Posted on Leave a comment

What’s new in Microsoft Teams for October

Ignite was here and gone before we could blink! The cool thing, Ignite shared so many of our incredible investments, announcements and new fun features we are all extremely excited about. Please take a read, learn about new integrations for PDFs, ways to collaborate using Video and the enhancements for Frontline Workers. Take a read, leave your comments and we thank you for being as enthusiastic about the October features as we are!

Meetings

Calling

Devices

Chat and Collaboration

Power Platform and custom development

Management

Teams for Education

Frontline Workers

Government

Meetings

Assign seats in Together Mode
Together mode makes meeting participants feel more like they’re in the same room during virtual meetings. With this latest innovation, meeting organizers and presenters can now assign seats to participants in Together mode.

Assign seats in Together Mode.gif

Pop out shared content into a separate window
Previously, you could pop out individual Teams chat conversation, meeting, and calling experiences into a separate in window to help streamline the workflow. We are now bringing the ability for users to also pop out shared meeting content in a separate window so you can see both shared content and meeting participants with ease.

Pop out shared content into a separate window.png

Live Translated Captions in Teams Premium 
Live translated captions for Microsoft Teams delivers AI-powered, real-time translations from 40 spoken languages so meeting participants can read captions in their own language. This helps break down language barriers for your global meetings and calls to be productive and effortless.

Live translated captions is temporarily available for all customers. Once Teams Premium is available, each user will need a Microsoft Teams Premium license. If an organizer has Teams Premium, all meeting attendees can enjoy live translated captions. For more information, see Teams Premium add-on for Microsoft Teams.

Updated companion mode for Android users
For a better hybrid meeting experience, we have updated companion mode in Teams mobile to give in-room attendees quick access to engagement features like chat, live reactions, and Microsoft Whiteboard. We are making it easier to access meeting and device controls, like the ability to join a meeting, cast a PowerPoint, mute the room, turn room cameras on and off, and more. Here are some areas companion mode in Teams mobile makes hybrid meetings better:

  1. Users can use a single tap to join a meeting on both their device and Microsoft Teams Room.
  2. Users can easily access chat, participant list (see who’s in the meeting), live reactions, and raise hands to easily participate from the room
  3. Audio on the mobile device will automatically turn off to ensure echo doesn’t happen.

This updated companion mode was previously available in iOS and now available in Android. Learn more.

Calling

Detailed call history
Get a more comprehensive view of your call history to see how calls arrived, whether calls were transferred or forwarded, and how they were controlled once received. This detailed call history, combined with the ability to access call recordings and transcriptions from within call details, gives you the context you need to be efficient and productive.

Detailed Call History.png

Creation of Contact Groups in Calls App
Creation of Contact Groups is now available in the right rail pane of the Calls App. Users can now create new groups, and edit the membership of existing groups via the Calls App.

Creation of Contact Groups in Calls App.png

Certified Devices

Crestron Flex
Crestron Flex Displays for Microsoft Teams provide a dedicated conferencing companion for Microsoft Teams-based collaboration that gives quick access to channels, chats, files, calendars, and all other Microsoft Teams features. The ideal desktop solution for both in-office hot desks and remote home offices, the Crestron Flex Display for Microsoft Teams were designed to facilitate cleaner management of daily workflow and activity while freeing up other devices for more specialized work.

Crestron Flex.png

Sony YY2969 Earbuds
Sony’s new LinkBuds headphones improve convenience of participating in online meetings with a truly wireless audio experience. The newly developed ring driver unit features an open central diaphragm for audio transparency, enabling users to tune in to their call and direct surroundings, which is ideal for multi-tasking and on-the-go work.

Calls can be easily operated by tapping the headphones. For instance, to mute the microphone, tap the right earbud three times, a useful feature when you step away from your PC during a meeting and want to speak up in a hurry. These Microsoft Teams certified headphones also boast Teams specific features like joining a meeting, receiving calls, and raising hands for meetings in Microsoft Teams.

By connecting to your PC through the included USB transceiver and mobile phone via Bluetooth, you can seamlessly switch between your PC and phone to ensure you don’t miss anything said. For instance, users can switch their Microsoft Teams meeting from their phone to their PC without having to reconnect their LinkBuds.

Sony YY2969 Earbuds.png

Neat Frame

Neat Frame is a portable, portrait-oriented personal video device that pairs well with laptops and desktop computers. This device caters to flexible hybrid work scenarios because it can be used in various environments: at home, in the office, in focus pods, or for hot desking. Users can sign into Microsoft Teams on Neat Frame and sync their calendar, files, and chats.

Neat Frame Teams.png

Chat & Collaboration

Microsoft 365 connected templates
We are combining the best of Microsoft Teams templates with SharePoint site templates – into the same flow of creation. When you create a new team using a default template – for example the Manage a Project template, the project management channels and apps, and the connected SharePoint template gets applied automatically.

Adobe PDF experience
Tenant admins can set Adobe Acrobat as the default app in Teams admin center to view and edit PDF files in the Microsoft Teams. End-users can view, search, comment and annotate PDF files without an Adobe Acrobat subscription or an Adobe ID. This feature is in public preview.

Learn how to set up Adobe Acrobat as the default app.

Adobe.png

Suggested Replies in Group Chat
Instead of spending time typing a routine response to an incoming message, simply reply with one click by choosing a suggested response to your group chat. Suggested replies uses machine learning to generate responses that are most relevant to the conversation.

Suggested reply group chat.png

Video clip
You can now create short, lightweight, rich video clips allow you to express yourself, deliver a more personal touch and strengthen your connections. Simply record, send and view a video clip in chat. The recipient of the video clip can easily reply with a chat message or a video clip of their own. Generally available in desktop and will be in public preview in mobile by end of the year.

Delete or rename files in a channel and in your OneDrive folder in Teams
To rename or delete a file in a channel, go to the files tab and find the file you want. Then select More options (the three dots) on the file. To rename or delete a file from your OneDrive, select More at the bottom of the app, then select Files. Once you find the file you want, select the three dots and choose to rename or delete it.

Teams calendar now includes scheduling form pop-outs
In a Teams calendar, users will now be able to pop-out an existing meeting using the pop-up icon in a Teams calendar scheduling form. Users will be able to pop out the meeting and have it visible while creating a new meeting. This feature will allow users to view multiple meetings in separate windows while also being able to check their chats or edit their files without the need to switch apps.

Teams calendar now includes scheduling form pop-outs.jpg

Power Platform and custom development

ISV App Subscriptions instead of 3P app subscriptions in Teams Admin Center
Ability for Admins to view and manage in single place all third-party app subscriptions they’ve purchased from Teams Admin Center, easily adding more licenses for the purchased subscriptions, cancel, upgrade and downgrade subscriptions and access invoices.

Simplified app update experience
Users will have a clear and transparent app update experience. Users will only need to approve an update once per app, and the new version will take effect seamlessly in all their chats, channels and meetings.

Teams Platform Apps in One-on-One VOIP Calls
All the familiar functionalities of meeting apps – tabs, bots, in-meeting dialogue, and meeting stage – will be supported in Teams VOIP Calls. Users of your apps will enjoy the same familiar app experience as seen in Teams Meetings, in their Teams VOIP Calls.

Teams Platform Apps in Group VOIP Calls
All the familiar functionalities of meeting apps – tabs, bots, in-meeting dialogue, and meeting stage – will be supported in Teams VOIP Calls. Users of your apps will enjoy the same familiar app experience as seen in Teams Meetings, in their Teams VOIP Calls.

Zero install link unfurling
Users can now see a preview card when a pasted link unfurls even when they don’t have the app installed.

Management

Upgraded usage analytics for Teams administrators and users
Updates and improvements were made to Teams related usage report in the Microsoft 365 admin center (and corresponding graph APIs) to be more accurate and upgraded. We are bringing consistency across different reporting surfaces, we are updating the Teams admin center usage reports and end user analytics in Teams with same underlying data source as Microsoft 365 Admin Center Teams usage reports.

  • Individual usage metrics reported in different reports and in the end user analytics in Teams, as well as the Graph APIs for the usage data will have data consistency across Teams and M365 admin center usage reports.
  • In addition to 7/30/90 days of aggregated metrics, Teams admin center usage reports and end user analytics for teams will have additional 180 days aggregated metrics. Thus, historical usage data up to 180 days will be available for reporting.
  • Teams app usage report is updated to include more reporting metrics, data quality fixes for reported metrics and usage for Line of business applications as well. (Available only for Public/worldwide cloud customers)
  • Team App usage and Teams team usage report will be available in both Teams admin center as well as M365 admin center.
  • Teams user activity report and Team usage report is updated to include shared channel related usage metrics.

To learn more: Microsoft 365 admin center activity reports – Microsoft 365 admin | Microsoft Learn , Microsoft Teams analytics and reporting – Microsoft Teams | Microsoft Learn, View analytics for your teams (microsoft.com), Microsoft 365 usage reports in Microsoft Graph | Microsoft Learn 

Enhancement to app usage report - support for Line of Business apps
An updated version of Teams app usage report with support for Live of business apps in alignment with Teams app usage in M365 admin center. The new enhancements includes the support for usage of line of business (LoB) apps, Tenant level install trend, enhanced quality of metrics reported, tenant wide usage of Microsoft, 3P and LoB apps etc. These enhancements will help the admin measure the usage of Teams app across their organization and to categorize them.

