Most of the changes being introduced to Microsoft's channel program are   taking effect relatively slowly. But one change is on the fast track. According   to a Microsoft news release this week about changes coming in the Microsoft   Partner Network, the following was listed as a "need to know" item:
  Microsoft Gold Certified Partners enrolling or   re-enrolling in the program must have participated in the Customer Satisfaction   Index within the previous 12 months. This new requirement will be required for   Gold Certified Partners re-enrolling during the 2010 re-enrollment   period.
You told us in our reader survey earlier this year that you generally   like the idea of having C-Sat data, and Microsoft has been talking about   increasing its reliance on C-Sat data on Gold Certified Partners for a while now.   Has Microsoft done enough to warn its Gold Certified Partners about the C-Sat   requirement this year? Let me know at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 15, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The 2010 Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference time and location is set:   Washington, D.C., from July 12-15. The location continues   Microsoft's practice over the last few years of picking hot and muggy places for   the July conference (Houston, New Orleans), although the   conference seems to be drifting back north. With a disproportionate amount of   U.S. IT spending expected to come out of the federal government over the next   few years, holding the event in the nation's capital certainly makes good   business sense. In any case, the Washington   location is sweet news for me -- I'm based near Baltimore.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 15, 20093 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft announced global   availability of Microsoft Communication Services on Tuesday at its Worldwide   Partner Conference (WPC).
The program consists of marketing   collateral, such as a Ready to Go campaign, aimed at SMB customers   who are most interested in having their communications infrastructure hosted by   a hosting provider.
The materials emphasize   capabilities, such as e-mail, phone, fax and document sharing, versus   emphasizing Microsoft products that those smaller customers don't tend to be   familiar with. Components of the campaigns are also designed for smaller   reseller partners who would act as sales agents for the larger hosters.
Microsoft Communication Services   grew out of a pilot program with cable giant Comcast that started in November   2007. Comcast, which won the Microsoft Communications Sector Partner of the Year   Award this year, has more than 100,000 e-mail users on Microsoft Hosted   Exchange.
At WPC, Microsoft announced that   Microsoft Gold Certified Partner Outsourcery Ltd., formerly Genesis   Communications Ltd., will use Microsoft Communication Services in the United   Kingdom.
If you're looking for more detail   on Microsoft Communication Services, we ran a feature previewing the program in   our May issue.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 14, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Partners will get a handful of   new tools, programs and benefits around the Microsoft Business Productivity   Online Suite (BPOS) this year in an effort that Microsoft officials hope will make the   flagship Software plus Services offering more attractive to the channel.
At the Microsoft Worldwide   Partner Conference (WPC) in New Orleans this week,   Microsoft officials announced partner-specific internal use rights, customer   management tools and partner branding on billing to encourage partner adoption   of BPOS, which was unveiled a year ago at the WPC in Houston.
Since the program went live in   the United States in November and more broadly in April, 5,000 partners have   signed up to sell BPOS, which gives customers access to Exchange and SharePoint   services for a low monthly price per user.
The headline change was the   internal use rights. "Partners will have 250 free seats of internal users for   BPOS. Our partners will be the first best users [of BPOS services]," said   Allison Watson, corporate vice president of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner   Group.
Microsoft also introduced "Order   on Behalf," which allows a partner to set up the sign-up process for a customer,   both simplifying the customer sign-up process and automatically registering the   partner as the partner of record for that order.
Another new feature is a Commerce   Dashboard, which allows a partner to view in one place all the customers that   have that customer listed as their partner of record. The Dashboard includes   partner fee information and renewal dates, Microsoft officials said.
In the third quarter, Microsoft   plans to launch a feature called Delegated Administration, through which a   customer will be able to hand over administrative tasks for things like setting   up new accounts or managing SharePoint sites, to partners.
