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Bill Gates - global entrepreneur

Posted on 19/06/08 by Colin Gray

 

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William Henry Gates, known to his friends and the rest of us as Bill, is probably the world’s most prominent entrepreneur. From a teenager’s interest in computer programming, he founded and built Microsoft to its position of global dominance of the vast personal computer market. He is certainly one of the world’s richest individuals. Entrepreneurs, entrepreneurship and enterprise are today very fashionable topics. The self-made, intelligent and visionary individual, who sets up a business that eventually arrives on everyone’s ‘must have’ list and sees off all rivals, is now the focus of press, film and TV. Entrepreneurs are now role models. Yet, in 1955, when Bill was born in Seattle, very few people ever mentioned the word ‘entrepreneur’. Even as recently as 1975, when Bill Gates and Paul Allen founded Microsoft, calling a business person an entrepreneur was often a term of abuse in Britain, if not in the US.

Bill Gates [image © copyright BBC]
Bill Gates.
[image © copyright BBC]

However, merely being extremely rich is not the same thing as being an entrepreneur. There are plenty of people with inherited wealth who did not have to lift a finger or take a risk. The term was first used to refer to merchants and traders who were prepared to bear the risk of buying goods and services at certain (fixed) prices, to be sold elsewhere or at another time for uncertain future prices. They were people who had the skills and energy to spot opportunities in trade and to act on their judgement. In the 1920s, Joseph Schumpeter, an Austrian economist, took the view that entrepreneurs are not opportunists but are energetic and competitive people who seek to gain an edge over their rivals by creating and adopting innovations. By this, he meant not only new goods and services but also novel processes, marketing, distribution, financing and ways of doing business. Thus, ‘modern’ entrepreneurs, in contrast to ‘classic’ entrepreneurs, create their own luck and opportunities. Furthermore, they are controlled rather than unbridled risk-takers. Schumpeter, however, was also interested in the motivation of the entrepreneur, which he ascribed to three main drives – a desire for social status, the joy of creativity or a desire to conquer, win and beat rivals (what is now often called need for achievement). So, what sort of entrepreneur is Bill Gates – classic or modern?

"merely being extremely rich is not the same thing as being an entrepreneur"

Bill Gates was born in Seattle to a father who was a leading lawyer there and a mother who was part of a prominent banking family. So, young Bill had no problem with social status and the family was not short of money. However, there is evidence that Bill was driven by a joy of creativity. As a boy, he was fascinated by computers and programming. He even managed to convince his teachers to let him drop maths so that he could pursue programming. At the age of 14, Bill and his school friend, (and future Microsoft partner) Paul Allen, converted an Intel processor into a traffic counter and earned $20,000 each for themselves. Six years later, in 1975, Paul talked Bill into dropping out of Harvard and travelling halfway across the country to New Mexico, in order to develop an interpreter of the BASIC programming language for the new Altai microcomputer. This opportunity gave birth to Microsoft but was clearly driven not by a desire to beat competitors but more by a love of doing something new, with new technologies, in a new industry.

Within ten years, however, Microsoft was creating its own opportunities and was on the path to becoming the $50 billion, 80,000 employee, multinational, dominant force that it is today in computing. The big opportunity came in 1981, when IBM turned to Microsoft to produce the operating systems for its new personal computers. To meet the IBM deadline, Microsoft bought the rights to an existing system for $50,000 and adapted it into the PC-DOS. Each IBM PC sold included the Microsoft system yet Microsoft retained the rights to sell to other customers. As clones of the IBM PC began to flood the market, they too were mostly using the Microsoft disk operating system (MS-DOS). As the money poured in, Microsoft stepped up its R&D so that it soon began to lead, rather than follow, market developments. So, Bill moved from being something in between an enthusiastic hobbyist, and a classical opportunity spotting entrepreneur, into a thoroughly modern entrepreneur who savours the creating of new opportunities. Bill now clearly enjoys being a winner.

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Colin Gray

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Colin Gray is Professor of Enterprise Development at the OU Business School, where he is responsible for research and teaching in small business and entrepreneurship.