Teams for Education

We’re showcasing one of this months Teams for Education features here but be sure to take a look at the monthly Teams for Education blog for a look at the great new updates.

Education Insights – Student Support Card
New AI-based Student Support spotlight in Education Insights helps educators better support students before they fall behind.

Frontline Workers

Approvals as a PDFs can be saved, printed and transferred
Approval creators will be able to save a completed approval request to a PDF file and have the option to print it. This feature will also allow customers to easily transfer their proof of approval as a PDF to another system or store as a file.

Approvals in integrated SharePoint Lists
List users will now be able to create and manage simple approval requests directly within integrated SharePoint Lists.

Assign Approvals to a Tag in Teams
For an approval assigned to a tag, the tag will expand and send to the correct members when the approval requestor hits submit.

Rich notes in Tasks field
Tasks will also support rich text support in the notes field, so you can include more detailed instructions with the help of rich formatting such as bold, italic, and underlined text, bulleted and number lists, and hyperlinks. Learn more about how to get started with Tasks in Teams.

Government

These features currently available to Microsoft’s commercial customers in multi-tenant cloud environments are now rolling out to our customers in US Government Community Cloud (GCC), US Government Community Cloud High (GCC-High), and/or United States Department of Defense (DoD).

Enhancement to app usage report – support for Line of Business apps
An updated version of Teams app usage report with support for Live of business apps in alignment with Teams app usage in M365 admin center. This will help admins track all app usage metrics over time.

Music on hold for Voice over IP calls, consultative transfer, and call transfer for GCCH and DOD
Music on hold is available for VoIP calls placed on hold, as well as VoIP and PSTN placed on hold for a call transfer and consultative transfer.

Live Share SDK support for meeting extensions
Live Share is a new developer capability designed to transform Teams meeting apps into collaborative multi-user experiences without writing any dedicated back-end code. Live Share SDK support for meeting extensions enables general-purpose collaboration features, turn-key media synchronization to co-watch videos in meetings, and inking, cursors & annotations.

Text prediction for Teams mobile in GCC-High and DoD
When you compose or reply to a message in Teams, Editor Text Predictions anticipates your writing and suggests a suitable word or phrase inline. This saves time and helps you reduce typos.

Connectors in GCC
Teams Connectors, which support webhook integrations, will be made available in GCC.

Firefox Meeting Support for Outgoing Screen Sharing
Extend outgoing screen sharing capabilities for Teams Meetings from the Firefox browser.

Updated companion mode for Android users for GCC, GCC-High and DoD
For a better hybrid meeting experience, we have updated companion mode in Teams mobile to give in-room attendees quick access to engagement features like chat, live reactions, and Microsoft Whiteboard. We are making it easier to access meeting and device controls, like the ability to join a meeting, cast a PowerPoint, mute the room, turn room cameras on and off, and more. Here are some areas companion mode in Teams mobile makes hybrid meetings better:

  1. Users can use a single tap to join a meeting on both their device and Microsoft Teams Room.
  2. Users can easily access chat, participant list (see who’s in the meeting), live reactions, and raise hands to easily participate from the room
  3. Audio on the mobile device will automatically turn off to ensure echo doesn’t happen.

This updated companion mode was previously available in iOS and now available in Android.

Posted on Leave a comment

Reducing costs with fleet route optimization: How Bing Maps dynamic delivery optimization can help

Between rising fuel prices and inefficient fleet routing solutions, logistics providers and small businesses tend to lose out on increasing amounts of revenue as they try to scale up.

The right fleet route optimization API allows businesses to achieve more while driving down operating costs with tailored solutions.

Here’s how Bing Maps API’s dynamic delivery route optimization can help your business thrive in a challenging market.

Act fast with fleet tracking

Accurate tracking is a must-have for a fleet of any size, whether it’s for a customer fulfillment company or a small business operating in a limited area. The Fleet Tracker App can significantly reduce costs through:

  • Geofencing: Improves estimated delivery times with real-time tracking. For example, you could set up alerts that automatically go off when an agent enters a delivery zone. This reduces the chance of an overlap where two agents are operating in the same area.

  • Improved Service: A comprehensive fleet tracking solution doesn’t just optimize routes, it also improves the overall customer experience. Managers don’t have to manually keep in touch with each agent to determine their location, and customers can instantly access their location through an app. A customer-centric experience gives them a reason to keep coming back and boosts trust.

  • Multi-device Support: A tracking solution has to be functional on the road across multiple devices for operators to reliably optimize delivery routes. Developers can easily incorporate fleet tracking features in a device of their choice, whether that’s iOS, Android, or a Windows-based device.

  • Extensibility: The Fleet Tracker APP seamlessly integrates with your existing backend data and apps for seamless fleet route optimization. All of the source code is provided on GitHub, so businesses can always customize the tracking solution to meet their needs and even add new features.

These dynamic route optimization features are made possible by Bing Maps API’s extensive list of features. Developers can access crucial features like routing, batch geocoding, and customizable map styles right out of the box.

The comprehensive feature set of this API further drives down costs by being open source. Businesses don’t have to subscribe to multiple services because the Fleet Tracker API can offer a custom solution from the get-go.

the reporting interface of a fleet route optimization app

The utility of fleet tracking isn’t just limited to short-term route optimizations. A detailed reporting interface allows businesses to reduce their costs by tracking a range of important metrics. These include: total time and distance traveled by each agent, average trip durations, geofences triggered per day, and more. Operators will find it much easier to optimize delivery routes with an eye on the bigger picture.

Routes built for your fleet

Traveling hundreds of miles only to have to take a detour because of a closed-off road isn’t just frustrating, it can also be very expensive. Avoid costly backtracking with an API that creates routes suited for your fleet, whether it’s a small van or an 18-wheeler truck.

The Truck Routing API accomplishes this route optimization with customizable fleet parameters. Simply enter the commercial vehicle’s specifications and the API will keep them in mind when looking at potential routes. This personalization extends far beyond road closures. Developers will also be able to specify the size, weight, and type of the cargo being carried by the vehicle. This can come in handy as certain roads are restricted against hazardous materials.

Long-time Microsoft partner OnTerra Systems set off on a mission to create a dynamic app that could optimize delivery routes for small to mid-sized fleets – RouteSavvy. The goal was to reduce the overall distance each agent would have to travel, thereby reducing fuel and maintenance costs. The app also included other key features like Streetside imagery and address geocoding. Find out how RouteSavvy’s fleet route optimization helped businesses reduce their logistics costs by reading the full customer story.

a screenshot of a fleet route optimization app

Planning is key

UPS’ recent success with saving millions in fuel costs is a testament to the importance of proper planning. The mapping tools that an operator has at their disposal play a big role in consistently planning a great route for the fleet. Ideally, these should be tailored to match your fleet’s everyday requirements, but this can be a tall order for operators that have to manually create routes for hundreds of agents at a time.

The Multi-Itinerary Optimization (MIO) API makes this process easier by automating delivery route planning. Managers will be able to take shift schedules, traffic conditions, stop priority, and even multi-day routes into consideration when optimizing fleet routes. Agents can now conveniently be grouped together depending on the delivery locations for the day. This dynamic approach to route optimization reduces the frequency of refueling and also improves delivery times.

Find out how the MIO API can revamp how your business treats logistics with our interactive demo. You’ll be able to create a customized itinerary for up to 4 agents and 40 stops, as well as determine whether you want to optimize for travel time or price.

Optimize with Bing Maps API

From accurate fleet tracking to automated itineraries, our fleet management API suite is the efficient solution for businesses looking to scale up while reducing costs. Create a free Bing Maps API key to get started today.
 

FAQ

Which key should I use for my delivery route optimization app?

If you’re just experimenting with fleet route optimization on a small scale, try out the Bing Maps APIs and SDKs with a Basic key. It supports up to 125,000 billable transactions and unlocks access to fleet management tools.

Businesses looking to streamline their operations with a scalable mapping solution will benefit from the Enterprise key. Consult the licensing page or contact us to learn more about upgrading to an Enterprise key. 

Are there other APIs that might be helpful for fleet management?

The Bing Maps API has a full suite of logistics APIs for Fleet Management. To find out more about how these can be leveraged for your asset tracking solution, see Fleet Management Services | Build with Us | Bing Maps API (microsoft.com)

What kind of support can developers expect?

Beginner or expert, you’ll be able to explore a massive library of code samples and documentation for step-by-step guides during development. Enterprise users will also have access to a specialized support team for all their queries.

Posted on Leave a comment

Cracking the code: With the right tools, anyone can become a developer

In this episode of “Digital Now,” Charles Lamanna, Microsoft corporate vice president of Business Applications & Platform, explains how Microsoft and its customers are democratizing code by empowering everyone to become a developer.

Low-code tools like the Microsoft Power Platform enable every person in every role – from business users, IT professionals, citizen developers and professional developers – to collaborate on solutions and accelerate innovation across the organization.