Delegated Administration will be   offered first to partners who sign up for what Microsoft is calling an   Accelerated Initiative. Partners will become eligible for that program by   committing to sell at least eight BPOS deals of 25 seats or more. Other benefits   of joining the Accelerated Initiative will include deeper technical training on   things such as complex migrations from Lotus Notes or Novell Groupwise and   comarketing dollars for putting up Web sites with the partner "Order on Behalf"   feature.
While Microsoft has 5,000   partners signed up, the number is less than it seems. Microsoft officials   suspect a large percentage are partners who signed up to try the BPOS service   out and haven't made any customer sales. The internal use rights will give   partners a way to try out the service before signing up to sell it, and the   Accelerated Initiative should help Microsoft identify its cadre of partners who   are committed to selling BPOS.
Microsoft also announced its   intention to include partner information on customer invoices by the end of the   2009 calendar year.
Putting partner information on   customer bills is an attempt to address one of the two major complaints partners   have had about the BPOS business model. Partners have expressed serious concerns   about Microsoft's ownership of customer billing, which provides Redmond with direct access   to customers for potential upselling opportunities that could cut partners out.   Having partner information included on the billing is more of an acknowledgement   of that issue than a way to address the fundamental problem. Nonetheless, at   least partners will retain some customer mindshare if their information at least   appears on the invoice.
The other main partner complaint   is about the business model itself. Partners say the margin opportunity is too   small to cover the costs of getting a new practice ramped up.
The BPOS changes announced at WPC   don't include any adjustments to the partner payment model laid out a year ago.   Those who resell the service get a 12 percent referral fee plus 6 percent of the   fees for every year that the customers remains subscribed  --  effectively an 18   percent margin in the first year and 6 percent every year thereafter. The fees   are paid quarterly, so partners start getting the recurring fees throughout the   year rather than only at the end.
John Betz, director of product   management for Microsoft Online Services, contends that the 18 percent and 6   percent recurring is a reasonable opportunity, but he says the real opportunity   remains for partners to add services on top of the base subscriptions.
"Five and six times the   subscription fee is available to [partners] as professional services fees. It's   important to realize that what you get with SharePoint Online is kind of a blank   slate [for customization]," he said.
But Betz adds that partners who   are relying on non-S+S deployment and migration will be operating in a shrinking   pool of opportunity. "Money that they make today doing deployment and   management, that practice is going to slowly go away over time. We think that   five years from now, 50 percent of the Exchange seats will be online as opposed   to on-premises. This is an opportunity for partners to uplevel their game."
"The services transformation is   happening in the market no matter what Microsoft does. I think what you hear   from us is deliberate dependence on partners. As a company with 640,000 partners   in the world and 95 percent of our revenues is that we would be foolish for us   to try to do it without partners," Betz said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 14, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The Microsoft Dynamics unit will   take the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group's new Microsoft Partner Network and   add elements to it for Dynamics partners.
"We're snapping into what the   Microsoft Partner Network is doing," explained Doug Kennedy, vice president,   Microsoft Dynamics Partners.
Already Kennedy is pleased that   the Microsoft Partner Network's new Competency structure will give Dynamics   partners some much needed differentiation. Even though the overall number of   Competencies and Specializations is being reduced, it's going the other way for   Dynamics partners, who will now have one Competency for ERP and one Competency   for CRM.
"Never before have we had the   delineation of CRM and ERP -- it's been down to the Dynamics level. The partner   ecosystems for CRM and ERP are completely different," Kennedy said.
In the Dynamics industry, though,   vertical specialization is key. So Microsoft's Dynamics' team is planning to   dive even deeper into categorizing partner with its own vertical   specializations. Major industries being looked at now for such branding include   manufacturing, distribution, retail, public sector, professional services and   financial services.
Microsoft is also working with a   third-party vendor to provide the industry-based stamp of approval for Dynamics   partners, Kennedy said. The concept would be similar to the way Veritest   certifies Microsoft applications.
