Page 12 - Forbes - Asia (March 2020)
P. 12
TECH CONNECTOR
By Rich Karlgaard
Cloud Pleaser
10
Microsoft is on a monster win streak. erything—reinventing their business
Its stock price, which had barely risen Scott Guthrie processes and revenue models because
above its 2000 peak prior to 2017, has of that change.”
now risen almost threefold in the past
three years. On any given day, Micro- On Asia’s potential:
soft or Apple stands as the world’s “Asia and India are among our fast-
most-valued company, at close to a est-growing regions for Azure. This
trillion-and-a-half dollars. growth comes from large companies,
Behind the surge is CEO Satya like LG and Samsung, and from newer
Nadella’s transformative bet on cloud companies like Flipkart, Ola Cab and
computing, which he announced upon Jio Phones in India. Singapore is one
taking the post in 2014. The risk was of our largest regions of Azure, what
huge, since Microsoft’s cloud comput- we call a hub region. Similarly, if you
ing engine, Azure, was then far behind look at Hong Kong and Australia and
cloud pioneer and leader Amazon the customers across Malaysia, Indo-
Web Services (AWS), IBM and oth- nesia, Vietnam, and Thailand, those
ers. Nadella gave his old job, executive are all big markets for us. We see tre-
vice president of Microsoft Cloud+AI mendous growth.”
Group, to Microsoft executive Scott Guthrie and asked
Guthrie to make Azure competitive with giant AWS. Guth- On Microsoft’s competitive advantage:
rie has succeeded. Microsoft’s cloud business reported $12 “Microsoft has 56 Azure regions around the world and
billion in sales in 2019, with Azure growing 62% in the lat- more cloud regions in Asia than any other cloud provider.
est quarter. Forbes has called Guthrie arguably the second So, for issues such as data residency and very local com-
most-powerful executive at Microsoft after Nadella. pliance certifications, we can work in countries that other
In late January I sat down with Guthrie, wearing his cloud vendors can’t. All of that makes a big difference to
trademark red polo shirt and jeans, at Microsoft headquar- companies as they look to expand and transform their
ters in Redmond, Washington. Below are edited highlights business.”
of Guthrie’s remarks.
On the cloud as an equalizer:
On the shift to cloud computing: “We see great companies in these regions. They aspire to
“We made a pivot six years ago, when Satya became CEO, to be global companies and reach every market around the
be a cloud-first company. Our goal was to accelerate digital world. The cloud is a great equalizer. It lets a company in
transformation for our customers. Give them cloud as a way any country expand outside their region. An Azure cus-
to let them advance their business and add more tech inten- tomer in Jakarta, Singapore or Bangalore can, with a push
sity to their organization.” of a button, deploy their products and services in Europe.
North America, the Middle East or Africa while meeting
On the cloud’s future: local regulations and compliance.”
“We see a faster rate of evolution in the digital space. Cloud
lets us scale up at the pace of Moore’s Law, but also scale out Rich Karlgaard is editor at large at Forbes.
rapidly and use less infrastructure. The physical world is As an author and global futurist, he has
going digital. Everything has an IP address. Everything will published several books, the latest of
which is Late Bloomers, a groundbreaking
be connected at 5G speed. The ability to link physical and exploration of what it means to be a late STEPHEN LAM/GETTY IMAGES
digital processes transforms the amount of data you can bloomer in a culture obsessed with SAT
scores and early success. For his past
collect—and the insights you will have. We see every busi-
columns and blogs visit our website at
ness out there—retail, logistics, finance, manufacturing, ev- www.forbes.com/sites/richkarlgaard.
F ORBES A SIA MAR CH 2020