The evolution of low-code development, he says, is enabling Microsoft customers to create a “culture and community of self-service, self-identifying, self-starting citizen developers.” He compares this rise in accessibility to parallel trends that have made data, hardware, analytics and automation available to all, not just to experts.

“Digital Now” is a video series hosted by Andrew Wilson, chief digital officer at Microsoft, who invites friends and industry leaders inside and outside of Microsoft to share how they are tackling digital and business transformation, and explores themes like the future of work, security, artificial intelligence, and the democratization of code and data.

Visit Digital Now on YouTube to view more episodes.

Posted on Leave a comment

Digital Now video: The Boeing plane of the future will take shape in the metaverse

In this episode of “Digital Now,” two senior leaders in Boeing’s technology organization share how technology is reshaping one of the most recognized and respected brands in the world.

Wendy Lonergan, vice president of information technology and data analytics, and Linda Hapgood, vice president of engineering practices, explain how the global pandemic sparked an innovation in disinfecting cabins, and how hundreds of engineers, designers and suppliers will collaborate to design future commercial airplanes in a massive digital environment.

“Digital Now” is a video series hosted by Andrew Wilson, chief digital officer at Microsoft, who invites friends and industry leaders inside and outside of Microsoft to share how they are tackling digital and business transformation, and explores themes like the future of work, security, artificial intelligence, and the democratization of code and data.

Visit Digital Now on YouTube to view more episodes.

Posted on Leave a comment

Satya Nadella’s annual letter to shareholders: A historic intersection of opportunity and responsibility

Below is my annual letter, published today in our Annual Report 2022.

Dear shareholders, colleagues, customers, and partners:

We are living through a period of historic economic, societal, and geopolitical change. The world in 2022 looks nothing like the world in 2019. As I write this, inflation is at a 40-year high, supply chains are stretched, and the war in Ukraine is ongoing. At the same time, we are entering a technological era with the potential to power awesome advancements across every sector of our economy and society. As the world’s largest software company, this places us at a historic intersection of opportunity and responsibility to the world around us.

Our mission to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more has never been more urgent or more necessary. For all the uncertainty in the world, one thing is clear: People and organizations in every industry are increasingly looking to digital technology to overcome today’s challenges and emerge stronger. And no company is better positioned to help them than Microsoft.

Every day this past fiscal year I have had the privilege to witness our customers use our platforms and tools to connect what technology can do with what the world needs it to do.

Here are just a few examples:

  • Ferrovial, which builds and manages some of the world’s busiest airports and highways, is using our cloud infrastructure to build safer roads as it prepares for a future of autonomous transportation.
  • Peace Parks Foundation, a nonprofit helping protect natural ecosystems in Southern Africa, is using Microsoft Dynamics 365 and Power BI to secure essential funding, as well as our Azure AI and IoT solutions to help rangers scale their park maintenance and wildlife crime prevention work.
  • One of the world’s largest robotics companies, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, is using the breadth of our tools—from Azure IoT and HoloLens—to create an industrial metaverse solution that brings its distributed workforce together with its network of connected equipment to improve productivity and keep employees safe.
  • Globo, the biggest media and TV company in Brazil, is using Power Platform to empower its employees to build their own solutions for everything from booking sets to setting schedules.
  • And Ørsted, which produces a quarter of the world’s wind energy, is using the Microsoft Intelligent Data Platform to turn data from its offshore turbines into insights for predictive maintenance.

Amid this dynamic environment, we delivered record results in fiscal year 2022: We reported $198 billion in revenue and $83 billion in operating income. And the Microsoft Cloud surpassed $100 billion in annualized revenue for the first time.

OUR RESPONSIBILITY

As a corporation, our purpose and actions must be aligned with addressing the world’s problems, not creating new ones. At our very core, we need to deliver innovation that helps drive broad economic growth. We, as a company, will do well when the world around us does well.

That’s what I believe will lead to widespread human progress and ultimately improve the lives of everyone. There is no more powerful input than digital technology to drive the world’s economic output. This is the core thesis for our being as a company, but it’s not enough. As we drive global economic growth, we must also commit to creating a more inclusive, equitable, sustainable, and trusted future.

Support inclusive economic growth

We must ensure the growth we drive reaches every person, organization, community, and country. This starts with increasing access to digital skills. This year alone, more than 23 million people accessed digital skills training as part of our global skills initiative.

But skills alone aren’t enough—we need to help people better prepare for and connect to jobs. That’s why we’ve committed to equip 10 million people from underserved communities with skills for jobs in the digital economy by 2025.

One area of digital skills has become especially critical: cybersecurity. Cybersecurity is a significant threat for governments, businesses, and individuals around the world, yet there simply aren’t enough people with cybersecurity skills to fill open jobs.

To help address this, we’ve committed to skill and recruit 250,000 people into the US cybersecurity workforce by 2025—especially those underrepresented in the field. And we’re helping an additional 24 countries with substantial cybersecurity workforce shortages close their gaps too.

We also continue to deliver affordable, relevant cloud technology and industry-specific solutions to nonprofit organizations addressing the world’s most pressing issues. This year, we provided $3.2 billion in donated and discounted technology to 302,000 nonprofits serving over 1.2 billion people globally. And earlier this month, we announced that Microsoft will double the number of nonprofits we reach worldwide over the next five years.

Protect fundamental rights

We unequivocally support the fundamental rights of people, from defending democracy, to protecting human rights, to addressing racial injustice and inequity. And, as people’s access to education, healthcare, jobs, and other critical services becomes increasingly dependent on technology, it’s clear that access to broadband and accessible technology is also fundamental to building a more equitable future.

Since 2017, we’ve helped more than 50 million people in unserved rural communities globally gain access to affordable broadband coverage. Building on our work in eight US cities, we’re now partnering with five US states with significant broadband adoption gaps to increase access, adoption, and equity. And—given the importance of current data to broadband planning—the new Microsoft Digital Equity Dashboard will help US policymakers and communities identify neighborhoods where funding and programmatic investment can achieve measurable impact.

This year, we continued our journey to address racial injustice and inequity by increasing representation within Microsoft, engaging our ecosystem, and strengthening our communities.

Across our ecosystem, we are more than 90% of the way toward our commitment to spend an incremental $500 million with Black- and African American-owned suppliers. We’ve coordinated over 80 justice reform partnerships to help 145 communities expand access to data-driven insights that advance a more equitable system of justice and public safety. And we’ve expanded our Technology Education and Learning Support (TEALS) program to 290 high schools in cities with large Black and African American communities—to promote more equitable access to computer science education.

Our work to help preserve, protect, and advance democracy by promoting a healthy information ecosystem and safeguarding electoral processes is as salient as ever in today’s geopolitical climate. Our AccountGuard nation-state threat notification service protects more than 4 million accounts of election officials, human rights organizations, journalists, and other organizations. Our efforts to preserve and protect journalism in the United States and Mexico have been extended globally through new partnerships with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, Report for the World, and others.

This year, we responded to six humanitarian emergencies in five countries through donations, technology, services, and employee giving. As of July 2022, we’ve committed $257 million in financial and technology assistance to the global response to the war in Ukraine, including support for government, businesses, nonprofits, and humanitarian assistance for refugees. And, through our AI for Humanitarian Action initiative, we’re helping organizations harness the power of AI to improve their disaster preparedness, response, and recovery.

Finally, we continued working toward our five-year commitment to bridge the disability divide for the more than 1 billion people around the world with disabilities, seeking to expand accessibility in technology, the workforce, and workplace. As just one example of this work, use of our Office Accessibility Checker—our “spell check” for accessibility—has grown by 9x over the past year. And, along with partner companies, we launched the Neurodiversity Career Connector, a jobs marketplace for neurodivergent job seekers. 

Create a sustainable future

We must ensure that economic growth does not come at the expense of our planet. Addressing climate change requires swift, collective action and technical innovation. We’re continuing our pursuit of our own ambitious commitments and helping others achieve their climate goals, aided by technology.

In March, we released our second annual sustainability report, sharing our progress, challenges, and learnings as we pursue our commitments to become carbon negative, water positive, and zero waste. Although we continued to make progress on several of our goals with an overall reduction in Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, our Scope 3 emissions increased, due in large part to significant global datacenter expansions and the growth in Xbox sales and usage. Despite these increases, we remain dedicated to achieving a net-zero future. We recognize that progress won’t always be linear, and the rate at which we can implement emissions reductions is dependent on many factors that can fluctuate over time.

On the path to becoming water positive, we invested in 21 water replenishment projects that are expected to generate over 1.3 million cubic meters of volumetric benefits in nine water basins around the world. Progress toward our zero waste commitment included diverting more than 15,200 metric tons of solid waste otherwise headed to landfills and incinerators, as well as launching new Circular Centers to increase reuse and reduce e-waste at our datacenters. 

We contracted to protect over 17,000 acres of land (50% more than the land we use to operate), thus achieving our commitment to protect more land than we use by 2025.

And with Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability, we’re expanding our work to help customers meet their ambitious sustainability goals by enabling them to better collect, track, and analyze the metrics of their sustainability strategy.

Earn trust

To drive positive impact and growth with technology, people need to be able to trust the technologies they use and the companies behind them. We are committed to earning trust—both trust in business model alignment with our customers and partners, and trust in technology, spanning privacy, security, digital safety, the responsible use of AI, and transparency.