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Categories: Business Strategies, Entrepreneurs, Management Tags: bill gates, business, computer, entrepreneur, microsoft, paul allen, software, technology

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That geek was my boss: a view from inside Microsoft

Posted on 19/06/08 by Gabriel Reedy

 

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One afternoon in the late 1990s, I was sitting in traffic on the mile-long floating Lake Washington Bridge, driving back home to Seattle from my office in suburban Redmond. My flatmate and I, who shared the 12-mile commute, were talking about our respective days at the office. “Do you think,” he asked me suddenly, “that one day, we’ll be telling our kids about how we were a tiny part of one of the most revolutionary movements in American history? That one day we’ll look back and say, ‘You know, I worked at Microsoft in the late 90s’?”

There’s no doubt that it was a heady and exciting time. The Seattle area, where we lived, was home to some of the most impressive names in technology. There was Aldus (later Adobe), who revolutionized desktop publishing; Real Technologies, who created one of the first platforms for streaming audio content; Amazon, who turned the relatively new Web into a marketplace; and hundreds of others.

Bill Gates [image © copyright BBC]
Bill Gates.
[image © copyright BBC]

As a young university graduate in the mid 1990s, I began to hear rumblings about how the Internet, which at that time was still very limited in scope, was changing everything. And the west coast was the place to be. Fortunately, I had family in the Seattle area, so I packed my bags and, like generations of Americans before me, headed west.

Within days I had a job with a large software company at twice what I was making on the east coast, and within a few months I realized the reality of high-tech work in Seattle: sooner or later, almost everyone ends up working for Bill Gates. The company couldn’t grow fast enough and soaked up every talented body that came to town – from computer programmers and math geeks just out of university; to English graduates like me and many of my technical writer and editor colleagues; to people like my flatmate, who had dropped out of seminary on a summer field trip to Seattle and parlayed his technical abilities into a well-paying job formatting and producing technical manuals at Microsoft.

"known by his email alias (as was almost everyone at Microsoft), billg was always present and active in the company"

The culture of the company was exciting and new at the time, even if it has now become something of a cliché. We worked hard and it was an exciting intellectual challenge, and late nights and weekend work were common. Holidays – just two weeks per year – had to be taken around the cycle of product releases, and when things went into “ship mode,” usually about four to six months prior to releasing a product, everything in your personal life went on hold. But at the end of the cycle, once the product was released, the company always sponsored a massive party. Sometimes lasting over a few days, they consisted of everything from bouncy castles and a barbecue in the car park to weekend ski trips to Canada.

Known by his email alias (as was almost everyone at Microsoft), billg was always present and active in the company, even as it grew to upwards of 20,000 employees, and it was common to see him around campus. Occasionally, I saw him doing that same cross-lake commute, just like many of his employees. Tough and demanding, he was passionate about the company he created, and he wanted nothing less from all of us who worked for him.

In return, the perks of working for the company were second to none. The health insurance, which is a must in the US, was gold plated; the stock option grants made millionaires of thousands of early employees. Set carefully in stands of evergreens, almost every office in the campus looks out onto the beautiful scenery. And every building featured the necessities: a coffee stand and a café open from early in the morning until late in the evening, so you never need leave the campus (or your work).

When I started working at Microsoft, I was just 25 years old and the Internet revolution was just getting underway. I remember thinking, naive though it was, that it might just be the pinnacle of my working career – it may be the last place I worked. But as I sat with colleagues in the Redwest café one sunny summer afternoon, eating lunch under a section of the Berlin wall (part of the company’s permanent collection of art and historical artifacts), looking out over the evergreens to the stunning snow-capped Cascade mountains, and discussing a new feature for one of the world’s most popular software products…well, maybe I could be forgiven for getting caught up in the moment.

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Gabriel Reedy

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Gabriel Reedy is a lecturer in learning and teaching innovation in The Open University Business School. His research focuses on the social and cultural impacts of teaching and learning technologies, and he studies how technology can support professional learning.

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Categories: Business Strategies, Work, Entrepreneurs Tags: bill gates, business, computer, internet, microsoft, software, technology

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