Microsoft to open retail stores this year

David Flynn16 July 2009, 10:38 AM

The first Microsoft store will open in time for the Windows 7 launch this October – with some located “right next door to Apple stores”, the company promises.


Microsoft is coming to Main Street, with plans to open a chain of retail stores a la Apple and Sony. The first shops will appear in the US in time for the launch of Windows 7, with the likely locations being hot and hip CBD locations or what Microsoft Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner termed as “lifestyle centre” retail environments.

Turner also said that “We’re going to have some retail stores opened up that are opened up right next door to Apple stores”.



Microsoft's concept retail store, opened last year at its Redmond HQ, doesn't suffer
 from pesky customers cluttering up the place

Microsoft is no doubt hoping that its first stores will see lines of customers queueing up pre-dawn to buy a copy of Windows 7 when the new OS debuts on October 22nd, to tap the same valuable media exposure as it did for the launch of Windows 95, and of course as Apple has enjoyed for the iPhone.

However, while the stores will be packed with Microsoft’s software, PC accessories and of course the Xbox and Zune, the company has not revealed the level of involvement by its hardware OEM partners.

One option would be to operate in the same way as the clothing and cosmetics counters of department stores, with individual areas sublet by and staffed by premium brands such as Dell and HP.

However, Microsoft is more likely to set up ‘experience’ centres around broader Windows concepts such as digital photography, movie making and mobile computing, to effectively showcase but not to sell partner hardware.

That approach could also more effectively promote niche solutions such as Windows Home Server, which has failed to gain traction in the mainstream.

Nor has the name of the stores themselves been revealed. Will this be The Microsoft Store? Windows Live Style? Blue Screens’R’Us?

Frippery aside, Microsoft has been putting some solid planning into this move. Earlier this year Microsoft hired David Porter, who previously spent 25 years with US retailer Wal-Mart, to run the operation. Microsoft COO Kevin Turner is also a Wal-Mart veteran.

And last year Microsoft created what it described as a ‘concept retail environment’ at its Redmond campus. The dummy store was fully decked out with stock, shopping carts and checkouts, although it wasn’t intended to actually sell anything.

At the time Microsoft denied this was part of a strategy to to open retail stores, claiming the project was more about “taking a leadership role” to help its retailers understand they could market Microsoft products and consumer technology more effectively.

But now the company has clean on its plans. “There are tremendous opportunities ahead for Microsoft to create a world-class shopping experience for our customers” says David Porter, “helping consumers make more informed decisions about their PC and software purchases”.


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McBanjo (User):

The difference is that Apple Stores were actually a success.

16 July 2009, 2:20 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

CBR1100XX (Advanced member):

Quoting McBanjo:
The difference is that Apple Stores were actually a success

Are you suggesting that the MS store won't be! .................... Before it even opens?



16 July 2009, 2:24 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

TV Bis (User):

Actually MS has been a success without opening any stores.........

16 July 2009, 9:02 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

NetR@nger (User):

Quoting McBanjo:
The difference is that Apple Stores were actually a success


Hate to breath some truth into your argument,apple never has and never will even come close to being a threat to microsofts worldwide domination.The apple company is a self centered,greedy company with the "apple way or the highway" approach.The microsoft stores will blow apple out of the water when they open for the simple fact that most of the world run windows.




17 July 2009, 7:45 AM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

Quoting NetR@nger:
apple never has and never will even come close to being a threat to microsofts worldwide domination


And PCs will never need more than 640K of RAM, right? Never say never. I can't stand Apple products, but every business has a beginning, middle and end. Microsoft's just as collapsible as any other business that doesn't keep up with the world.

17 July 2009, 2:19 PM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

todd_h86 (User):

Are they going to have Microsoft equivalents to the Genius Bar? Balmer Bar maybe?

16 July 2009, 2:27 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

The PikeMaster (User):

Blue screens `r` us. Good name rofl. Lets hope the blue screen is lacking frequency in Windows 7.

16 July 2009, 4:05 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

TV Bis (User):

Quoting The PikeMaster:
Lets hope the blue screen is lacking frequency in Windows 7.

I'd check your hardware if I were you.........



16 July 2009, 9:00 PM (8 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

NetR@nger (User):

Quoting The PikeMaster:
(Lets hope the blue screen is lacking frequency in Windows 7)
No bluescreens in win 7,ive had it running(now as my main os)since it was released and its never crashed once.Blows XP,VISTA,OSX,LINUX out of the game.




17 July 2009, 7:22 AM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

Quoting NetR@nger:
Blows XP,VISTA,OSX,LINUX out of the game.


Eleborate... How much experience do you have with all of those? You sound like someone who has not actually spent any real time on MacOS or Linux.

17 July 2009, 2:34 PM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (Senior Forumologist):

Quoting Tin:
How much experience do you have with all of those?

How dare you question the lad's experience don't you know he's loaded W7 on his machine and that worked. It's a level of testing far greater than that done before the Vista launch.

The "I've never had a problem set" never cease to amaze with the exhaustiveness of their own home testing.


17 July 2009, 9:53 PM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

NetR@nger (User):

Quoting Tin:
How much experience do you have with all of those?
Oh lets just say that ive had a fair whack at these operating systems



18 July 2009, 7:47 AM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

Other than boxed copies of software, a few XBoxes and some Zunes, what would be in these stores? Why would anyone visit one when there's KMart, Harvey Norman, etc?
Apple Stores made sense because Apple make hardware, and a broad range of it. They also have a more exclusive image.

17 July 2009, 2:44 PM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Aubrey (Advanced member):

I agree Tin - I would have though that boxed software is not a big cash earner for MS. They made their mark with preloaded OS's and point-of-sale add-on apps - I still believe that most people don't add much to their software library after they get a new machine. Why would they given the massive discounts they get by getting it all as a package.

Unless MS is radically changing its business, these stores are more likely to be just sophisticated "billboards" for the brand rather than actual real sales outlets. If that is so, it would indicate concern about consumers drifting to other brands - the old idea that a PC is "Windows Machine" and a Mac is an Apple machine may be starting to loose ground.

And since when were digital photography, movie making and mobile computing etc limited to Windows? These are all areas where other systems (Apple and Linux) have had reasonable success well before MS tried to put their brand on them.

I can't comment on others exhaustive testing of different OS offerings at the moment, but I'm running Win7 and Ubuntu side-by-side and can't say I have found anything so compelling about Win7 that I would pay a (hefty) license fee for it
when the RC bomb goes off. It is certainly better (and faster) than Vista on my machine, but so is DOS 5.0 running Windows 3.11. I have, however, recommended it to friends and relatives who wouldn't use Linux.



17 July 2009, 11:59 PM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

JTech Studios (User):

Blue Screens’R’Us is an awsome name! Lol, I hope they actually call it that :) But they won't even think about a name like that :( Oh well, we can dream.

19 July 2009, 2:03 PM (7 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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