We’re dedicated to preserving our customers’ privacy and their ability to control their own data. We advocate for strong privacy laws that require companies, including ours, to be accountable and responsible in their collection and use of personal data. That’s why we supported the new Trans-Atlantic Data Privacy Framework and committed to meet or exceed all the requirements it outlines. And through the Microsoft privacy dashboard, millions of people each year can make meaningful choices about how their data is used.

Security and digital safety are foundational to trust in today’s complex threat landscape. We analyze 43 trillion security signals daily and use the insights to inform increased protections. This year, we blocked 34.7 billion identity threats and 37 billion email threats. Over the past four years, we’ve sent over 67,000 nation-state-related threat notifications to customers to help them protect themselves from digital threats.

This comprehensive capability has been critical during recent world events, including the war in Ukraine. Our efforts have involved both defending key infrastructure in the country—including assisting with the detection and disruption of cyberattacks and cyberinfluence operations and evacuating data to the cloud—as well as supporting people, communities, and organizations on the ground as part of our humanitarian and disaster response.

Our commitment to responsibly develop and use technologies like AI is core to who we are. We put our commitment into practice, not only within Microsoft but by empowering our customers and partners to do the same and by advocating for policy change. We released our Responsible AI Standard, which outlines 17 goals aligned to our six AI principles and includes tools and practices to support them. And we share our open-source tools, including the new Responsible AI Dashboard, to help developers building AI technologies identify and mitigate issues before deployment.

Finally, we provide clear reporting and information on how we run our business and how we work with customers and partners, delivering the transparency that is central to trust. Our annual Impact Summary shares more about our progress and learnings across these four commitments, and our Reports Hub provides detailed reports on our environmental data, our political activities, our workforce demographics, our human rights work, and more. 

We should all be proud of this work—and I am. But it’s easy to talk about what we’re doing well. As we look to the next year and beyond, we’ll continue to reflect on where the world needs us to do better.

OUR OPPORTUNITY

Now, let me turn to how we are positioned to capture the massive opportunities ahead. Over the past few years, I’ve written extensively about digital transformation, but now we need to go beyond that to deliver on what I call the “digital imperative.”

Technology is a deflationary force in an inflationary economy. Every organization in every industry will need to infuse technology into every business process and function so they can do more with less. It’s what I believe will make the difference between organizations that thrive and those that get left behind.

In the coming years, technology as a percentage of GDP will double from 5% to 10% and beyond, as technology moves from a back-office cost center to a defining feature of every product and service. But even more important will be technology’s influence on the other 90% of the world’s economy. From communications and commerce, to logistics, financial services, energy, healthcare, and entertainment, digital technology will power the entire global economy as every company becomes a software company in its own right.

Across our customer solution areas, we are delivering powerful platforms, tools, and services that expand our opportunity to help every organization in every industry deliver on the digital imperative—with a business model that is trusted and always aligned with their success. 

Apps and infrastructure

We are building Azure as the world’s computer, with more than 60 datacenter regions—more than any other provider—delivering faster access to cloud services while addressing critical data residency requirements. With Azure Arc, we’re bringing Azure anywhere, meeting customers where they are and enabling them to run apps across on-premises, edge, or multicloud environments. And we’re extending our infrastructure to the 5G network edge with Azure for Operators, introducing new solutions to help telecom operators deliver ultra-low-latency services closer to end users.

As the digital and physical worlds come together, we’re also leading in the industrial metaverse. From smart factories, to smart buildings, to smart cities, we’re helping organizations use Azure IoT, Azure Digital Twins, and Microsoft Mesh to digitize people, places, and things, in order to visualize, simulate, and analyze any business process.

Data and AI

From best-in-class databases and analytics to data governance, we have the most comprehensive data stack to help every organization turn its data into predictive and analytical power. With our new Microsoft Intelligent Data Platform, we are helping customers focus on creating value instead of integrating a fragmented data estate. Cosmos DB is the go-to database powering the world’s most demanding, mission-critical workloads, at any scale. With Azure Synapse, we’re removing traditional barriers between enterprise data warehousing and big data analytics so anyone can collaborate, build, and manage analytics solutions. And we’re creating an entirely new market category with Microsoft Purview, as we help organizations govern, protect, and manage their data estate across platforms and clouds.

When it comes to AI, we’re seeing a paradigm shift as the world’s large AI models become platforms themselves. And we are helping organizations apply the world’s most advanced coding and language models to a variety of use cases, such as writing assistance, code generation, and reasoning over data with our new Azure OpenAI Service.

Digital and app innovation

We have the most popular developer tools for any cloud and any platform to help organizations modernize existing apps and build new ones. GitHub is the most complete developer platform to build, scale, and deliver secure software. This year, we introduced GitHub Copilot, a first-of-its-kind AI pair programmer, to help developers write better code faster. And organizations are increasingly turning to both Visual Studio and our Azure PaaS services to streamline development and create modern, more resilient cloud-native applications.

Low-code/no-code tools are rapidly becoming a priority for every organization’s digital capability. With Power Platform, we are helping domain experts rapidly drive productivity gains when it’s never been more important. We have nearly 25 million monthly active users. And we’re innovating to make it even easier for teams of professional and citizen developers to automate workflows, create apps, build virtual agents, and analyze data.

Business applications

With our expanding portfolio of business applications, we are helping every business become a hyperconnected business—unifying data, process, and teams across the organization. New Dynamics 365 Connected Spaces helps organizations across diverse industries—from real estate and retail, to factories and construction—manage their physical operations. And with new integrations between Dynamics 365 and Teams, we are creating a new category of collaborative applications that helps businesses surface data and insights right in the flow of work.

Our industry clouds bring together capabilities across the Microsoft Cloud with industry-specific customizations to help organizations improve time to value, increase agility, and lower costs. We completed our acquisition of Nuance Communications this year, adding new cloud and enterprise AI capabilities for healthcare, as well as other industries. And as sustainability becomes an existential priority not just for our society but for every organization, our new Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability, which I mentioned earlier, is helping our customers record, report, and ultimately reduce their environmental impact.

Modern work

Hybrid work is now just work. Every organization is looking to reconnect and reengage the workforce at home, in the office, and everywhere in between. Microsoft Teams is the most used and most advanced platform for work, surpassing 270 million monthly active users this year. It’s the only solution with meetings, calls, chat, collaboration, and business process automation in one place.

Teams Rooms is bringing Teams to a growing ecosystem of devices to help organizations rethink their approach to space and help employees participate fully in meetings from anywhere. And with Microsoft Viva, we’re building an employee experience platform that brings together communications, knowledge, learning, resources, and insights in the flow of work to empower employees and strengthen their connection to their company’s mission and culture.

Modern life

The PC has never been more relevant to work, life, and play. This year, we launched Windows 11, the biggest update to our operating system in a decade. It reimagines everything from the user experience to the store to help people and organizations be more productive, connected, and secure, and to build a more open ecosystem for developers and creators. There are now more than 1.4 billion monthly active devices running Windows 10 or Windows 11. We launched new Surface devices to support every person and work style. And we have nearly 60 million Microsoft 365 consumer subscriptions as we help people create, connect, and share wherever they go.

Security

Cybersecurity is the number one threat facing every business today. To keep our customers secure, we build security by design into every product we sell, and we deliver end-to-end solutions spanning security, compliance, identity, device management, and privacy across clouds and platforms. We are the only cloud provider with multicloud protection for the industry’s top three cloud platforms. Our new Entra product family includes tools for permissions management, identity governance, and identity verification. And we now offer managed threat detection and response with Microsoft Security Experts.

LinkedIn

LinkedIn has become mission critical to connect creators with their communities, job seekers with jobs, learners with skills, and marketers with buyers. LinkedIn now has more than 850 million members, and our Sales, Talent, Marketing, and Premium Subscriptions lines of business have all surpassed $1 billion in annual revenue over the past 12 months.

Search, advertising, and news

When it comes to advertising, we are creating a new monetization engine for the web—an alternative that offers marketers and publishers more long-term viable ad solutions—while upholding consumer privacy and strong data governance. We’re focused on increasing our share and engagement across our browser Microsoft Edge, our search engine Microsoft Bing, and our personalized content feed Microsoft Start.

And with our acquisition of Xandr, we now power one of the largest marketplaces for premium advertising. Netflix chose us this summer as its exclusive technology and sales partner for its first ad-supported subscription offering, a validation of the differentiated value we provide to publishers looking for a flexible partner to build and innovate with them. I couldn’t be more excited about our expansive opportunity ahead in this space.

Gaming

The big bets we have made across content, community, and cloud over the past few years continue to pay off. We’ve sold more Xbox Series S and Series X consoles life-to-date than any previous generation of Xbox, and with Xbox Cloud Gaming, we’re bringing games to entirely new endpoints. In the past year, we’ve made many of our most popular titles accessible on phones, tablets, TVs, and low-spec PCs for the first time. Our Xbox Game Pass subscription service now includes access to hundreds of games. And with our planned acquisition of Activision Blizzard, we aim to give players more choice to play great games wherever, whenever, and however they want. Choice is equally important to developers, who we want to support with a diversity of distribution and business models for their games. We believe the acquisition will unlock opportunities for innovation and enable the industry to grow.

