Corporate  accounts (CAS), sometimes referred  to as larger mid-market companies, are typically defined as those with between  300 and 1,000 employees. It is a segment that lies above SMB and below the enterprise  level. There are more than 50,000 companies in the United States that fit the  definition of a CAS.
Many  partners, including myself, love to have prominent household brands on the  customer list because it opens doors to new business. However, it is often challenging for smaller or  medium-sized partners to start transacting with these large accounts. You often  need to have a bit of luck, and luck should never be confused with having a  strategy. Don't say no to enterprise customers, but don't bet the farm on winning  them.
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	Posted by Per Werngren on September 16, 20250 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It seems that every partner today wants to be an  MSP. There are lots of opportunities in this space and the growth is  predicted to continue. However, there  seems to be confusion around what an MSP actually is. MSPs  comes in different sizes, with different focus areas and specializations, and  serving different industries. And many partners that  are not really MSPs want to label themselves as such, when in reality they're closer to classic professional services companies (i.e., they sell hours in  various forms) and often they're solo-entrepreneurs. 
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	Posted by Per Werngren on July 02, 20250 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Everyone has been talking about AI since ChatGPT was released, but  even for years before that, AI has caused plenty of buzz in our industry. But  where exactly is the money in AI? 
On the cost side, it's quite obvious. Many billions of dollars are  being invested in AI by the cloud hyperscalers, different platform companies and  everyone else. On the income side, however, it's a little less obvious. 
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	Posted by Per Werngren on March 25, 20250 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Thank  for all the fantastic responses to my post in January where I talked  about recurring revenue. This is clearly a topic that everyone loves; everyone  is seeking the magic formula for recurring revenue growth. Part of the secret  sauce of recurring revenue is that you need to build scale -- and that means volume.
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	Posted by Per Werngren on February 24, 20250 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    "Don't  pay over the odds" was a line I used in the mid-1990s in reference to  advertising. Paying over the odds is the most common problem for customers in  IT today and many of them are unaware of it. They pay a lot and get far less  than they should -- or deserve.
The  easiest thing for a cloud customer to do (most of the time) is to look at their  Microsoft Azure, AWS or Google Cloud spend and implement a few changes to  reduce their monthly bill significantly. If a customer is unoptimized, doing  this can often slash costs by as much as a third, and sometimes as much as two-thirds.  I will never understand why some customers just let it slide and choose to pay  the highest price available by being passive. 
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	Posted by Per Werngren on January 22, 20250 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I have been exploring and driving business models based on recurring  revenue all my career. It started with a business in the early 1990s, when we offered  a server-as-a-service. That meant we placed a physical server with Novell NetWare  (this was before Microsoft was a major player in this area), printing services  and e-mail system at the customer's office. We connected to the server remotely  for maintenance and support. Occasionally, we had to send for a technician to fix  something that couldn't be fixed remotely, like a hard drive that needed replacing  or a power supply issue. Essentially, however, we became that customer's IT  department and ran the system for them. Everything was included in the fixed monthly  cost. 
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	Posted by Per Werngren on January 14, 20250 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Many partners  that have been around for some time are classified as value-added resellers  (VARs). The VAR business model entails working to get the most, biggest and  most profitable transactions as possible. Some VARs have a small services arm,  where they install, repair and maintain customers' equipment; if they play it  right, they can make the bulk of their profits this way. However, a VAR's business  is often based on reselling hardware and software, plus the margin that customers  will accept. VARs try to add value to their transactions in multiple ways, but ultimately,  it is mostly a reselling game. 
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	Posted by Per Werngren on September 30, 20240 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The AI wave can be seen as hype, something that needs to mature before  money can be made from it. At the moment, everyone is thinking about what they  can do with AI -- though many have already started to experiment. 
Earnings from the big hyperscalers (Microsoft, Google and AWS) weren't  driven by AI services as much as the stock market expected, which hurt  valuations short-term. Investors expected the AI hype to have translated into  higher revenue by now. But this is the time for us all to make investments, to  plant the seeds that will give great harvests. 
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	Posted by Per Werngren on September 03, 20240 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I'm not a software developer; I'm just a guy helping Microsoft partners  find their path to success. Nitty-gritty technical conversations have never  been my arena. 
But even a non-techie like myself sees that AI-driven software  development is a revolution. Software development will never be the same again,  to the benefit of both customers and partners. And this is where I'm an expert. I love to talk about business  transformation and driving better business outcomes.
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	Posted by Per Werngren on February 23, 20240 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Probably nobody in our ecosystem has missed the wave of news around AI.  Besides the great products we've seen from Microsoft and others, AI has also been  widely democratized via ChatGPT, which has really accelerated innovation. In  just the year since it hit the scene, ChatGPT has become the engine for  multiple solutions that build services on top of it.  
At this month's Microsoft Ignite event in Seattle, there was a very  strong focus on AI and the marching orders from Microsoft are crystal clear:  AI is the chosen path and partners should get on board. But what exactly does a  partner play for AI look like?
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	Posted by Per Werngren on November 27, 20230 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
In my previous  article, I talked about CPOs -- chief partner (or partnership) officers -- and  I'm overwhelmed and a bit surprised by how much interest this discussion has attracted.  CPOs are the talk of partner ecosystems -- not just specific to the Microsoft ecosystem,  but also in much broader terms, and even with regard to partnering outside tech.
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	Posted by Per Werngren on October 03, 20230 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
For as long as I can remember, whenever we in the channel have talked  about "P2P" or simply "partnering," we were referring to  transactions that either went in a single direction (as is the case with  resellers) or a bi-directional flow of deals.
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	Posted by Per Werngren on September 11, 20230 comments