Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella Just Rejected Steve Ballmer's Big Plan
Steve Ballmer
Steve Ballmer

AP

Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer

When Satya Nadella took over as Microsoft CEO in February, he inherited a company in the middle of huge transition.

Former CEO Steve Ballmer had a vision for Microsoft that involved chasing Apple's business model.

Ballmer had declared Microsoft to be a "devices and services" company (devices came first).

On Wednesday, Nadella firmly rejected that direction.

Nadella sent out a novella-size email to his employees (nearly 3,200 words!) that described a new direction: to become a "productivity and platforms" company.

Instead of becoming another Apple — a company bent on controlling every part of the tech it sells — he's now looking to become another Google — a company that builds devices as state-of-the-art examples with the real goal of selling more cloud services.

To recap: In 2012, Ballmer abandoned one of Microsoft's core philosophies and announced that Microsoft would be building its own PC, the Surface. That for the first time put Microsoft in direct competition with its PC partners. In the months that followed, he reorganized the company's employees and spent $7.2 billion to acquire the device manufacturing business of Nokia (its second-largest acquisition ever, after his $8.5 billion purchase of Skype).

On Wednesday, to mark the start of Microsoft's fiscal 2015 year, Nadella told employees that he was ditching the "devices and services" mantra:

More recently, we have described ourselves as a "devices and services" company. While the devices and services description was helpful in starting our transformation, we now need to hone in on our unique strategy.

Instead "productivity" and cloud will become king:

We will reinvent productivity to empower every person and every organization on the planet to do more and achieve more. ...

Our cloud OS represents the largest opportunity given we are working from a position of strength.

Microsoft has been struggling to find a new mission for itself since it achieved its initial one, which was "putting a PC on every desk and in every home."

Satya Nadella Microsoft
Satya Nadella Microsoft

Microsoft

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella

Nadella's new mission is just as bold: to "obsess over reinventing productivity and platforms," but it's also squishier and harder to understand.

He explains that he wants Microsoft to focus on the person using the device, not on the company's goal of locking people into using Microsoft products.

He sees the company building the technology like the movie "Her" where computers intelligently do tasks for us, saving us time.

We will reinvent productivity for people who are swimming in a growing sea of devices, apps, data and social networks. They will ask questions naturally and have them answered with insight from Power Q&A. They will conquer language barriers and change the world with Skype translator.