OUR CULTURE

Our culture is the foundation on which our mission and strategy stand, and cultivating it is our greatest priority. We’re always working to close the gap between our espoused culture and the lived experience of the more than 220,000 people who work at Microsoft. Essential to this is our commitment to continually exercise our growth mindset and confront our fixed mindset with humility, curiosity, compassion, and the recognition that, while none of us will ever be perfect, we can always be better than we are today.

This growth mindset served us well through the historic changes of the past few years. It sustains our everyday practice of customer obsession. It helps us care for our colleagues and collaborate more effectively across the company. And it deeply informs our longstanding commitment to diversity and inclusion.

If we want to serve the world, we need to represent the world. Each year we strive to increase representation, and 2022 was no exception. We saw the strongest progress in years across several demographic groups, as you can see in our latest Diversity & Inclusion Report. We are one of the most transparent companies of our size when it comes to the data we share, and we continually challenge ourselves to increase visibility into where we’re succeeding and where we need to address gaps. We’ve added new data, such as military status, gender representation by geography, employee exits, and additional pay data, to reflect our workforce more broadly. As we make meaningful process, we continue our commitment to meet the increasing expectations for driving innovation, welcoming diverse perspectives, and leading global change.

Giving is also core to our culture at Microsoft. In 2022, our employees gave $255 million (with company match) to over 32,000 nonprofits. And more than 29,000 employees volunteered over 720,000 hours to causes they care about.

I’m constantly in awe of how our employees bring their passion to work each day—for each other, for our customers, and for their communities.

***

I want to close by thanking you for your continued investment in Microsoft. Our growth and impact this past year would not have been possible without your commitment to the company and belief in its mission.

The opportunity to apply technology to make a real difference for every customer, community, and country has never been greater. And I truly believe if we continue to live our mission, embrace our responsibility, and grasp that opportunity, there is no limit to what we can achieve for the world in the year ahead and beyond.

Satya Nadella

Posted on Leave a comment

In my annual letter to shareholders, I reflect on our opportunity and responsibility to connect what technology can do with what the world needs it to do.

Below is my annual letter, published today in our Annual Report 2022.

Dear shareholders, colleagues, customers, and partners:

We are living through a period of historic economic, societal, and geopolitical change. The world in 2022 looks nothing like the world in 2019. As I write this, inflation is at a 40-year high, supply chains are stretched, and the war in Ukraine is ongoing. At the same time, we are entering a technological era with the potential to power awesome advancements across every sector of our economy and society. As the world’s largest software company, this places us at a historic intersection of opportunity and responsibility to the world around us.

Our mission to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more has never been more urgent or more necessary. For all the uncertainty in the world, one thing is clear: People and organizations in every industry are increasingly looking to digital technology to overcome today’s challenges and emerge stronger. And no company is better positioned to help them than Microsoft.

Every day this past fiscal year I have had the privilege to witness our customers use our platforms and tools to connect what technology can do with what the world needs it to do.

Here are just a few examples:

  • Ferrovial, which builds and manages some of the world’s busiest airports and highways, is using our cloud infrastructure to build safer roads as it prepares for a future of autonomous transportation.
  • Peace Parks Foundation, a nonprofit helping protect natural ecosystems in Southern Africa, is using Microsoft Dynamics 365 and Power BI to secure essential funding, as well as our Azure AI and IoT solutions to help rangers scale their park maintenance and wildlife crime prevention work.
  • One of the world’s largest robotics companies, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, is using the breadth of our tools—from Azure IoT and HoloLens—to create an industrial metaverse solution that brings its distributed workforce together with its network of connected equipment to improve productivity and keep employees safe.
  • Globo, the biggest media and TV company in Brazil, is using Power Platform to empower its employees to build their own solutions for everything from booking sets to setting schedules.
  • And Ørsted, which produces a quarter of the world’s wind energy, is using the Microsoft Intelligent Data Platform to turn data from its offshore turbines into insights for predictive maintenance.

Amid this dynamic environment, we delivered record results in fiscal year 2022: We reported $198 billion in revenue and $83 billion in operating income. And the Microsoft Cloud surpassed $100 billion in annualized revenue for the first time.

OUR RESPONSIBILITY

As a corporation, our purpose and actions must be aligned with addressing the world’s problems, not creating new ones. At our very core, we need to deliver innovation that helps drive broad economic growth. We, as a company, will do well when the world around us does well.

That’s what I believe will lead to widespread human progress and ultimately improve the lives of everyone. There is no more powerful input than digital technology to drive the world’s economic output. This is the core thesis for our being as a company, but it’s not enough. As we drive global economic growth, we must also commit to creating a more inclusive, equitable, sustainable, and trusted future.

Support inclusive economic growth

We must ensure the growth we drive reaches every person, organization, community, and country. This starts with increasing access to digital skills. This year alone, more than 23 million people accessed digital skills training as part of our global skills initiative.

But skills alone aren’t enough—we need to help people better prepare for and connect to jobs. That’s why we’ve committed to equip 10 million people from underserved communities with skills for jobs in the digital economy by 2025.

One area of digital skills has become especially critical: cybersecurity. Cybersecurity is a significant threat for governments, businesses, and individuals around the world, yet there simply aren’t enough people with cybersecurity skills to fill open jobs.

To help address this, we’ve committed to skill and recruit 250,000 people into the US cybersecurity workforce by 2025—especially those underrepresented in the field. And we’re helping an additional 24 countries with substantial cybersecurity workforce shortages close their gaps too.

We also continue to deliver affordable, relevant cloud technology and industry-specific solutions to nonprofit organizations addressing the world’s most pressing issues. This year, we provided $3.2 billion in donated and discounted technology to 302,000 nonprofits serving over 1.2 billion people globally. And earlier this month, we announced that Microsoft will double the number of nonprofits we reach worldwide over the next five years.

Protect fundamental rights

We unequivocally support the fundamental rights of people, from defending democracy, to protecting human rights, to addressing racial injustice and inequity. And, as people’s access to education, healthcare, jobs, and other critical services becomes increasingly dependent on technology, it’s clear that access to broadband and accessible technology is also fundamental to building a more equitable future.

Since 2017, we’ve helped more than 50 million people in unserved rural communities globally gain access to affordable broadband coverage. Building on our work in eight US cities, we’re now partnering with five US states with significant broadband adoption gaps to increase access, adoption, and equity. And—given the importance of current data to broadband planning—the new Microsoft Digital Equity Dashboard will help US policymakers and communities identify neighborhoods where funding and programmatic investment can achieve measurable impact.

This year, we continued our journey to address racial injustice and inequity by increasing representation within Microsoft, engaging our ecosystem, and strengthening our communities.

Across our ecosystem, we are more than 90% of the way toward our commitment to spend an incremental $500 million with Black- and African American-owned suppliers. We’ve coordinated over 80 justice reform partnerships to help 145 communities expand access to data-driven insights that advance a more equitable system of justice and public safety. And we’ve expanded our Technology Education and Learning Support (TEALS) program to 290 high schools in cities with large Black and African American communities—to promote more equitable access to computer science education.

Our work to help preserve, protect, and advance democracy by promoting a healthy information ecosystem and safeguarding electoral processes is as salient as ever in today’s geopolitical climate. Our AccountGuard nation-state threat notification service protects more than 4 million accounts of election officials, human rights organizations, journalists, and other organizations. Our efforts to preserve and protect journalism in the United States and Mexico have been extended globally through new partnerships with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, Report for the World, and others.

This year, we responded to six humanitarian emergencies in five countries through donations, technology, services, and employee giving. As of July 2022, we’ve committed $257 million in financial and technology assistance to the global response to the war in Ukraine, including support for government, businesses, nonprofits, and humanitarian assistance for refugees. And, through our AI for Humanitarian Action initiative, we’re helping organizations harness the power of AI to improve their disaster preparedness, response, and recovery.

Finally, we continued working toward our five-year commitment to bridge the disability divide for the more than 1 billion people around the world with disabilities, seeking to expand accessibility in technology, the workforce, and workplace. As just one example of this work, use of our Office Accessibility Checker—our “spell check” for accessibility—has grown by 9x over the past year. And, along with partner companies, we launched the Neurodiversity Career Connector, a jobs marketplace for neurodivergent job seekers. 

Create a sustainable future

We must ensure that economic growth does not come at the expense of our planet. Addressing climate change requires swift, collective action and technical innovation. We’re continuing our pursuit of our own ambitious commitments and helping others achieve their climate goals, aided by technology.

In March, we released our second annual sustainability report, sharing our progress, challenges, and learnings as we pursue our commitments to become carbon negative, water positive, and zero waste. Although we continued to make progress on several of our goals with an overall reduction in Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, our Scope 3 emissions increased, due in large part to significant global datacenter expansions and the growth in Xbox sales and usage. Despite these increases, we remain dedicated to achieving a net-zero future. We recognize that progress won’t always be linear, and the rate at which we can implement emissions reductions is dependent on many factors that can fluctuate over time.

