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  • Microsoft faces an identity crisis — Satya Nadella fears AI could run the company and products like Office into the ground

    Karlston

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    • 2 comments
    • 4.2k views
    • 4 minutes

    Microsoft's CEO fears AI could threaten the company's legacy and even potentially render it obsolete.

    Last month, Microsoft reached a market capitalization of $4 trillion predominantly due to its multibillion-dollar investment in generative AI. Part of the tech giant's success can also be attributed to co-founder and billionaire Bill Gates' efforts in software development. While the company has greatly benefitted from its software development efforts, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella recently highlighted his plans to move on beyond this strategy:

     

    "When Bill founded Microsoft, he envisioned not just a software company, but a software factory, unconstrained by any single product or category. That idea has guided us for decades. But today, it's no longer enough."

     

    Instead, the executive wants the company to shift focus to security, quality, and AI transformation as its core business priorities. Security doesn't come as a surprise, as the company has been increasing its efforts on this front for a while now, including holding top Microsoft executives accountable for cybersecurity by tying a section of their compensation packages to meeting the set security thresholds.

    The AI bubble could be a pitfall for Microsoft

    The Microsoft logo displayed on a smartphone with the OpenAI logo in the background.

    Microsoft continues plunging billions into AI despite the threat it poses to its existence.

    (Image credit: Getty Images | CFOTO)

     

    Over the past few years, Microsoft has been hit by major layoffs, with the most recent one impacting over 9,000 workers. This is despite Microsoft sharing its impressive earnings report for the quarter ending June 30, 2025, with $76.4 billion in revenue, which was up 18% year-over-year. The company attributed its massive gains to its cloud and AI business.

     

    The layoffs have led to a shift in the company's culture, raising concerns among staffers, some under constant fear of being fired or replaced using AI as the company plunges billions into the technology (via The Verge).

     

    Satya Nadella is under pressure to remain relevant in the AI space, as the goalposts in the ever-evolving industry keep shifting amid massive layoffs. However, Microsoft's partnership with OpenAI is seemingly fraying, especially after the latter announced its $500 billion Stargate project designed to facilitate the construction of data centers across the United States to support its AI advances.

     

    This prompted Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff to claim that Microsoft won't use OpenAI's technology in the future. Microsoft's AI CEO, Mustafa Suleyman, confirmed that the company is developing off-frontier models, potentially suggesting that it's emancipating itself from an overdependence on OpenAI amid rising tension over for-profit evolution plans.

     

    While Microsoft has invested up to $80 billion to build data centers this year, CEO Satya Nadella is seemingly concerned about the possibility of Microsoft becoming obsolete as it chases down the AI hype, something that keeps the executive up at night.

     

    During a recent company town hall meeting, the executive revealed that he was "haunted" by the story of Digital Equipment Corporation. For context, the computer company enjoyed significant success in developing low-cost computers. However, it seemingly became obsolete as companies like IBM swiftly rose to the top, avoiding misplaced strategies in the early 1970s.

     

    Perhaps more interestingly, the executive revealed that some of the employees who were laid off from Digital Equipment Corporation were hired by Microsoft and helped contribute to the development of Windows NT, which was launched in 1993.

     

    Microsoft is in the crosshairs in the age of AI, struggling to maintain its relevance as arguably one of the most profitable companies in the world right now. Even Elon Musk is working toward giving Microsoft a run for its money with an AI simulation called "Macrohard," which will solely focus on developing software.

     

    It remains unclear whether Elon Musk will be able to develop an iteration that attempts to compete with products like Microsoft Office. However, if AI unlocks this feat and renders some of these products obsolete, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says that he is ready to cut his losses:

     

    "All the categories that we may have even loved for 40 years may not matter. Us as a company, us as leaders, knowing that we are really only going to be valuable going forward if we build what’s secular in terms of the expectation, instead of being in love with whatever we’ve built in the past.”

     

    Do you think Microsoft should stick to its guns and continue chasing the ever-elusive AI hype or stick to what it does best? Share your thoughts with me in the comments.

     

    Source


    Hope you enjoyed this news post. Feedback welcome.

    Posted Wednesday 24 September 2025 at 5:15 am AEST (my time).

    News posts... 2023: 5,800+ | 2024: 5,700+ | 2025 (till end of August): 4,048

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    On 9/23/2025 at 3:18 PM, Karlston said:

    He's just worried about being sacked by AI.

     

    I'm sorry Satya, I'm afraid you can't work here anymore...

    Microsoft CoPilot

    You will be removed from your service at Microsoft WITH CAUSE and sent back to Hyperabad on the cheapest possible flight...

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