The result could be extremely   specialized labels in the Dynamics community. For example, a partner might be an   Microsoft Advanced ERP Partner for Manufacturing in the Heartland region.
"It'll help customers find the   right partner faster, which will help everyone," Kennedy said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 14, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Market researchers at IDC are out   with their predictions for the channel impact of Windows 7, which is set to   become generally available in October.
In a research profile sponsored   by Microsoft and released at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) this   week, analysts John Gantz, Al Gillen and Amie White wrote that IDC's forecast   for Windows 7 uptake is brisk: 177 million unit shipments by the end of   2010.
"For every dollar of Microsoft   revenue from launch in October 2009 to the end of 2010 from Windows 7, the   ecosystem beyond Microsoft will reap $18.52," the analysts write.
Broken down by types of revenues,   IDC projects that every $1 of Windows 7 revenue will bring $10.21 in hardware   sales, $4.43 in software revenues and $3.88 in services revenues.
IDC projects that the worldwide   Microsoft ecosystem will sell $320 billion in products and services revolving   around Windows 7 from October 2009 to the end of 2010. IDC's forecast for the   U.S. ecosystem is $110 billion during   the same period.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 14, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		During online registration for   the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC), Microsoft gave attendees a chance to   assist in some projects to rebuild New   Orleans, a city still reeling from the effects of   Hurricane Katrina nearly four years ago.
According to figures provided by   Allison Watson, corporate vice president for the Microsoft Worldwide Partner   Group, participation was impressive. "We had over 500 partners participate with   us from all over the world," she said.
Microsoft organized two projects   for Sunday, the day before the WPC officially started.
One group of volunteers stayed at   the Ernest Morial Convention   Center and helped local teachers, students and artists paint   pre-designed murals that will be combined into a "Wall of Hope" that will be   installed at Carver High   School. Another group headed to an elementary school   in the 9th Ward to re-wire computer labs, install a wireless network   and do some painting and landscaping.
"We were able to give back to the   city of New   Orleans," Watson said. Kudos to all those partners who   took time out of their busy schedules to help such a great city rebuild.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 14, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Allison Watson formally launched the new Microsoft Partner Network on   Monday at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC). The new network will   eliminate the longstanding and popular Gold Certified level in the Microsoft   Partner Program, as well as the Certified and Registered Member   levels.
The new program will have four main partner "landing areas":  Advanced,   Standard, Subscriber, and Communities and QuickStarts. Microsoft will continue   the use of the Microsoft Competencies, but is paring the list substantially from   17 competencies and 46 specializations now to about 30 in the near future. The   Competency system will also encompass some previously free-standing programs,   such as the Microsoft Small Business Specialist Community.
The name "Microsoft Partner Network" became official immediately, but   partners will have some time to make adjustments.
"You have a full 18 months to understand where you want to go so you can   make the plans [that will help] you get there," said Watson, corporate vice   president of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group. Using Gold Certified partner   Quilogy as an example, Watson said Quilogy would be able to migrate to the new   competencies in the next year, then would re-enroll into the new program at a   new level next year.
In an interview, Julie Bennani, general manager of the Microsoft Partner   Network, provided more detail on the four levels of the new program, which will   take effect some time in Microsoft's 2011 fiscal year.
Advanced will replace Gold. Bennani said the Advanced level will be more   exclusive than the current Gold level, but Advanced status will come with   specific commitments from Microsoft. Those include both partner account   management, at least at the telePAM level, and opportunity support.
"That's a much bigger extension of contact with partners," Bennani said.   "This is best-in-class. [Partners at this level can say,] 'I am the best partner   in CRM based on customer evidence, Customer Satisfaction, a case study and   participating in training.'"
The Standard level will be for partners who achieve a competency. "They'll get into   brand. We'll align incentives. This is the point where coverage for   opportunities will start," Bennani said.
The Subscriber level is an evolution of the Microsoft Action Pack   Subscription and Empower programs and will cover a large portion of the existing   Registered Member community.
