馃攳
How Microsoft Saved Apple (And Why They Did It) - YouTube
Channel: Business Casual
[0]
Apple: hands down the most successful American
company.
[5]
Between the ubiquity of their devices and
the almost fanatical loyalty of their customers,
[10]
it should come as no surprise that Apple recently
became the first trillion-dollar company listed
[15]
on the American stock market.
[17]
And yet, just twenty years ago Apple was on
the verge of bankruptcy and it wasn鈥檛 Steve
[23]
Jobs that saved them, but rather their greatest
rival at the time, Microsoft.
[30]
This video is brought to you by Dashlane.
[32]
Never forget your passwords again by registering
with the link in the description.
[38]
The Apple of 1997 was a very different company.
[42]
It wasn鈥檛 selling smartphones, they weren鈥檛
even invented yet, but what they were selling
[47]
was computers.
[49]
Back then Apple was a computer company and
that was even reflected in their name, but
[53]
by all accounts it was a company in decline.
[56]
Apple鈥檚 computers were simply too expensive
to be massively popular.
[60]
They did have good margins, but their market
share was abysmal.
[64]
You see, Apple refused to license its operating
system to other companies, which had no choice
[70]
but to go to the only other player in town,
Microsoft.
[74]
Now, keep in mind back in the 1990s the vast
majority of computers were used for commercial
[80]
purposes.
[81]
Their main value was the software they had,
and if your computer didn鈥檛 have the necessary
[85]
programs developed for it, well then it was
effectively useless for big companies.
[90]
In 1997 Microsoft had a staggering 90% market
share, and unsurprisingly almost all the software
[97]
that was being developed at the time was made
for Windows.
[101]
Every software developer had to make a choice:
he could spend only as much money as necessary
[105]
to create programs for Windows, or throw almost
twice as much to also support Apple, which
[111]
had less than 10% market share.
[113]
It鈥檚 also worth noting that throughout this
period Steve Jobs wasn鈥檛 even part of the
[117]
company: the Apple board of directors had
forced him out in 1985.
[122]
But in 1997 the situation was truly desperate:
sales were declining rapidly and after a series
[129]
of unsuccessful CEOs, the Apple board actually
brought Steve back.
[134]
In February they acquired Next, the company
Steve had started after leaving Apple.
[139]
But by that point Apple鈥檚 finances were
in such bad shape that Steve Jobs didn鈥檛
[143]
actually receive cash for this purchase; instead
he received Apple shares, specifically 1.5
[149]
million of them.
[150]
But even that wasn鈥檛 enough.
[152]
By the end of July Apple had less than 90
days worth of cash left in the bank.
[157]
Apple was worth less than $3 billion and had
lost over a billion in a single year.
[162]
But then, on the 6th of August 1997, Steve
Jobs made an announcement that shocked the
[168]
world.
[169]
I'd like to announce one of our first partnerships
today, a very very meaningful one, and that
[176]
is one with Microsoft.
[181]
You probably noticed that the crowd鈥檚 response
was hesitant: they just could not comprehend
[186]
how Apple could possibly partner with their
biggest competitor, who was driving them out
[191]
of business.
[192]
As the announcement progressed, things got
worse.
[195]
Next, we have taken a look at browsers out
there and Apple has decided ... Apple has
[204]
decided to make Internet Explorer its default
browser on the Macintosh.
[216]
Since we believe in choice.
[223]
The speech was sounding like a surrender statement.
[225]
And lastly, Microsoft is making an investment
in Apple.
[229]
Microsoft is buying $150 million worth of
Apple stock at market price.
[235]
It is non-voting shares.
[243]
Notice the keyword here: non-voting.
[246]
Microsoft wasn鈥檛 trying to acquire Apple,
instead it was just funding it.
[251]
But it wasn鈥檛 just cash that Bill Gates
was offering.
[254]
The second part of this is Microsoft is committing
to release Microsoft Office on Macintosh for
[260]
the next five years.
[265]
The issue with software I mentioned earlier
that was basically bringing Apple down, was
[270]
being solved by Bill Gates single-handedly.
[273]
No one would ever purchase an Apple computer
without Microsoft Office on it and here is
[277]
Bill Gates giving it away for shares at market
price, which he could have just purchased
[282]
off of the market.
[284]
So why did Bill Gates do it?
[285]
Why save Apple on the eve of what would鈥檝e
been their death at the hands of Microsoft?
