Microsoft: From a New Mexico Garage to the World's Most Valuable Company
COMPANY DEEP DIVE: Microsoft Corp. — $245B Revenue — $3.2T Peak Market Cap — 228,000 Employees — 190+ Countries
Global Business · Tech Giants · Company Story

Microsoft: From a New Mexico Garage to the World's Most Valuable Company

How Bill Gates and Paul Allen built a software empire on a single bet in 1975, survived an antitrust case that nearly broke them, lost the mobile era entirely, then came back under Satya Nadella to reach a $3 trillion valuation through cloud computing and AI.

14 min read By Robert
$245BAnnual Revenue
$3.2TPeak Market Cap
228K+Employees
190+Countries
23%Cloud Market Share
1975Year Founded

The Beginning: A 19-Year-Old, a Magazine, and a Big Gamble

In December 1974, Paul Allen walked into a newsagent in Harvard Square, Massachusetts, and saw a copy of Popular Electronics magazine. On the cover was the Altair 8800, billed as the world's first personal computer kit. Allen immediately called his childhood friend Bill Gates, then a 19-year-old Harvard student, and said: "This is it. This is the moment." They were convinced that every home and office would one day own a personal computer, and that whoever wrote the software to run those computers would control an industry.

Gates dropped out of Harvard. Allen left his job at Honeywell. They called the company Micro-Soft, a portmanteau of microcomputer and software. On April 4, 1975, Microsoft was formally incorporated in Albuquerque, New Mexico, near the manufacturer of the Altair. Their first product was a version of BASIC programming language that ran on the Altair. They had written it without actually owning the hardware, simulating the chip on a larger computer and hoping it would work when they finally ran it on the real machine. It worked on the first attempt.

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The IBM Deal: The Pivot That Built the Empire

In 1980, IBM approached Microsoft to provide the operating system for a new personal computer IBM was developing. The deal was not originally intended for Microsoft. IBM had approached Digital Research, owners of the dominant CP/M operating system. When those negotiations stalled, IBM came to Gates. Microsoft did not have an operating system. Rather than admit this, Gates agreed to supply one and immediately purchased a crude operating system called QDOS, Quick and Dirty Operating System, from a Seattle programmer named Tim Paterson for approximately $50,000.

Microsoft licensed QDOS to IBM as PC-DOS, but crucially, Microsoft retained the rights to license the same operating system to other manufacturers as MS-DOS. When the IBM PC launched in 1981 and became a phenomenon, dozens of other companies built IBM-compatible clones running MS-DOS. Microsoft collected a licensing fee from every one of them. Within five years, MS-DOS was the operating system on the majority of personal computers worldwide. Bill Gates had not invented a product. He had created a platform tax on an entire industry.

"Our vision is to empower every person and every organisation on the planet to achieve more." Microsoft Corporate Mission Statement

Windows and the Graphical Revolution

Apple's Macintosh had demonstrated in 1984 that a graphical user interface was the future of computing. Microsoft's response was Windows, a graphical layer built on top of MS-DOS. Windows 1.0 in 1985 was uninspiring. Windows 3.0 in 1990 was transformative. Windows 95 in August 1995 was a cultural event: the launch was accompanied by a $300 million marketing campaign that licensed the Rolling Stones' "Start Me Up," featured a Jay Leno appearance, and resulted in queues outside computer stores at midnight worldwide. Windows 95 sold 7 million copies in its first five weeks, and by the late 1990s, over 90% of the world's personal computers ran Microsoft Windows.

Revenue: From $16,000 to $245 Billion

YearRevenue (USD)Key Driver
1975$16,000BASIC for Altair
1986$197 millionMS-DOS, Windows, IPO year
1995$5.9 billionWindows 95, Office
2000$22.9 billionWindows, Office, Server
2008$60.4 billionWindows Vista, Xbox, Server
2014$86.8 billionOffice 365 launch, Cloud begins
2018$110 billionAzure growth, LinkedIn
2022$198 billionAzure, Teams, Activision deal
2024$245 billionAzure AI, Copilot, Gaming
Microsoft's Intelligent Cloud segment, anchored by Azure, generated over $105 billion in fiscal year 2024 revenue, making it the single largest segment within Microsoft and the clearest indicator of how completely the company has transformed from a Windows-dependent software vendor into a cloud and AI business.

The Antitrust Battle That Shook Silicon Valley

By the late 1990s, Microsoft's dominance had become a target. The US Department of Justice, joined by 20 state attorneys general, filed a landmark antitrust case in 1998 alleging Microsoft had illegally leveraged its Windows monopoly to crush Netscape's web browser by bundling Internet Explorer for free into Windows. In June 2000, Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson ruled that Microsoft should be broken into two companies: one to sell Windows, one to sell everything else.

