<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Wednesday,  April 24 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Business

Microsoft sees Asia as place to grow

Amid its puzzling moves, company targets fertile fields

The Columbian
Published: June 1, 2014, 5:00pm

SINGAPORE — As Microsoft gets more aggressive in the device business, it’s making decisions that may seem perplexing.

Take its abrupt decision to hold off on selling a smaller version of its Surface tablet computer. The mini-tablet was expected to be unveiled last month, matching Microsoft’s Surface lineup to that of Apple’s iPad, but it was reportedly canceled at the last minute. The Redmond company announced the third iteration of the Surface Pro instead.

Another head-scratcher came in February, at a big wireless conference in Spain.

Among the company’s announcements was a deal to use the messaging app of BlackBerry — the ailing Canadian phone-maker — on Windows Phones.

Those who have watched Microsoft fall further and further behind Apple and Google in the device business may think the company has completely lost its way.

But the view’s very different for Cesar Cernuda, president of the company’s Asia Pacific business, selling software, services and devices in 39 countries and territories with 1 billion people.

Cernuda, 42, is an ebullient, globe-trotting Spaniard who took the Singapore job last year after leading Microsoft sales in Latin America and, earlier, its business-solutions software sales in Europe and globally.

He embodies the global reach and perspective of a company that’s looking to make up for lost ground by increasing its focus on emerging markets, where most people are just entering the smartphone era.

Cernuda also has a vantage point from which it makes perfect sense for a Redmond software company to put a Canadian messaging app onto phones developed in Finland.

Stay informed on what is happening in Clark County, WA and beyond for only
$9.99/mo

“It’s a different world — let me try to explain why,” Cernuda says, smiling and leaning forward in a corner office, high up in one of the shimmering skyscrapers lining the harbor in downtown Singapore.

Eye on Indonesia

Gesturing with hands that have shook those of a thousand government and corporate-technology buyers over the years, Cernuda points toward Indonesia, which lies just across a narrow stretch of water beyond the window.

China and India may get the most attention because they are so large, but Indonesia is expected to become the fourth-largest economy in the world by 2050, Cernuda said.

“It’s a reality to me but what is even more interesting to me is what is going to happen in the future and how they’re really using technology,” he said.

Indonesia is a young country — the average age of the population is about 28 — and enthusiastic about technology. Its people are among the world’s prolific users of social networks and for some reason they particularly like using BlackBerry’s messaging app.

Microsoft’s share of Indonesia’s smartphone market is expected to triple this year, overtaking Apple, but still remain far behind Android, according to research firm IDC. With or without the BlackBerry app.

Generous tax laws

Indonesia is just one of the countries in Cernuda’s territory, which extends from Korea to New Zealand but excludes Japan, China and India, each of which is large enough to have its own Microsoft subsidiaries.

Singapore is one of the smallest countries, but thousands of foreign companies take advantage of the prosperous city-state’s generous tax laws, business-friendly climate and intellectual-property protections to make it their Asian headquarters.

“There is always a call for a small place that has an open environment, rule of law, safety and security, a financial center where your money is safe and you are safe, and you can be sure that if you invest it, the government’s not going to take it away,” said K. Shanmugam, minister for foreign affairs and law.

Singapore is also expensive, with limited area for housing and commercial growth. But, Cernuda said, the company needs a location that’s close to customers and partners and has the best possible talent. Microsoft has about 1,000 employees in Singapore, where it opened its headquarters 10 years ago, and more than 7,000 in Cernuda’s Asia-Pacific region, where it’s been operating since 1983.

Microsoft has long and deep partnerships with companies that sell and support Microsoft software and with governments that use the company’s products. He said Microsoft has a 20 percent market share for Windows Phone in Vietnam and more than 15 percent share for Windows Phone in Thailand.

“So when you talk about brand — our brand in many of these markets — we’re positioned as quite positive because we have been really helping and embracing the country, helping them create a better country in terms of infrastructure, getting people to use IT,” he said.

Statesman, salesman

At this level Cernuda is a statesman as much as a salesman, meeting with government leaders to discuss ways to increase their citizens’ use of technology, limit theft of software and perhaps upgrade the government’s infrastructure to Microsoft’s latest platforms. He flew more than 300,000 miles last year.

During a busy stretch early this spring, Cernuda was in Brunei to sign a memorandum of understanding on privacy and security; next he was in Vietnam signing a similar pact with the finance minister; and the week after that he was in Indonesia signing an agreement on economic development and the protection of intellectual property.

This commercial diplomacy also requires Cernuda to tiptoe around regional tensions. A dramatic example came last month in Thailand, where Microsoft managed to finalize a deal with the beleaguered government to provide Office 365 to every student in the country, which was completed the day before a military coup.

Growth in the region slowed over the past year, but still outpaced the rest of the world and remains a key driver of global growth, according to the World Bank. It expects the East Asia Pacific region to account for a larger share of global output than the U.S. by 2017.

As these countries and their industries grow, they’ll spend more on technology.

Cernuda said the region is expected to spend $8.6 billion next year on cloud services, though the uptake of cloud services by companies isn’t as widespread as in the U.S.

“No, we don’t see the same cloud adoption,” Cernuda said. “However, the growth is bigger here than the growth that is happening in the U.S. right now.”

Tablets have been selling well in the Asia-Pacific region but the category’s growth has slowed as people move toward “phablets” — jumbo phones with 5- to 7-inch screens.

Loading...