On the path to becoming water positive, we invested in 21 water replenishment projects that are expected to generate over 1.3 million cubic meters of volumetric benefits in nine water basins around the world. Progress toward our zero waste commitment included diverting more than 15,200 metric tons of solid waste otherwise headed to landfills and incinerators, as well as launching new Circular Centers to increase reuse and reduce e-waste at our datacenters. 

We contracted to protect over 17,000 acres of land (50% more than the land we use to operate), thus achieving our commitment to protect more land than we use by 2025.

And with Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability, we’re expanding our work to help customers meet their ambitious sustainability goals by enabling them to better collect, track, and analyze the metrics of their sustainability strategy.

Earn trust

To drive positive impact and growth with technology, people need to be able to trust the technologies they use and the companies behind them. We are committed to earning trust—both trust in business model alignment with our customers and partners, and trust in technology, spanning privacy, security, digital safety, the responsible use of AI, and transparency.

We’re dedicated to preserving our customers’ privacy and their ability to control their own data. We advocate for strong privacy laws that require companies, including ours, to be accountable and responsible in their collection and use of personal data. That’s why we supported the new Trans-Atlantic Data Privacy Framework and committed to meet or exceed all the requirements it outlines. And through the Microsoft privacy dashboard, millions of people each year can make meaningful choices about how their data is used.

Security and digital safety are foundational to trust in today’s complex threat landscape. We analyze 43 trillion security signals daily and use the insights to inform increased protections. This year, we blocked 34.7 billion identity threats and 37 billion email threats. Over the past four years, we’ve sent over 67,000 nation-state-related threat notifications to customers to help them protect themselves from digital threats.

This comprehensive capability has been critical during recent world events, including the war in Ukraine. Our efforts have involved both defending key infrastructure in the country—including assisting with the detection and disruption of cyberattacks and cyberinfluence operations and evacuating data to the cloud—as well as supporting people, communities, and organizations on the ground as part of our humanitarian and disaster response.

Our commitment to responsibly develop and use technologies like AI is core to who we are. We put our commitment into practice, not only within Microsoft but by empowering our customers and partners to do the same and by advocating for policy change. We released our Responsible AI Standard, which outlines 17 goals aligned to our six AI principles and includes tools and practices to support them. And we share our open-source tools, including the new Responsible AI Dashboard, to help developers building AI technologies identify and mitigate issues before deployment.

Finally, we provide clear reporting and information on how we run our business and how we work with customers and partners, delivering the transparency that is central to trust. Our annual Impact Summary shares more about our progress and learnings across these four commitments, and our Reports Hub provides detailed reports on our environmental data, our political activities, our workforce demographics, our human rights work, and more. 

We should all be proud of this work—and I am. But it’s easy to talk about what we’re doing well. As we look to the next year and beyond, we’ll continue to reflect on where the world needs us to do better.

OUR OPPORTUNITY

Now, let me turn to how we are positioned to capture the massive opportunities ahead. Over the past few years, I’ve written extensively about digital transformation, but now we need to go beyond that to deliver on what I call the “digital imperative.”

Technology is a deflationary force in an inflationary economy. Every organization in every industry will need to infuse technology into every business process and function so they can do more with less. It’s what I believe will make the difference between organizations that thrive and those that get left behind.

In the coming years, technology as a percentage of GDP will double from 5% to 10% and beyond, as technology moves from a back-office cost center to a defining feature of every product and service. But even more important will be technology’s influence on the other 90% of the world’s economy. From communications and commerce, to logistics, financial services, energy, healthcare, and entertainment, digital technology will power the entire global economy as every company becomes a software company in its own right.

Across our customer solution areas, we are delivering powerful platforms, tools, and services that expand our opportunity to help every organization in every industry deliver on the digital imperative—with a business model that is trusted and always aligned with their success. 

Apps and infrastructure

We are building Azure as the world’s computer, with more than 60 datacenter regions—more than any other provider—delivering faster access to cloud services while addressing critical data residency requirements. With Azure Arc, we’re bringing Azure anywhere, meeting customers where they are and enabling them to run apps across on-premises, edge, or multicloud environments. And we’re extending our infrastructure to the 5G network edge with Azure for Operators, introducing new solutions to help telecom operators deliver ultra-low-latency services closer to end users.

As the digital and physical worlds come together, we’re also leading in the industrial metaverse. From smart factories, to smart buildings, to smart cities, we’re helping organizations use Azure IoT, Azure Digital Twins, and Microsoft Mesh to digitize people, places, and things, in order to visualize, simulate, and analyze any business process.

Data and AI

From best-in-class databases and analytics to data governance, we have the most comprehensive data stack to help every organization turn its data into predictive and analytical power. With our new Microsoft Intelligent Data Platform, we are helping customers focus on creating value instead of integrating a fragmented data estate. Cosmos DB is the go-to database powering the world’s most demanding, mission-critical workloads, at any scale. With Azure Synapse, we’re removing traditional barriers between enterprise data warehousing and big data analytics so anyone can collaborate, build, and manage analytics solutions. And we’re creating an entirely new market category with Microsoft Purview, as we help organizations govern, protect, and manage their data estate across platforms and clouds.

When it comes to AI, we’re seeing a paradigm shift as the world’s large AI models become platforms themselves. And we are helping organizations apply the world’s most advanced coding and language models to a variety of use cases, such as writing assistance, code generation, and reasoning over data with our new Azure OpenAI Service.

Digital and app innovation

We have the most popular developer tools for any cloud and any platform to help organizations modernize existing apps and build new ones. GitHub is the most complete developer platform to build, scale, and deliver secure software. This year, we introduced GitHub Copilot, a first-of-its-kind AI pair programmer, to help developers write better code faster. And organizations are increasingly turning to both Visual Studio and our Azure PaaS services to streamline development and create modern, more resilient cloud-native applications.

Low-code/no-code tools are rapidly becoming a priority for every organization’s digital capability. With Power Platform, we are helping domain experts rapidly drive productivity gains when it’s never been more important. We have nearly 25 million monthly active users. And we’re innovating to make it even easier for teams of professional and citizen developers to automate workflows, create apps, build virtual agents, and analyze data.

Business applications

With our expanding portfolio of business applications, we are helping every business become a hyperconnected business—unifying data, process, and teams across the organization. New Dynamics 365 Connected Spaces helps organizations across diverse industries—from real estate and retail, to factories and construction—manage their physical operations. And with new integrations between Dynamics 365 and Teams, we are creating a new category of collaborative applications that helps businesses surface data and insights right in the flow of work.

Our industry clouds bring together capabilities across the Microsoft Cloud with industry-specific customizations to help organizations improve time to value, increase agility, and lower costs. We completed our acquisition of Nuance Communications this year, adding new cloud and enterprise AI capabilities for healthcare, as well as other industries. And as sustainability becomes an existential priority not just for our society but for every organization, our new Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability, which I mentioned earlier, is helping our customers record, report, and ultimately reduce their environmental impact.

Modern work

Hybrid work is now just work. Every organization is looking to reconnect and reengage the workforce at home, in the office, and everywhere in between. Microsoft Teams is the most used and most advanced platform for work, surpassing 270 million monthly active users this year. It’s the only solution with meetings, calls, chat, collaboration, and business process automation in one place.

Teams Rooms is bringing Teams to a growing ecosystem of devices to help organizations rethink their approach to space and help employees participate fully in meetings from anywhere. And with Microsoft Viva, we’re building an employee experience platform that brings together communications, knowledge, learning, resources, and insights in the flow of work to empower employees and strengthen their connection to their company’s mission and culture.

Modern life

The PC has never been more relevant to work, life, and play. This year, we launched Windows 11, the biggest update to our operating system in a decade. It reimagines everything from the user experience to the store to help people and organizations be more productive, connected, and secure, and to build a more open ecosystem for developers and creators. There are now more than 1.4 billion monthly active devices running Windows 10 or Windows 11. We launched new Surface devices to support every person and work style. And we have nearly 60 million Microsoft 365 consumer subscriptions as we help people create, connect, and share wherever they go.

Security

Cybersecurity is the number one threat facing every business today. To keep our customers secure, we build security by design into every product we sell, and we deliver end-to-end solutions spanning security, compliance, identity, device management, and privacy across clouds and platforms. We are the only cloud provider with multicloud protection for the industry’s top three cloud platforms. Our new Entra product family includes tools for permissions management, identity governance, and identity verification. And we now offer managed threat detection and response with Microsoft Security Experts.

LinkedIn

LinkedIn has become mission critical to connect creators with their communities, job seekers with jobs, learners with skills, and marketers with buyers. LinkedIn now has more than 850 million members, and our Sales, Talent, Marketing, and Premium Subscriptions lines of business have all surpassed $1 billion in annual revenue over the past 12 months.

Search, advertising, and news

When it comes to advertising, we are creating a new monetization engine for the web—an alternative that offers marketers and publishers more long-term viable ad solutions—while upholding consumer privacy and strong data governance. We’re focused on increasing our share and engagement across our browser Microsoft Edge, our search engine Microsoft Bing, and our personalized content feed Microsoft Start.

And with our acquisition of Xandr, we now power one of the largest marketplaces for premium advertising. Netflix chose us this summer as its exclusive technology and sales partner for its first ad-supported subscription offering, a validation of the differentiated value we provide to publishers looking for a flexible partner to build and innovate with them. I couldn’t be more excited about our expansive opportunity ahead in this space.