[290]
Well, as you probably guessed, Bill Gates
wasn鈥檛 doing this out of the kindness of
[294]
his heart.
[295]
In fact, back then Bill Gates had a rather
negative reputation.
[299]
He wasn鈥檛 really into philanthropy yet;
instead, he was seen as a cutthroat businessman
[305]
willing to do anything to succeed in his industry.
[308]
And by all accounts Microsoft was successful;
so successful in fact, that it was attracting
[314]
the attention of antitrust regulators.
[317]
The Department of Justice had been preparing
its case against Microsoft since 1993, and
[322]
obviously Bill didn鈥檛 want his company broken
up, so what better way to show that Microsoft
[327]
isn鈥檛 a monopoly than by literally propping
up his competition.
[332]
Less than a year after the Apple partnership,
the DOJ summoned Bill Gates for a painstaking
[337]
three-day-long deposition.
[340]
By the way, you can tell a lot about someone
based on how they act during these things.
[344]
Did you ever have any discussions with any
representative of Real Networks concerning
[355]
what products Real Networks should or should
not offer or distribute?
[365]
No.
[371]
Notice how long he takes before giving an
answer, carefully considering how his responses
[375]
could be used against him.
[377]
A program designed to assist in the performance
of a specific task, such as word processing,
[382]
accounting or inventory management.
[383]
I鈥檇 say it鈥檚 a pretty vague definition.
[385]
Is it accurate as far as it goes?
[392]
I鈥檇 say it鈥檚 vague but accurate.
[397]
Throughout the deposition he鈥檇 attack definitions
and remain as vague as possible because he
[401]
knew that by saving Apple a year earlier he
had really saved Microsoft.
[406]
The DOJ, of course, eventually gave up and
in 2001 cleared Microsoft with minimal punishments.
[413]
And as to what happened with the Apple shares
Microsoft had, well, Bill Gates got rid of
[418]
them as soon as they had served their purpose.
[421]
Once the Department of Justice had settled
with Microsoft, Bill Gates converted his preferential,
[426]
non-voting Apple shares into regular stock.
[429]
In total he ended up with 18.2 million shares
of Apple, which he sold in 2003.
[435]
Now, keep in mind this was after the dot-com
bubble had crashed and in 2003 Apple鈥檚 stock
[441]
price was still extremely low compared to
its pre-bubble heights.
[446]
So just how much money did Bill Gates miss
out on?
[448]
Well, Apple has been performing so well since
2003 that its stock has split twice in that
[455]
time, once at a 2:1 ratio in 2005 and a second
time at a 7:1 ratio in 2014.
[463]
Thus the 18.2 million shares then would be
254 million today.
[469]
As of August 2018 Apple鈥檚 stock price is
roughly $210 a piece, which would make Microsoft鈥檚
[476]
former stake be worth $53.5 billion today.
[481]
So yeah, Bill Gates might have missed out
on a few billion dollars, but hey at least
[485]
he doesn鈥檛 have to worry about remembering
all his passwords thanks to services like
[490]
Dashlane.
[491]
Dashlane makes managing passwords a breeze:
it generates strong passwords, stores them
[496]
safely across all of your devices and automatically
fills them in wherever you need them.
[502]
Dashlane is so convenient and secure that
honestly I wouldn鈥檛 be surprised if Bill
[506]
Gates himself has it installed on his computer.
[509]
The beautify of Dashlane is its versatility:
it鈥檚 available on every popular desktop
[513]
and mobile device and integrates flawlessly
with every browser.
[517]
And it鈥檚 not just a password service: it
actively protects you by offering a VPN for
[522]
every one of your devices, and it also monitors
the Dark Web to make sure your data hasn鈥檛
[527]
been leaked by hackers.
[529]
The full range of Dashlane鈥檚 service will
make your digital life much easier and much
[533]
safer, and to help you get a taste of their
amazing features, I鈥檓 giving you a free
[537]
trial of Dashlane and 10% off their premium
service if register using the link in the
[542]
description.
[543]
Anyway, thanks for watching.
[545]
Make sure to like, subscribe, leave a comment,
check out my Patreon, check out my Skillshare
[549]
class and register for Dashlane and I think
that鈥檚 it.
[553]
You鈥檒l be hearing again from me in about
two weeks, and until then, stay smart.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





