FACTBOX: Microsoft's post-Gates leaders
(Reuters) - Microsoft Corp co-founder Bill Gates will retire from the company on Friday and move to a full-time role at his charitable organization, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
As Microsoft's biggest shareholder, Gates will maintain a role at the software company as its nonexecutive chairman. He will also take part in special technology projects.
Does Gates' departure leave a leadership vacuum at the company? Here's a list of the remaining leaders at Microsoft after Gates leaves:
* Steve Ballmer, Chief Executive Officer, 52
Ballmer joined the company in 1980 when Gates, a Harvard University classmate, talked him into dropping out of Stanford University business school to join Microsoft as its first business manager.
Since replacing Gates as CEO in 2000, Ballmer has been the main decision maker at the company, which has seen revenue more than double during that period.
Known for his histrionics and sharp intellect, Ballmer has said in interviews that he would stay at Microsoft for another "9 or 10 years."
* Ray Ozzie, Chief Software Architect, 52
Ozzie replaced Gates as the company's top software guru in 2006. He joined the company as chief technical officer in 2005 when Microsoft bought his software company called Groove Networks.
The white-haired, soft-spoken Ozzie competed with Microsoft for years, creating products like International Business Machines' Lotus Notes e-mail and calendaring software.
Ozzie is responsible for mapping out the company's "software plus services" strategy, which call on Microsoft's software to incorporate an online services element.
* Kevin Johnson, President, Platforms & Services Division, 47
Johnson has the dual task of protecting Microsoft's most important business, Windows, and building out its future cash generator, online advertising.
Since joining Microsoft in 1992, Johnson has taken on various roles in sales and marketing including being the head of worldwide sales.
He was one of the main drivers behind Microsoft's bid to acquire Yahoo Inc. After Yahoo's board rejected Microsoft's offer to buy the company, Johnson and his team countered with an alternative offer to buy Yahoo's search business and assume a minor stake in the company. That was also rejected by Yahoo.
* Christopher Liddell, Chief Financial Officer, 50 Continued...
The future of food
Italian farmer Giuseppe Oglio eschews fertilizer and pesticides; American corporate giant Monsanto rewrites the genetic code of plants. Which of these radically different approaches will best feed the world? Full Article | Slideshow