The ruling was overturned on appeal. A 2001 settlement required Microsoft to share its programming interfaces with third-party companies and prohibited certain anti-competitive practices, but the company remained intact. The case, however, consumed years of executive focus and contributed to Microsoft missing the mobile and internet transitions that followed. While Gates and Ballmer fought the government, Google was building search, and Apple was building the iPhone.

Microsoft's market cap fell from a peak of $619 billion in 1999 to approximately $270 billion by 2009, a decade of stagnation during which Google, Apple, and Amazon all emerged as dominant tech powers. The "lost decade" under Steve Ballmer is one of the most studied cases of leadership failure and missed opportunity in corporate history.
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The Nadella Revolution: Cloud First, Mobile First

Satya Nadella became Microsoft's third CEO on February 4, 2014. He was not the obvious choice. He was a quiet, thoughtful engineer from Hyderabad, India, who had spent his career inside Microsoft building its server and cloud businesses. His predecessors had been defined by aggressive, combative styles. Nadella brought something different: intellectual humility and a willingness to confront what Microsoft had done wrong.

Within his first year, Nadella released Office for iPad, ending years of Microsoft refusing to put its productivity software on Apple devices out of a defensive instinct to protect Windows. He declared Microsoft a "cloud-first, mobile-first" company. He killed the Windows Phone project that had burned billions. He acquired LinkedIn for $26.2 billion in 2016 and GitHub for $7.5 billion in 2018, giving Microsoft the world's largest professional network and the world's largest code repository respectively. Most importantly, he doubled down on Azure, Microsoft's cloud platform, transforming it from a niche IT product into the second-largest cloud infrastructure service on Earth.

According to Reuters, Microsoft's market capitalisation grew from approximately $300 billion when Nadella took over in 2014 to over $3 trillion by early 2024, representing the largest absolute market cap gain by any company in a single CEO tenure in history.

Global Footprint: 190 Countries, Every Device

North America
Headquarters
Redmond, Washington HQ. US accounts for ~52% of revenue. Azure's largest data centre network.
Europe
Enterprise Core
~27% of revenue. Strong Office 365 and Azure penetration. Dublin regional hub.
Asia Pacific
Growth Markets
India major engineering base. Azure expanding rapidly in Japan, Australia, Southeast Asia.
Emerging Regions
Long-Term Bets
Africa, Latin America, Middle East. Data centres announced in Kenya, UAE, Saudi Arabia.

Milestones: The Full Journey

1975
Bill Gates and Paul Allen found Micro-Soft in Albuquerque. First product: BASIC interpreter for the Altair 8800.
1980
IBM contract signed. Microsoft acquires QDOS for $50,000 and licenses it to IBM as PC-DOS, retaining rights as MS-DOS.
1986
Microsoft IPO at $21 per share. Gates becomes a billionaire at 31. Allen exits to manage health issues.
1990
Windows 3.0 launches. Microsoft Office consolidates Word, Excel, and PowerPoint into a single suite.
1995
Windows 95 launches to global fanfare. Internet Explorer bundled free. Netscape's browser war begins.
1998
DOJ antitrust case filed. Google founded the same year. Microsoft begins missing the internet wave.
2001
Xbox launches, entering the console gaming market. Windows XP released, the most successful Windows version.
2010
Azure cloud platform launches commercially. The pivot that would save Microsoft begins quietly.
2014
Satya Nadella becomes CEO. Cloud-first strategy declared. Office released on iOS and Android.
2016
LinkedIn acquired for $26.2 billion, the largest acquisition in Microsoft history at the time.
2019
Microsoft becomes the world's most valuable company for the first time since 2002, surpassing Apple briefly.
2023
$10 billion OpenAI investment announced. Copilot AI integrated across all Microsoft products. Bing Chat launches.
2024
Market cap peaks above $3.2 trillion. Activision Blizzard acquisition for $69 billion closes, creating largest gaming company by revenue.

The OpenAI Bet: Owning the AI Era

In January 2023, Microsoft announced a multi-year, multi-billion-dollar investment in OpenAI that ultimately totalled approximately $13 billion. The deal gave Microsoft a 49% stake in OpenAI's capped profit structure, exclusive rights to commercialise OpenAI's technology across its products, and a commitment to run all of OpenAI's compute workloads on Azure. It was the single most consequential technology investment of the 2020s.

