 10/2007
Net Cash From Continuing Operations 21.61 Bil. 17.53 Bil. 10.44 Bil. 5.88 Bil.
Net Cash From Investing Activities -4.59 Bil. -4.08 Bil. -3.31 Bil. -2.26 Bil.
Net Cash From Financing Activities -12.93 Bil. -7.86 Bil. -5.88 Bil. -3.15 Bil.
Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents 4.23 Bil. 5.71 Bil. 1.35 Bil. 526 Mil.

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Income Statement 2008 2007 2006 2005
Sales 9.54 Bil. 9.25 Bil. 6.75 Bil. 5.34 Bil.
Gross Operating Profit 50.88 Bil. 41.87 Bil. 37.54 Bil. 34.44 Bil.
Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) 50.88 Bil. 19.96 Bil. 17.38 Bil. 15.42 Bil.
Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) 48.82 Bil. 20.1 Bil. 18.26 Bil. 16.63 Bil.
Total Net Income 17.68 Bil. 14.06 Bil. 12.6 Bil. 12.25 Bil.
Basic EPS, Total 1.9 1.44 1.21 1.13
Diluted EPS, Total 1.87 1.42 1.2 1.12

BALANCE STATEMENT 2008 2007 2006 2005
Cash and Equivalents 10.34 Bil. 6.11 Bil. 6.71 Bil. 4.85 Bil.
Total Assets 43.24 Bil. 40.17 Bil. 49.01 Bil. 48.74 Bil.
Total Liabilities 29.89 Bil. 23.75 Bil. 22.44 Bil. 16.88 Bil.
Total Capitalization 1.9 Bil. 31.1 Bil. 40.1 Bil. 48.12 Bil.

Cash Flow 2008 2007 2006 2005
Net Cash From Continuing Operations 21.61 Bil. 17.8 Bil. 14.4 Bil. 16.6 Bil.
Net Cash From Investing Activities -4.59 Bil. 6.09 Bil. 8 Bil. 15.03 Bil.
Net Cash From Financing Activities -12.93 Bil. -24.54 Bil. -20.56 Bil. -41.08 Bil.
Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents 4.23 Bil. -603 Mil. 1.86 Bil. -9.45 Bil.

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