Gaming

The big bets we have made across content, community, and cloud over the past few years continue to pay off. We’ve sold more Xbox Series S and Series X consoles life-to-date than any previous generation of Xbox, and with Xbox Cloud Gaming, we’re bringing games to entirely new endpoints. In the past year, we’ve made many of our most popular titles accessible on phones, tablets, TVs, and low-spec PCs for the first time. Our Xbox Game Pass subscription service now includes access to hundreds of games. And with our planned acquisition of Activision Blizzard, we aim to give players more choice to play great games wherever, whenever, and however they want. Choice is equally important to developers, who we want to support with a diversity of distribution and business models for their games. We believe the acquisition will unlock opportunities for innovation and enable the industry to grow.

OUR CULTURE

Our culture is the foundation on which our mission and strategy stand, and cultivating it is our greatest priority. We’re always working to close the gap between our espoused culture and the lived experience of the more than 220,000 people who work at Microsoft. Essential to this is our commitment to continually exercise our growth mindset and confront our fixed mindset with humility, curiosity, compassion, and the recognition that, while none of us will ever be perfect, we can always be better than we are today.

This growth mindset served us well through the historic changes of the past few years. It sustains our everyday practice of customer obsession. It helps us care for our colleagues and collaborate more effectively across the company. And it deeply informs our longstanding commitment to diversity and inclusion.

If we want to serve the world, we need to represent the world. Each year we strive to increase representation, and 2022 was no exception. We saw the strongest progress in years across several demographic groups, as you can see in our latest Diversity & Inclusion Report. We are one of the most transparent companies of our size when it comes to the data we share, and we continually challenge ourselves to increase visibility into where we’re succeeding and where we need to address gaps. We’ve added new data, such as military status, gender representation by geography, employee exits, and additional pay data, to reflect our workforce more broadly. As we make meaningful process, we continue our commitment to meet the increasing expectations for driving innovation, welcoming diverse perspectives, and leading global change.

Giving is also core to our culture at Microsoft. In 2022, our employees gave $255 million (with company match) to over 32,000 nonprofits. And more than 29,000 employees volunteered over 720,000 hours to causes they care about.

I’m constantly in awe of how our employees bring their passion to work each day—for each other, for our customers, and for their communities.

***

I want to close by thanking you for your continued investment in Microsoft. Our growth and impact this past year would not have been possible without your commitment to the company and belief in its mission.

The opportunity to apply technology to make a real difference for every customer, community, and country has never been greater. And I truly believe if we continue to live our mission, embrace our responsibility, and grasp that opportunity, there is no limit to what we can achieve for the world in the year ahead and beyond.

Satya Nadella

Posted on Leave a comment

2022 Diversity & Inclusion Report: Driving progress through greater accountability and transparency

Today I am sharing Microsoft’s 2022 Global Diversity & Inclusion Report, our fourth annual report and our ninth year of releasing our global workforce demographic data. This year’s data shows that globally we are a more diverse Microsoft overall today than we have ever been, with the highest year-over-year representation progress of the past five-year period for many employee communities. We’re motivated by our ongoing progress, and this year’s growth feels particularly meaningful in the context of significant challenges around the world.

As one of the most transparent companies of our size when it comes to the diversity and inclusion data we share, we are continually evaluating where we are now and where we aspire to be. This year, in addition to the extensive data we usually share, we’re adding new data on U.S. populations that include multiracial employees and those with military experience, as well as data on workforce exits by women and men globally and race and ethnicity in the U.S., and more detail on representation of women worldwide by geographic regions. We are also sharing additional pay analysis data to further highlight the opportunity for us to continue to make progress on representation at all levels of the company.

Key highlights:

  • For the first time, women now make up more than 30% of the Microsoft’s core* workforce worldwide at 30.7%, up 1.0 percentage point since last year. Since 2018, representation of women has grown at least 1.0 percentage point every year.
  • At Microsoft, we are committed to the principle of pay equity. Pay equity accounts for factors that legitimately influence total pay, including things like job title, level and tenure. As of September 2022:
    • Inside the U.S., all racial and ethnic minorities who are rewards eligible combined earn $1.008 total pay for every $1.000 earned by U.S. rewards-eligible white employees with the same job title and level and considering tenure.
    • Inside the U.S., women who are rewards eligible earn $1.007 total pay for every $1.000 earned by rewards-eligible employees who are men and have the same job title and level and considering tenure.
    • Outside the U.S., women who are rewards eligible earn $1.002 total pay for every $1.000 earned by men who are rewards eligible with the same job title and level and considering tenure in the combined geographies we report on.
  • Employees from racial and ethnic minority communities now make up 53.2% of Microsoft’s core U.S. workforce, up 1.9 percentage points from last year.
  • Representation across Asian, Black and African American, Hispanic and Latinx, and multiracial employee populations in our core U.S. workforce has increased for each group since last year:
    • Asian representation has grown by 0.3 percentage points to 35.8%, and has grown by 3.9 percentage points since 2018.
    • Black and African American representation grew 0.9 percentage points to 6.6%, the highest year-over-year increase in the past five years.
    • Hispanic and Latinx representation grew 0.6 percentage points to 7.6%, the highest year-over-year increase in the past five years.
    • Multiracial representation is 2.6%, up 0.1 percentage point from last year.
  • We’re energized by our strides toward fulfilling our commitment made in 2020 to double the number of Black and African American and Hispanic and Latinx people managers, senior individual contributors and senior leaders in the U.S. by 2025 as part of our Racial Equity Initiative.
    • For Black and African American people managers (below Director level), we’re 116.0% of the way to our 2025 commitment.
    • For Black and African American Directors, Partners and Executives — including people managers and individual contributors — we’re 92.0% of the way to our commitment.
    • For Hispanic and Latinx people managers (below Director level), we’re 46.5% of the way to our commitment.
    • For Hispanic and Latinx Directors, Partners and Executives — including people managers and individual contributors — we’re 57.6% of the way to our commitment.
  • 7.8% of employees in the U.S. self-identified as having a disability. This is an increase of 0.7 percentage points from last year.

This year, we added new reporting to continue to evolve how we reflect the many dimensions of identity within our workforce and to deepen transparency on our progress. For the first time, we’re sharing:

  • New dimensions of self-identification: We’ve added details on the population of U.S. employees who identify as multiracial. Increasing employees’ options to be more specific about their racial and ethnic identities helps us gather more actionable data, and we’ve heard from employees that having these options can help people feel more seen and included in the workplace. We’ve also expanded options for Asian employees in the U.S. to identify their backgrounds in further detail. The Asian community is the single largest racial and ethnic minority group within our company, encompassing more than 20 sub-identities. We aim to expand the detail we share in future reports once we have representative participation in this additional layer of self-identification.
  • Representation of U.S. employees with military status: Microsoft employs thousands of veterans and reserve service members around the world, and we offer employees the choice to identify as a person with military experience in 38 countries including the U.S. This data helps us to create more visibility for members of the Microsoft military community and better understand and support the diversity of our workforce. This year’s report shows that 4.7% of U.S. employees in our core Microsoft business self-identified as having served the U.S. Armed Forces or as having Protected Veteran status, a 0.4 percentage point increase from 2021. We aim to expand the detail we share in future reports once we have representative participation globally.
  • Workforce exits data: This year, for the first time, we’re reporting data on workforce exits of employees who have left Microsoft voluntarily or involuntarily. This reporting shows exits representation has declined 0.2 percentage points year over year for women globally. In the U.S., for Black and African American employees, exits representation has declined 0.3 percentage points year over year. Exits representation in the U.S. rose for Asian (5.1 percentage points), Hispanic and Latinx (0.4 percentage points), Native American and Alaska Native (0.2 percentage points), and multiracial (0.3 percentage points) employees since last year. Exits representation for Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander employees was unchanged year over year.
  • Additional pay data: We have reported on pay equity since 2016 in support of our commitment to pay employees equitably for substantially similar work. While pay equity is a critical factor, it is only one factor in how we think about progress. To further highlight the opportunity to continue to make progress on representation at all levels of the company, we have chosen this moment to be even more transparent and also voluntarily disclose the unadjusted differences in median total pay for women inside and outside of the U.S., and for racial and ethnic minorities, Asian, Black and African American, and Hispanic and Latinx employees in the U.S. The median is the middle value of a data set. Therefore, median pay for a group of employees represents the value where half of the employees in that group are paid higher than that point and half of the employees in that group are paid lower. This analysis allows us to surface differences in median pay when we don’t adjust for things like job title, level, and tenure. As we continue to increase representation for women and racial and ethnic minorities at more senior levels, and continue to ensure pay equity for all, the gap between the medians will reduce. View additional pay data on page 30 of the report.

This year’s report also explores how we innovate for inclusion, setting the standard on accountability and transparency, advocating for employees and communities globally, and continuing to broaden career pathways into our industry.

YouTube Video

The work of diversity and inclusion at Microsoft isn’t about a pledge or a performance, but about being deeply connected to the powerful impact on our lived experience when the people we spend our workdays with value inclusion and embrace difference. This is one of the reasons we are encouraged by what our employee sentiment measurement tells us. This year, for instance, when asked whether they feel included in their teams, employees responded to this companywide survey question with an average score of 86 globally.