The Communities and QuickStarts will be very basic. "This is a toe in the   water. [For example, someone who says,] 'I'm an individual interested in Windows   7.' We're going to be very simple and clean on what we ask them to do there,"   Bennani said. The only requirements to enroll at that level will be an e-mail   address, the role in the organization and the name of the company.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 13, 20093 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As part of the new Microsoft Partner Network launched Monday, Microsoft   is streamlining the Competency system that partners use to differentiate their   expertise.
Microsoft released a list of the 29 Solution Competencies that will   replace the current set of 17 Competencies and 46 Specializations. Partners will   have 12 to 18 months to switch into the new categories.
The new Solution Competencies   are:
  -  Server Platform
-  Desktop Platform
-  Systems Management
-  Identity & Security
-  Virtualization
-  Content Management
-  Search
-  Portals &   Collaboration
-  Unified Communications
-  Business Intelligence
-  Web Development
-  App Lifecycle Management
-  Data Platform
-  Software Development
-  Application Integration
-  Small Business
-  Digital Home
-  Licensing
-  Learning
-  CRM
-  Software Asset Management
-  ERP
-  Digital Marketing
-  Project & Portfolio   Management
-  Mobility
-  Solution Provider
-  OEM
-  Authorized Distributor
-  Hosting Platform
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on July 13, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		There was never much doubt that attendance at the Microsoft Worldwide   Partner Conference (WPC) would be down in New Orleans 2009 compared with Houston   2008.
Microsoft officials rejected the recession-inspired outright cancellation   option that many other companies have chosen for their conferences this year.   Microsoft hustled to open registration for WPC several weeks early this year and   held registration open right up until last week. In previous years, the   conference sold out long before the start.
The moment of truth came Monday morning, when Microsoft posted its WPC   attendance. Like the U.S. housing market, WPC is back at   2003 levels. The official number for partners in attendance is 5,500. That's the   same number of partner attendees as 2003  --  coincidentally, also in New Orleans.
The last two years, in Denver and   Houston,   Microsoft had about 7,000 partner attendees.
In all, there are 7,700 attendees this year because Microsoft brought   2,207 employees to New   Orleans for the show. Microsoft is also saying attendees   are here from 115 countries, down a little from the 130 countries represented in   2008.
So, probably a little less energy on the floor this year, but a great   ratio of partners to Microsofties for 1:1 interactions.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 13, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Jenni Flinders, a nine-year   Microsoft veteran with deep channel experience whose most recent role involved   leveraging distributor relationships to reach the breadth of Microsoft's   640,000-member global channel, on Tuesday became vice president for U.S. Partner   Business Development and Sales.
Flinders replaces Robert Deshaies,   who will be focusing on an unspecified "key strategic initiative" for the   Microsoft U.S. Leadership Team, a company spokesperson said in an e-mail laying   out a number of moves within Microsoft's channel   organization.
The move takes Flinders from the   Worldwide Partner Group (WPG), where she reported to Corporate Vice President   Allison Watson. She now will report to Phil Sorgen, corporate vice president,   U.S. Small and Midmarket Solutions and Partners   (SMS&P).
Under various titles, including   general manager and global business leader, Flinders has run the channel   incentive and transaction channel operations within the Worldwide Partner Group   for the past three years. Presumably, the move also gives Watson a close   associate in the critical U.S. partner subsidiary. 
Of the 394,000 partners who are   formally registered in the Microsoft Partner Program, nearly a third (122,000)   are in the United   States. Flinders had served as Watson's chief   of staff before her promotion to managing the transaction channel, which   includes distributors, Large Account Resellers and other resellers. Flinders'   previous Microsoft experience included stints as the marketing lead for SMB in   South   Africa and a regional role lead with Microsoft   Latin America. (Click here for a September 2007 RCP Q&A with Flinders.)
