• subscribe
July 29, 2008 12:00 AM

Microsoft Lashes Out at 'Schizophrenic' Forrester Analysts

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #99882

Microsoft this week lashed out at the "schizophrenic" analysts at Forrester, calling them out on the incongruity of alternatively recommending and then panning Windows Vista in two different and recently released reports. In a post to the Windows Vista Blog, Microsoft representative Chris Flores wrote that his company was disappointed that Forrester was more interested in "making sensationalist statements rather than offering a thoughtful industry perspective."

In April, a Forrester report recommended that "most clients start the migration to Windows Vista sooner rather than later," refuting the widely-accepted if uneducated opinion that Vista is "a risky bet." Not so, the report claims. "As businesses of all regions, sizes, and industries struggle with how to settle this debate, Forrester sees five business reasons for your company to start its migration to Windows Vista soon. ... Returns from early adopters have been impressive."

The more recent Forrester report, issued last week, claims however that Windows Vista has been "rejected" by enterprises and that customers should consider waiting for Windows 7, which is due in 2010. Flores says that Microsoft, "millions of [its] enterprise customers," and "some pesky statistics" don't agree with that assessment. He also calls out the fact that "even Forrester doesn't agree with Forrester," referring to the dueling reports.

More important, perhaps, the early Forrester report showed that Windows Vista adoption was proceeding as fast or faster than did XP adoption at the same time in that product's life cycle. This basic truth undermines the notion that businesses are rejecting Vista. "We've sold 180 million copies of Windows Vista so far, 40 million of which were in the last quarter alone," Flores noted. "There are thousands of enterprise customers deploying Windows Vista by the thousands of seats on a weekly basis, including heavy hitters like The United States Air Force, PPG Industries, and Cerner."

Flores didn't pull any punches in describing the true aim of the more recent Forrester report, an opinion I happen to agree with fully. "There's a mountain of evidence to refute this report, including multiple reports from Forrester and other top-tier analysts," he wrote. "This [more recent report] appears to be more focused on making sensationalist statements, rather than offering a thoughtful industry perspective, based on conversations with IT operations professionals or deep knowledge of enterprise deployment cycles. How is this useful guidance to customers? It's disappointing to see such a respected organization like Forrester take this approach."

Yes it is.



ARTICLE TOOLS

Comments
  • Chris
    4 years ago
    Jul 31, 2008

    It's good to see we have a new troll. I'd been missing the likes of bonch - glad he returned.

    In the mean time, the articles about companies not upgrading to Vista is recycled - we had the exact same thing for Windows XP, as well as Windows 2000 and I'm willing to bet Windows NT 4. People making a story about Intel not upgrading is my favorite - the *exact same* story came out when XP shipped.

    But I guess I'm just ignorant, I have my fingers in my ears, I'm not listening to the facts, and Microsoft is dying.

  • ken
    4 years ago
    Jul 31, 2008

    The only real problems this Vista 64-bit box has experienced is with pre-existing 3rd party programs or hardware which did not interface well (or at all) with Vista 64-bit. The "fix" was to obtain those programs and hardware which did interface with Vista. MS Office 2007 Suite interfaces correctly. Printers interfaced. Older scanners didn't so had to get updated ones, which was OK because the new ones have medium-format scanning and better resolution. Nephew has a company which needed to upgrade the server and three dozen desktops, his IT Pro recommended Vista. Nephew called to ask what I thought. I asked his reason for upgrading, he said security was number one but "upgrading" was close behind. I told him if his IT Pro had MS credentials then go for it but be ready for serious desktop clients learning curve and check the compatability list for peripherals and programs before changing the system. They upgraded to Vista, bit the bullet on a few peripherals but their prior Office Suite still works. The plus is they put a noose around computer security which was a premium item for them. Anyway, it seems to me most of the problems with Vista (mine also) have been with older peripheral and program compatability.
    Vista 64-bit works fine on this box, including MS Office 2007. And if I need to use some old program I prefer which isn't available for Vista, then I just boot into W2GPro. Which is not often anymore.
    Just my 2cw. ;-)

  • sx4sport@hotmail.com
    4 years ago
    Jul 31, 2008

    you are right - can you get Win98 to run on my new puter - I want to go back now!

    I think I will contact King Research and see why they aren't spiffing us for these fake surveys...

    Oh great, now I have that darn la la la song in my head again...

    if only Itunes ran on Windoze 98 so I could download that hot new FIEST track...

  • Bill
    4 years ago
    Jul 31, 2008

    Um, most home consumers were not using Win2000, and as for businesses users there was not a clamoring for a downgrade licence to Win2000. So my point stands.

    "IT Pros don't do surveys." Wow, how can anyone refute such a detailed and well substantiated point. Good Lord, your powers of persuasiveness are overwhelming. Maybe you should contact King Research to let them know that they must have been fooled by 1162 people.

    I know ... It's tough to argue a point when you can't deal with the facts; all you can do then is to try to deny they exist.

    What's it like living with your hands over your ears going "la, la, la" all day long?

  • sx4sport@hotmail.com
    4 years ago
    Jul 30, 2008

    I too wonder why they didn't go crawling back to Win98...

    Maybe because there was something called Win2000.

    "IT Pro's" don't do surveys - unless they get free Starbucks or something.

    Start trolling again when you are old enough to get your fishing license.

You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here