Microsoft Cloud Partner Community Reaches 68K
    Six months after claiming to have more cloud partners than  Amazon Web Services, Google and Salesforce combined, Microsoft says partners continue  to join on to its cloud effort at a good clip.
Microsoft worldwide channel chief Gavriella Schuster shared  some Microsoft Partner Network metrics during a State  of the Channel briefing this month.
"Currently, we have more than 68,000 cloud partners,  which is a 33% increase year over year," Schuster said during the  briefing. That figure is up slightly from the 64,000+ figure that Microsoft  cited in July at its Microsoft Inspire conference. It implies the count would  have been about 50,000 partners a year ago.
Those partners are selling Microsoft's cloud services, such  as Azure, Dynamics 365 and Office 365 through all of Microsoft's sales motions.  All of that partner activity helped Microsoft reach a $20  billion annual run rate goal for cloud revenues in its first fiscal quarter  of 2018.
Schuster also called attention to even faster growth within  the Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) business model for partners. CSP involves almost  all of Microsoft's cloud products, but allows partners to bundle Microsoft's  products with a partner's own, as well as third-party, services to present a  single bill to the customer. In that type of customer engagement, the partner,  rather than Microsoft, owns pricing, billing and first-line support.
According to Schuster, the number of partners transacting  through CSP in the past 12 months has grown by 83%.
Asked for clarification in an email, a Microsoft  spokesperson said the total number of partners transacting in CSP is now  45,000. That's up from 37,500 partners transacting through CSP as of July. An  83% increase suggests Microsoft had just under 25,000 partners transacting  through CSP a year ago. That rate of increase, fast at the start of the year,  and slower in the last six months, would be consistent with figures shared by Microsoft  for U.S. CSP participation this fall of about a 33%  increase.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 29, 2018