As we maintain our momentum on increasing representation and strengthening our culture of inclusion, we’ll continue to listen, we’ll continue to learn and just as importantly, we’ll continue to act.

*Core Microsoft business represents 83.9% of the worldwide broader Microsoft workforce and does not include our minimally integrated companies.

Tags: ,

Posted on Leave a comment

Protecting fundamental values and driving technological progress in the EU

Five Questions for Nanna-Louise Wildfang Linde – Microsoft’s newly appointed Vice President of European Government Affairs

Nanna-Louise, you have recently taken the helm of Microsoft’s government affairs and public policy work in the EU. Can you share with us your professional journey to date?  

My first role was in a major law firm in Denmark, where I was a commercial attorney specializing in antitrust law. I was active in the professional community, giving lectures and publishing articles – and that’s how Microsoft became aware of me.  

I began as the company’s legal director for Denmark and Norway back in 2005. Over the following years, I would be charged with overseeing different territories across Europe. In 2012, I assumed the role of Assistant General Counsel, leading the Western European North and Central team responsible for corporate, external and legal affairs, including government relations. Most recently, I oversaw legal matters and government relations in 32 countries in Central and Eastern Europe. 

Taking on external affairs – responsible for engaging with governments as well as regulators – marked an important shift in my career. I am passionate about the law and I also get so much energy from connecting with people and building partnerships. So, being able to leverage my law background combined with my passion for creating dialogue with people and building trust was, and still is, incredibly fulfilling.  

What impact would you like to have in your new position?  

It’s a very interesting time to take on this role. Europe is facing a confluence of remarkable challenges. We’re emerging from the throes of the pandemic. There are the broad ramifications surrounding the war in Ukraine. We’re in a race to avert a climate tipping point.  

Digital technology has never played a bigger role in our daily lives, and we believe that tech innovation has a crucial role to play in helping society address these issues. For that to happen, there needs to be more collaboration and debate amongst policymakers, businesses and civil society. These issues are far too big and complex to be addressed in silos.  

At the same time, it’s important to note that people will not fully avail themselves of technology they don’t trust. For that, we need regulation that puts guardrails in place to protect peoples’ rights and ensures businesses are operating in a fair, open marketplace where they can thrive and innovate.  

It’s equally important to acknowledge that the pace of innovation continues to grow exponentially. This makes it challenging to craft legislation that is both effective and “future proofed”. For example, over the last several years I’ve worked with governments in Central and Eastern Europe around the issue of responsible AI. We share a deep belief that this technology must be designed and implemented in a way that is inclusive, accountable, reliable and fair. In other words, the technology should benefit all people.  

While that’s simple enough to say, it’s not so simple to do. It requires different points of view and different areas of expertise if you’re going to get it right for the long term. Policy influencers, tech leaders, NGOs and academics all need a voice.  

The issue of strategic autonomy has been receiving greater attention in recent times – what is your perspective as a European working for a major U.S. technology company?  

The discussions in Europe about strategic autonomy have been ongoing for a number of years. There are many reasons for this: The somewhat challenging transatlantic relationship during the previous U.S. administration, the pandemic as well as the war in Ukraine and subsequent energy crisis. These discussions of course encompass the digital sphere. There is increased scrutiny around the extent to which European businesses and governmental bodies are relying on the technology provided by U.S. companies. That’s valid and another reason why it’s so important for us to earn and maintain the trust of our customers.  

European governments and businesses should never compromise on their capacity for self-determination as they look to digitize and become data led. Approaches around how to best protect sovereignty vary, however. Sometime the only way to maintain it is by working with others, including trusted cloud providers who have the ability to disburse and distribute digital operations and data assets across borders. 

For example, during the earlier stages of the war against Ukraine, Russia targeted the governmental data center with cruise missiles and cyberattacks. The Ukraine government was able to successfully maintain its civil and military operations by pre-emptively moving its digital infrastructure out of the country and to the public cloud. Vital government data is now hosted in data centers across Europe, and we’re proud to have supported the government in achieving greater cyber-resiliency and digital sovereignty in this way.  

Your first few weeks in the role took you to New York to participate in discussions on the margins of the UN General Assembly and you also attended the Athens Democracy Forum where many of the issues you just talked about were addressed. What new perspectives have you brought back with you? 

We have a large global community that is deeply vested in protecting democracy. The war in Ukraine shows how high the stakes are. I had many discussions about how technology can help strengthen a nation’s security against cyber threats, protect the integrity of elections and mitigate the threat of misinformation campaigns. There was a real sense that we need to act now as a collective. We owe this to future generations.  

The conversations I’ve been having over the past several weeks – at the UN General Assembly and elsewhere – have been a timely reminder for me that the winning strategy for protecting democratic societies is working in partnership. Closing ourselves off and pulling away from the global stage is not an option. We need each other. The challenges we are facing collectively are too big – and the stakes are too high – for any of us to go it alone.  

One last question: what excites you about this new opportunity?  

At a fundamental level, I’m excited to play a part in ensuring technology actively advances the core values of the EU – freedom, democracy, equality and the rule of law. Having worked with teams across Europe for many years I have a great appreciation of the EU not just as an economic and political union, but as a community united by democratic principles and values.  

Another important reason to be excited about this role is my team. I must say I couldn’t be working with a more talented, dedicated group of individuals with incredibly varied backgrounds. And it’s clear to me we share a common mission: to be a constructive, helpful voice on tech regulation in the EU, while supporting the success of our customers in the region. The bottom line: If any team is ready to tackle the challenges, I talked about just now, it’s this one. 

Tags: , , , , ,

Posted on Leave a comment

’Critical to our modern society’: How datacenters power everyday necessities

In Berlin, a mother chats with her child’s doctor via a computer screen. In a Paris shop, the grocery shelves are stocked and more supplies are on the way. In Amsterdam, a student makes an online rent payment. In Romania, an ambulance is dispatched to a car accident.

All those moments – along with countless conveniences that pack daily life – nowadays happen with the help of datacenters. Purposely nondescript, these warehouses contain tens of thousands of interconnected computer servers plus the equipment needed to ensure the servers are always running, always available.

Happy family doing video call at home - Main focus on son faceSimply put, they are the physical infrastructure behind cloud computing. And across Europe, Microsoft datacenters are operating around the clock to support a wide spectrum of critical services, from the life-saving work of doctors and first responders to essential services like groceries and online banking. At the same time, datacenters also empower everyday necessities like food deliveries, remote work and video calls to family.

As Europeans brace for the possibility of a wintertime energy crisis, market researchers and energy consultants are calling datacenters critical enablers of modern society – including how they foster hybrid work schedules that reduce travel and allow office buildings to use less heat and electricity.

Despite the role datacenters play in so many aspects of people’s lives, most people don’t give them a second thought.

“Without datacenter infrastructure, which is the invisible infrastructure, will you still be able to do the things you need for working, resting and playing? Unless you’re off grid, the answer is no, you’re not going to be able to do any of those things,” says Rahiel Nasir, an associate research director at the market research firm IDC. He is based in the U.K.

“They are critical to our modern society,” adds Nasir, a member of IDC’s European cloud and cloud data management research programs.

Echoing those words, energy advisers Baringa labeled datacenters as “essential for modern society” – the top finding of a July report published by the U.K.-based consultancy.

From health care to grocery shopping, from online schools to online banking, it’s difficult to think of many corners of life that aren’t dependent on cloud services hosted in datacenters. Microsoft Azure and Microsoft Teams are products that rely on datacenters.

Doctor and nurses discussing digital tabletIn medicine, hundreds of hospitals and clinics in Europe rely on Azure’s cloud capabilities to track patient records, schedule surgeries and engage with patients via telehealth systems. A German software company created an Azure-based solution that has helped more than 600 European health care facilities manage the work schedules of doctors, nurses and other staff.

A hospital in the Czech Republic uses Azure IoT to help monitor medication storage. In Poland, a surgeon uses augmented reality to precisely perform a procedure. And Azure hosts the public health records and the robotic medicine dispensing system for a hospital in Malta.

For urgent medical matters, Microsoft datacenters support emergency dispatch services across Europe, including 112-call systems and the mapping platforms that help route emergency vehicles to people in need and to the nearest hospitals.

In the world of money, some European financial services run their risk assessment programs in Azure, helping them make smarter decisions about where and how to invest. The cloud also enables financial trading systems, a core driver of economic markets.

In the stores, some European retailers rely on Microsoft Teams and its cloud-based collaboration functions to communicate with employees in the aisles or checkout lanes. At the back end, datacenters allow retail managers to track stock.

And to keep the lights on in those stores as well as in thousands of other businesses, hospitals and private homes, European utility providers trust datacenters to carry the critical workloads that help them manage electrical grids.

“Just looking across that list of industries and all the enablement they provide, datacenters are critical,” says Corey Sanders, corporate vice president of Microsoft cloud for industry and global expansion.

“Across almost every industry – manufacturing, transportation, even hospitality – there is some aspect of dependency, whether it be legacy services running in the cloud or modern digital transformation capabilities that have been invented in the cloud,” Sanders says.