Microsoft and Nokia are working together to put a version of Microsoft's
Office productivity applications on Nokia handsets, the companies said
Wednesday.
Microsoft Business Division President Stephen Elop and Nokia Executive Vice
President for Devices Kai Oistamo unveiled the alliance -- which should give
Microsoft leverage against Google and others that are attacking its Office
business with free or low-priced, Web-based productivity applications -- in a
teleconference.
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Under the terms of the agreement, the two companies will begin working together
immediately to design, develop and market productivity applications for mobile
professionals, bringing an application called Microsoft Office Mobile to Nokia's
Symbian devices, they said in a press statement. They will also do the same for
other Microsoft communications, collaboration and device-management software.
The applications will be available first on Nokia's Eseries phones, which are
optimized for the business market, but eventually will extend to other Nokia
handsets. Microsoft and Nokia also will jointly market the applications to
business customers and carriers, they said.
The Microsoft-Nokia deal brings two competitors together. Microsoft's Windows
Mobile platform for handsets competes with Symbian, the OS for most Nokia
phones. However, Windows Mobile has never really found solid footing in the
mobile market, while Nokia's Symbian is still the market share leader for
midrange handsets, said Directions on Microsoft analyst Matt Rosoff.
Putting Office applications on Nokia handsets is a savvy business move for
Microsoft, he said, and will also help both companies compete against their
mutual rivals Apple and Research in Motion, which have made life difficult for
both companies in the mobile market. Apple's iPhone remains primarily a consumer
phenomenon, while Research in Motion's Blackberry OS is extremely popular with
business users.
Elop and Oistamo said that the partnership is based on Microsoft's and Nokia's
common goal to make mobile workers more effective as mobile devices become more
evolved and powerful. "This partnership was founded with the customer in mind
and understanding that mobile workers of the future will need to get more out of
their mobile phones," Oistamo said.
"This whole relationship is about expanding ... from a business-productivity
perspective," Elop said. "We need to take the broad productivity experiences and
put them in the hands of as many people as possible."
The deal does not mean that Microsoft is conceding to Nokia's Symbian as the
dominant OS for smartphones, Elop said. Oistamo said that Nokia has no plans to
offer Windows Mobile on its own handsets.
Both said the two companies will remain fierce mobile competitors even as they
collaborate to bring Office to more mobile workers. Microsoft already offers
Office Mobile on Windows Mobile handsets and plans to put a new version of the
application on mobile phones next year.
"We both believe strongly in our respective strategies but we also believe in
our new alliance," Elop said.
The first application to appear on Nokia phones will be Microsoft Office
Communicator, the company's instant messaging and Web presence client for
business users, Oistamo said. This will happen sometime next year, he said, with
other applications to follow.
Next to its Windows OS business, Microsoft's Office business is the primary
source of the company's revenue. However, its Office consumer business<