At the start of this decade, Microsoft was on the defensive—beset on all
sides by anti-trust suits and costly litigation, and viewed by many in the technology
industry as a monopolist and market bully. How was it going to survive and succeed in the
emerging new era of "open innovation," where collaboration and cooperation
between firms, rather than market conquest, would be the keystones of success?
This was the challenge facing Microsoft founder and Chairman Bill Gates. But "like
Cortez burning his ships at the shores of the New World," Gates decided to embrace
the change that was needed. He recruited Marshall Phelps—the legendary
"godfather" of intellectual property who had turned IBM’s IP portfolio into a
$2 billion-a-year gold mine—out of retirement and into the cauldron of controversy that
was Microsoft. Only this time Phelps’ mission was infinitely more challenging than
simply making money from IP. It was to help reform Microsoft’s "man the
barricades" culture, encourage the company to abandon its fortress mentality around
its technology and share it with others for mutual benefit, and use intellectual property
not as a weapon of competitive warfare but as a bridge to collaboration with other firms
instead.
Here, for the first time (and 500 collaboration deals later), is the inside story of
what one analyst has called "the biggest change Microsoft has undergone since it
became a multinational company."
In this book, authors Marshall Phelps and David Kline take the reader inside
the dramatic struggle within Microsoft to find a new direction. They offer an
extraordinary behind-the-scenes view of the high-level deliberations of the company’s
senior-most executives, the internal debates and conflicts among executives and
rank-and-file employees alike over the company’s new collaborative direction, and the
company’s controversial top-secret partnership building efforts with major open source
companies and others around the world. Nothing was held back from this book save for
information specifically prohibited from disclosure by confidentiality agreements that
Microsoft signed with other companies. Indeed, the degree of access to Microsoft’s inner
workings granted to the authors—and the honest self-criticism offered by Microsoft
leaders and employees alike—was unprecedented in the company’s 34-year history.
There are lessons in this book for executives in every industry—most especially on
the role that intellectual property can play in liberating previously untapped value in a
company and opening up powerful new business opportunities in today’s era of "open
innovation." Here is a powerful inside account of the dawn of a new era at what is
arguably the most powerful technology company on earth.
Table of Contents
About the Authors.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
Chapter 1 The Collaboration Imperative.
Chapter 2 Like Cortez Burning His Ships.
Chapter 3 Money Isn’t Money Anymore.
Chapter 4 A Very Secret Mission.
Chapter 5 Leadership Starts at the Top.
Chapter 6 The Road Ahead (with Apologies to Bill Gates).
Index.
186 pages, Hardcover