Deshaies came to the partner role   from the sales side. He was a regional vice president of the U.S. SMS&P East   Region for several years before becoming vice president of the U.S. Partner   Group in 2006. In July, 2008, Deshaies' title changed to vice president of U.S.   Partner Sales and Business Development. A colleague, Cindy Bates, became vice   president of Partner Strategy, Marketing and Programs at that time.
Bates' role was not mentioned in   the e-mail, although Flinders' assumption of Deshaies second, more limited   title, implies that Bates remains in the same position. In joint interviews last   year, Deshaies and Bates said their roles involved working together extremely   closely, basically as co-chiefs of the U.S.   channel.
Two other executives will take up   the torch for the distribution channel. "We will continue our deep focus on the   Worldwide Distribution channel as a key mechanism for reaching SMB customers as   announced earlier with the appointment of Birger Steen as vice president,   Worldwide SMB and Distribution, and Thomas Hansen as general manager, Worldwide   Distribution," the Microsoft statement said.
On Watson's team, 12-year   Microsoft veteran Allen Boone will lead the Channel Incentives team, coming to   the WPG from the Server and Tools Business Group, where his role involved   pricing and business models for Software +   Services.
Ross Brown, the WPG's vice   president of Solutions and ISV Partners, will also expand his duties to include   some of the transaction channel responsibilities previously handled by   Flinders.
In other WPG management changes,   Karl Noakes joins Watson's leadership team from further down in the   multi-thousand employee group. Noakes has focused for the last year on Web   design, Web developers, custom developers and ISV communities. Another of   Watson's direct reports, Julie Bennani, continues in the same role, but with a   new title reflecting the changes    coming to the Microsoft Partner Program, which is to be renamed the Microsoft   Partner Network. Bennani is now general manager, Microsoft Partner Network. Watson also named Caroline Goles, who formerly worked in Flinders' Channel   Incentives team, to be her new chief of staff.
Management shakeups are common   just before Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) as Microsoft begins a new fiscal   year July 1. Partner organization changes tend to be announced right before the   partner conference when such changes would be noticed by the thousands of   influential attendees at WPC. This year's conference starts Monday in New   Orleans.
Meanwhile, the one channel   position that isn't shaking up is Allison Watson's. Named to run the WPG in August 2002, Watson has helmed the organization for nearly six   full years, bringing a stability to Microsoft's channel organization that is   remarkable for a company that moves people around   incessantly.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 08, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The number of Microsoft partners boasting Gold Certified status has  been booming, both in the United    States and worldwide. 
According to the latest Microsoft Partner Program enrollment figures  provided to RCP by Microsoft, Gold  Certified partners have been going up both globally and in the United States.  The number of Gold Certified Partners worldwide is up 17 percent this year to  16,000. In the United States,  the number of Golds is up 67 percent to 5,000. Worldwide, the number of  Certified Partners is up nearly 5 percent to 18,000. In the United States, Certified Partner  rolls dropped 17 percent to 6,000.
Stepping back to look at the Microsoft Partner Program over the last  few years shows a program skewing heavily toward Gold certification. In 2005,  there were 3,500 Gold Certified Partners compared to 16,000 today – a 350  percent increase. At the same time, the size of the overall program has  increased only about 68 percent.
Put another way, in 2005 there were seven Certified Partners and 59  Registered Members for every Gold Certified Partner. Today there is roughly one  Certified Partner for every Gold Certified Partner, and there are only 23  Registered Members for every Gold Certified Partner.
While the market may feel tight to the Gold Certified partners out  there, here's one thing to keep in mind: When Microsoft created the Gold  Certified level in October 2000, the idea was to highlight the top 10 percent  of partners. Even with the explosive growth in Gold Certified Partners, fewer  than 5 percent of partners are Gold Certified.
It will be interesting to see if the changes coming through the  Microsoft Partner Network will be designed to change these ratios at all. What  do you think? Is the Gold field too crowded, OK or too sparse? Send me your thoughts at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 18, 20090 comments