Within weeks of the deal, Microsoft integrated OpenAI's GPT-4 into Bing search, rebranding it as Bing Chat. It integrated the same technology into Office 365 as Microsoft 365 Copilot, allowing Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook to be driven by natural language AI commands. Azure OpenAI Service made the same models available to enterprise customers. The result was that every major Microsoft product gained a credible AI capability almost simultaneously, while Google scrambled to respond with Bard and Amazon raced to sign its own AI deals.

According to BBC Technology, the OpenAI partnership transformed Microsoft's narrative from a legacy software company into the most credibly positioned large technology firm for the AI era, directly contributing to the stock rising over 70% between the investment announcement and early 2024.

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Microsoft's Business Model: Three Powerful Pillars

Microsoft today operates three primary revenue segments of roughly comparable and growing size. Intelligent Cloud, dominated by Azure, represents the company's highest-growth business and its strategic future, generating over $105 billion annually. Productivity and Business Processes covers Office 365, LinkedIn, and Dynamics 365 enterprise software, generating over $77 billion and benefiting from deep entrenchment in corporate workflows globally. More Personal Computing covers Windows, Xbox gaming, Surface hardware, and Bing advertising, generating approximately $63 billion and serving as the consumer-facing arm of the business.

The elegance of Microsoft's model in the Nadella era is that each pillar reinforces the others. Azure cloud is where enterprises run their infrastructure. Office 365 is the productivity layer on top of that infrastructure. Windows and GitHub are the entry point for developers who learn to build on Azure. LinkedIn feeds the enterprise sales pipeline. The entire ecosystem generates high-margin, recurring subscription revenue with extraordinary switching costs once a company is embedded in the Microsoft stack.

Microsoft 365 Copilot, the AI assistant integrated into Office, is priced at $30 per user per month on top of existing Microsoft 365 subscriptions. With over 400 million Microsoft 365 commercial users globally, even modest Copilot adoption rates represent tens of billions in potential additional annual revenue, the highest-margin growth opportunity in Microsoft's history.

Gaming: The Activision Gambit

Microsoft completed its acquisition of Activision Blizzard in October 2023 for approximately $69 billion, after a 21-month regulatory battle with US and UK authorities. The deal made Microsoft the world's third-largest gaming company by revenue, adding franchises including Call of Duty, World of Warcraft, Candy Crush, and Diablo to its existing Xbox and Bethesda studios. Microsoft's stated strategy is to build a Netflix-like gaming subscription service through Xbox Game Pass, where players pay a monthly fee to access hundreds of games rather than buying titles individually.

The gaming division now generates approximately $21 billion in annual revenue and is growing as streaming and mobile gaming expand. More strategically, gaming is Microsoft's clearest path to consumer relevance in a hardware landscape where Windows PCs are declining and Microsoft has no presence in smartphones, the world's dominant computing device.

Frequently Asked Questions

Microsoft was founded by Bill Gates and Paul Allen on April 4, 1975, in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Gates was 19 and Allen was 22. The company's initial business was developing a version of the BASIC programming language for the Altair 8800 microcomputer.
Microsoft reported annual revenue of approximately $245 billion in its fiscal year 2024, with cloud services under Azure representing the single largest and fastest-growing revenue segment. The company's operating income exceeded $109 billion.
Microsoft employs approximately 228,000 full-time employees worldwide as of its most recent annual filings, making it one of the largest technology employers in the world alongside Amazon, Alphabet, and Apple.
Microsoft Azure holds approximately 23-25% of the global cloud infrastructure market, making it the second largest cloud provider after Amazon Web Services at roughly 31%, and ahead of Google Cloud at around 11%.
Microsoft has invested approximately $13 billion in OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT and GPT-4, making it OpenAI's largest investor and exclusive cloud partner. The deal gives Microsoft rights to integrate OpenAI technology across all its products, including Copilot AI features in Windows, Office, and Azure.
Microsoft first surpassed Apple as the world's most valuable public company by market capitalisation in January 2024, reaching a peak valuation of approximately $3.2 trillion, driven by explosive investor enthusiasm for its AI strategy and Azure cloud growth.

What Comes Next?

Microsoft's priorities are clear and ambitious: accelerate Copilot AI adoption across its 400 million commercial users, grow Azure at 25-30% annually to defend and expand its cloud market share against AWS, and integrate Activision's gaming assets into a scalable subscription model that can rival Netflix in the entertainment industry.

The OpenAI relationship will remain the defining strategic variable. As OpenAI seeks independent compute capacity and potentially new investors, the exclusivity and depth of Microsoft's partnership will be tested. Any meaningful shift in that relationship would be one of the most consequential events in the technology industry in years.

Watch: Azure AI revenue milestones, Copilot commercial adoption rates, OpenAI partnership terms, and Xbox Game Pass subscriber growth through 2025-2026.

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