Welcome to the Room: A lesson in leadership by Satya Nadella
22 points - last Monday at 8:17 PM
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This is the same guy that shoved AI down the throats of millions of Windows users that forced me to just turn off Windows updates and add bazzite in dual boot.
I remember a long time ago I was talking to an executive that worked at a startup that was eventually acquired by Cisco. After the acquisition, the executive team got coaches to train them to be "inspirational" leaders. One thing that was common was adding a quote from say Marcus Arelius in the signature of their emails to make them sound wiser.
We need to stop this hero worship. Microsoft built a moat, and capitalized on it. They used their connections to block others from coming into the fray.
I don't care what their theory of success is, their definition is cancerous; a malignant one.
“Don’t come whining that you don’t have the resources you need. We’ve done our homework. We’ve evaluated the portfolio, considered the opportunities and allocated our available resources to those opportunities. That is what you have to work with.”
Right out of the gate they’re telling you that your judgment is irrelevant to the scope of the problem. Immediately the chances of success are reduced quite a bit because the SME is not trusted to help craft the terms of engagement. If you aren’t at the table to help draft the terms of engagement, to help define the scope and to help define the resources needed, you’re always going to be working from someone else’s plan. Success is defined by not by your ability to execute, but someone else’s ability to plan. They’re telling you that you may be the SME, but they’re the ones who will be making the judgement calls. Politics has risen above engineering and above business strategy.
“You only have 2 controls: 1) The clarity, culture, and energy you give your teams ; and 2) Resource allocation .”
Except we’ve determined you don’t get much of a say in resource allocation, they’ve allocated the resources you get. If you determine the way to win with the plan you were given is to change that, you have to convince other people why their planning was wrong, and that’s rarely easy.
And you, as a leader, have far more than “clarity, culture, and energy”, too.
This shows that some of the major flaws that drove me out of a cushy role in MS in 2004 are still there today. I think Nadella is a better leader than Ballmer in knowing how to respond to markets, but this speech explains to me with crystal clarity why the AI push has gone so poorly. They think they can still dictate the terms of engagement with the market.
Today? All anybody except for Microsoft’s C suite execs want Copilot to do is turn itself off.
He’s an idiot. Ballmer 2.0, except even Ballmer got some cloud stuff right.
I can't believe anyone actually wrote this.
But this only serves to reduce my confidence that much more in the ELTs which have sired the modern incoherent shiny-object-obsessed ecosystem that is Windows and MS at large.
Like this was some deep insightful journey and not your entirely typical cheerleader corpo-speak.
Have you seen the recent windows update bugs, the enshitification of office, recall, bing, etc..
I don't know who else to blame but Nadella for all of that.
Seems more like the guy would be a great politician, great speech to inspire fresh employee, but delivers nothing in reality.
Literally the only metric that’s been good has been market cap, but that will not last forever if they continue with their current trajectory.
That is not someone you should not take advice from.
Revolting sycophancy is not a good sign for the leadership culture.
Satya has also completely fucked Windows and has been unable/unwilling/uninterested in making it a product that people love. Satya has led to people hating Windows.
His ass was a bit hairy, but damn, it was sweet. /s