Microsoft staff refer to December 2008 as “The
It’s a measure of how deep a hole Microsoft had dug itself into that the employees interviewed by Wired.com were unanimous in calling this a good thing. Even though the software titan had a head start on phone software beginning with Windows CE back in 1996, the subsequent Windows Mobile OS suffered from steep declines in market share when pitted against more user-friendly phones, like the iPhone and the Android-powered Droid.
“It was trying to put too much functionality in front of the user at one time,” said Bill Flora, a design director at Microsoft, reflecting on Windows Mobile’s mistakes. “It resulted in an experience that was a little cluttered and overwhelming for a lot of people today. It felt ‘computery.’”
An un-sexy OS didn’t bode well for Microsoft. The outdated design of Windows Mobile contributed to a stereotype that Microsoft cared little about customers and was focused only on big sales to big companies. It symbolized a software leader losing its edge.
Furthermore, Windows Mobile’s shrinkage in the market was embarrassing for a company whose CEO Steve Ballmer previously laughed at Apple’s iPhone for its lack of a keyboard and high price tag, only to admit three years later that Microsoft had fallen far behind.
“We were ahead of this game and now we find ourselves No. 5 in the market,” Ballmer said at an All Things Digital Conference. “We missed a whole cycle.”
Recognizing it needed to play serious catchup, Microsoft essentially hit CTRL+ALT+DEL on Windows Mobile, rebooting its mobile OS like a balky, old Windows PC and making a fresh start.
The company spent six weeks hatching a a plan for a Windows phone do-over, and it set a deadline of one year to build and ship a brand new OS.
The end result was Windows Phone 7, an operating system with a tiled-based user interface that looks nothing like its predecessor. The first Windows Phone 7 handsets will hit stores today in the United States.
The reset was no simple task: It involved bringing in new managers, reorganizing the Windows phone-design department and opening new test facilities dedicated to mobile hardware.
Here’s how the company did it.
Authors: Brian X. Chen