Microsoft Raises Bar for Direct CSPs
    Microsoft this month is informing partners that requirements  and costs to participate in direct billing for Cloud Solution Providers (CSPs)  will be increasing, starting this summer, and that revenue requirements are a likely  next step in the evolution of the program.
In an e-mail sent to direct CSPs on May 10, Microsoft introduced  two new direct-bill requirements that partners must meet before their next  enrollment period after Aug. 31. According to the e-mail, which was confirmed as  authentic by a Microsoft spokesperson, direct CSPs must now purchase a support  plan from Microsoft and demonstrate a few key capabilities. 
The support plan options are Microsoft Advanced Support for  Partners or Microsoft Premier Support for Partners. The Advanced Support plan  will cost U.S. partners $15,000 a year and provides break/fix problem resolution,  promised response times of less than an hour for critical issues, and the  ability to manage support incidents on a customer's behalf. Premier Support is  a more expensive and higher-end offering that is customizable and can cover  multiple geographies.
There are also two key capability requirements. One is that  partners provide at least one managed service, intellectual property service or  customer solution application. The other is that the partner must demonstrate a  billing and provisioning infrastructure.
The e-mail also suggested partners should expect CSP-related  revenue requirements later. "While there are no specific performance  targets associated with these updates, your performance will be considered as a  key success component in the future," the e-mail stated. Given that the  effective start of the program is Sept. 1, which is partway into Microsoft  Fiscal Year 2019, it seems likely that any revenue requirements wouldn't take  effect until FY 2020, which begins July 1, 2019.
Microsoft declined to make a partner executive available for  an interview. The company did provide an e-mailed statement in which it  presented the changes as aligning the CSP direct-bill enrollment requirements  with the needs and priorities of customers.
"Cloud enablement services are a critical element of  Advanced Support for Partners, making this offering essential to help grow  cloud businesses and achieve more active, satisfied customers," the  statement said, highlighting a partner-focused element of the lower-tier  support package.
Microsoft also presented the rollout of the program as  plenty of time for partners to get ready, with partners whose re-enrollment  date falls prior to Aug. 31 having 15 months to prepare. "As always,  Microsoft provides a long runway to meet any significant changes to  requirements which may impact partner status," the statement said.
In its statement, Microsoft also referenced the increased  investment and emphasis in the last two years on its network of indirect providers  in the CSP program, those partners who sit between Microsoft and about 90 percent of  the company's CSP partners, known as indirect resellers. In the United States,  there are more than a dozen indirect providers in the CSP program, including Ingram  Micro, Tech Data, Synnex, SherWeb, AppRiver and others. Direct CSP partners  only make up about 10 percent of CSP partners, company executives have said. "Microsoft's  network of indirect CSP partners are also investing in solutions and support to  bring additional value to partners worldwide," the Microsoft statement  said.
One partner who takes issue with Microsoft's claim that it's  providing a long runway is Joel Pippin, president and CEO of Secure Network Administration Inc. in Durham,  N.C. A longtime Intermedia and Rackspace partner, Secure Network Administration  made the cutover to being a Microsoft CSP enrolled in direct billing about a  year ago when Pippin felt the partner program and the Microsoft products had  reached sufficient maturity.
Now Pippin fears his renewal will fall right in the earliest  wave of the Sept. 1 program, meaning the new requirements will hit his company  within about three months.
"As a business owner, I feel cheated. If they were  saying, 'We're going to bill you $3,000 or $4,000 a year,' OK. But $15,000? Now  Microsoft says pay to play. If they had said pay to play upfront, we would  have said we'll stay with Rackspace," Pippin said.
Pippin speculates that Microsoft has calculated the  requirement partially in an effort to reduce the number of direct CSPs and herd  smaller companies like his into becoming indirect CSPs.
"They're going, 'Ah, we've got too many of these, we've  got to weed them out.' They're smart, they probably know exactly where the weed  line is in the next couple of years," he said.
For Ric Opal, a vice president at SWC Technology Partners, a large Microsoft  partner with a direct billing CSP relationship, the raised requirements and  support expenses won't be much more than a blip.
"Unquestionably, customers have to get value from the  partner channel. Those two [support agreement] vehicles afford excellent  support mechanisms for partners to use if they understand how to amortize that  cost over the install base," Opal said. "The intent of the CSP  program is to allow partners to be creative with their solutions. I see what  they're doing, and it kind of lines up with the intent of the program."
