News

Microsoft's Ray Ozzie To Retire

Microsoft's chief software architect Ray Ozzie is stepping down from his role and will retire, the company announced late Monday.

In an e-mail to employees, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said Ozzie will retire from the company following a transition period in which he will focus on Microsoft's entertainment efforts. Ozzie, who came to Microsoft in 2005 following the acquisition of his company Groove Networks, was a vocal force behind Microsoft's cloud strategy and played a role in the success of Microsoft's SharePoint collaboration software.

Ozzie replaced Microsoft founder and chairman Bill Gates as chief software architect in 2006. In his e-mail, Ballmer said he does not intend to fill the chief software architect role.

"The CSA role was unique and I won't refill the role after Ray's departure," Ballmer wrote. "We have a strong planning process, strong technical leaders in each business group and strong innovation heading to the market."

Many have described Ozzie as a visionary. Ozzie's initial claim to fame came when his company, Iris Associates, created what would be known as Lotus Notes, a product that during the 1990s was so successful that IBM acquired Lotus Development Corp. in 1995 for $3.5 billion. The success of Notes, the first widely-used enterprise collaboration platform for PC users, confounded Gates at the time.

Ozzie joined Microsoft after the company acquired Groove, which is now a key component in SharePoint Server 2010. Shortly after arriving at Microsoft, he wrote a call to arms posting on the need to embrace Internet and Web services and ultimately the cloud.

"Computing and communications technologies have dramatically and progressively improved to enable the viability of a services-based model," he wrote, warning that failure to respond to the evolution of what would become cloud-based services would put the entire company at risk. "We must respond quickly and decisively," he noted.

"His work since, stimulated thinking across the company and helped catalyze our drive to the cloud," Ballmer said.

It is unclear how long Ozzie will remain in his new role, where he will continue to report to Ballmer.

About the Author

Jeffrey Schwartz is editor of Redmond magazine and also covers cloud computing for Virtualization Review's Cloud Report. In addition, he writes the Channeling the Cloud column for Redmond Channel Partner. Follow him on Twitter @JeffreySchwartz.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Low-Coding in the Age of AI: Dataverse Embraces Copilot, Claude and Cursor

    Microsoft is extending Dataverse into coding-agent marketplaces while expanding its MCP tools, certification program and governance controls.

  • Visual Studio Takes Aim at Copilot Billing Shock

    Beyond Copilot usage visibility, the June update delivers several other enhancements centered on AI-assisted development, security and quality-of-life improvements. Here's a quick rundown of the remaining additions announced by Microsoft.

  • Claude AI Gets Yet Another Boost in VS Code 1.128

    The July 8, 2026, Visual Studio Code update expands agent workflows, chat attachments, browser-tab controls, OS-level shortcuts and enterprise telemetry management.

  • TypeScript 7 Arrives to Rock VS Code with Go-Powered Speed

    Microsoft says TypeScript 7, announced July 8, brings native Go performance to VS Code, Visual Studio and other editors.

Subscribe on YouTube