Microsoft is the iPhone 5S' biggest loser
Apple's rivals are always on edge when new iPhones are unveiled, but Tuesday's iPhone 5S event made an unlikely loser out of Microsoft.
Apple is now offering its five iWork productivity apps for free on new
iPhones and iPads -- a direct challenge to Microsoft's Office. Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500)
CEO Tim Cook said the apps in the iWork suite, which previously cost
$40, are the best-selling mobile productivity apps on any platform.
Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500),
by contrast, only recently began seriously competing in the mobile
productivity realm, despite Office's long-held reign as the king of
spreadsheets, documents and slide shows. The company finally launched Office apps for iPhone and Android phones in June.
The Office Mobile apps come with two big catches that Apple's iWork
doesn't have: Office Mobile is available only for users who subscribe to
Office 365, Microsoft's cloud-based Office service that costs $100 per
year. And the Microsoft apps don't work on tablets -- likely because
Microsoft wants to give its own struggling Surface tablet a fighting
chance.
That's not going to cut it, particularly now that iPhone users can get iWork with no price tag or other strings attached.
"It's time for Microsoft to get its head out of the sand and respond very vigorously," said Laura DiDio, principal analyst at research firm ITIC. "They need to be proactive and not reactive."
Apple iWork is the scariest foe that Microsoft Office has yet faced,
according to Zeus Kerravala, an independent analyst. Apple's offering,
which includes iPhoto and iMovie, plus three services that let users
create documents and presentations, has deeper functionality than other
popular free alternatives, including Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) Docs, Evernote and Dropbox.
To counteract the threat, Kerravala thinks Microsoft should make
full-functionality Office Mobile apps available to all Apple and Android
non-corporate users.
"If you were going to lose that person to
another platform, you're going to have trouble monetizing them anyway,"
Kerravala said. "And then you can still charge for the corporate
version of [Office] 365, which is a huge business."
Microsoft didn't comment on Apple's announcement specifically. A
spokesman said simply that the company is "seeing great adoption of
Office 365." An Apple spokesman also declined to comment.
The
software giant is still in an enviable position. Despite Microsoft's
slow transition to mobile, the Office division logged $27.4 billion in
revenue in the company's last fiscal year.
DiDio, the ITIC
analyst, credits Microsoft's customer support and reputation among IT
managers with keeping Office strong -- and those pluses could help it
fend off attacks from the likes of a free iWork suite.
No comments:
Post a Comment