Another group of partners who are unfazed about the  immediate set of changes are those who have come to the CSP program from the  Dynamics and business applications side, where buying support agreements  from Microsoft is a longstanding  programmatic requirement.
Julie Lathrop, director of operations at Edgewater Fullscope in Alpharetta, Ga.,  says that company has maintained support agreements with Microsoft since their  partnership started in 2001, and throughout the two years it has acted as a  direct CSP. "The changes will not impact us as we already have and use  both support offerings with our customers very successfully," Lathrop said  in an e-mail interview.
Lathrop says an upside is that any partner involved in the  program will have access to Microsoft support beyond the baseline Microsoft  Partner Network (MPN) benefit support if an issue arises that the partner can't  solve. Indeed, the requirement to spin up a first-line support operation had  already been an obstacle to many partners considering enrolling as direct CSPs.
To Lathrop, Premier Support is also an opportunity for  direct CSP partners. "Premier was always offered to the larger customers  or to customers that could afford it. Many small customers could not take  advantage of it and had to take a lower level of support. Now with the partners  being able to offer Premier to their customers, the smaller ones can also  benefit from the same high quality of support," she said.
She added that Fullscope has built an internal support  center and leverages Microsoft to backfill the complex issues: "Our customers  expect us to have an outstanding working relationship with Microsoft and, in  fact, it is part of our offerings during our sales process. We let our customers  know that we can provide them with Tier 1 support and, if necessary, we can  escalate it to Microsoft. Great selling point."
Another Microsoft business applications-side partner  enrolled as a direct CSP is BroadPoint Technologies in Bethesda, Md.
Andy Gordon, vice president of business development and  partnerships at BroadPoint, says the company already maintains an Advanced  Support agreement with Microsoft, and is seeing strong gains as a direct CSP  partner.
"Through the CSP program, Microsoft has allowed us to  be the front line and be the invoicing partner," said Gordon, adding that  the company has more than doubled its percentage of recurring revenues by  leveraging CSP. "We're slowly but surely turning a corner, and the CSP  program has really helped with that."
Given those gains, Gordon says BroadPoint is ready to handle  administrative, cost and other back-end changes to the program: "Whatever  we have to do, we're on board."
Here's the full text of Microsoft's e-mail to partners:
  New CSP direct bill  requirements begin August 31, 2018
  Digital transformation  is evolving the way you and your customers do business. To keep pace and help  you make the best decisions for your business, we've updated enrollment  requirements for direct bill partners in the Cloud Solution Provider program. 
  Our goal is to ensure  you enjoy steady business growth. While there are no specific performance  targets associated with these updates, your performance will be considered as a  key success component in the future. 
  As a valued Microsoft  partner, please review and prepare to meet the following direct bill  requirements that will go into effect by your next enrollment period after  August 31, 2018: 
  Purchase a Microsoft  support plan 
  To help you meet your  customers' specific support needs, we offer two plans: 
    • Microsoft Advanced  Support for Partners provides break/fix problem resolution, response times of  less than one hour for critical issues, and the ability to manage support  incidents on your customers' behalf. 
    • Microsoft Premier  Support for Partners provides comprehensive support services including  prioritized response times, a designated account manager, training programs,  and more.
  Demonstrate key  capabilities
    • Provide at least one  managed service, IP service, or customer solution application. 
    • Enable billing and  provisioning infrastructure. 
  If you are unable to  meet these new requirements for any reason, you can continue to transact and  sell to your customers through an indirect provider in your area.
 
Here's the full text of Microsoft's  e-mailed statement to RCP:
  We are updating our  Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) direct bill enrollment requirements to ensure our  partners are positioned to address the growing customer demand for cloud  solutions. Aligning our CSP program to meet the needs and priorities of  customers, particularly around cloud usage, enablement, and support, creates  more targeted opportunities for partners, and further enables partners to  unlock the digital transformation opportunity for customers. Cloud enablement  services are a critical element of Advanced Support for Partners, making this  offering essential to help grow cloud businesses and achieve more active,  satisfied customers. As always, Microsoft provides a long runway to meet any  significant changes to requirements which may impact partner status. Microsoft's  network of indirect CSP partners are also investing in solutions and support to  bring additional value to partners worldwide.
  
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 17, 2018