Microsoft on Wednesday announced the release to manufacturing of System Center 
  Data Protection Manager 2007, the company's disk and tape backup and recovery 
  server for Microsoft application and file servers.
New features since the DPM 2006 release include support for Exchange Server 
  2003 and 2007, including clustered configurations and restoration at the Exchange 
  database, storage group or mailbox level; support for SQL Server 2000 and 2005, 
  including mirrored clusters; and support for Microsoft SharePoint, both MOSS 
  2007 and Windows SharePoint Services 3.0.
While Microsoft won't say how much business it's done on DPM 2006, Gartner 
  sized the backup and recovery market for Windows Systems at about $1.5 billion 
  in 2005. According to a Microsoft FAQ on the new release, "We entered this 
  market both for revenue opportunity and for strategic reasons relating to customer 
  satisfaction with current third party data protection offerings for the Windows 
  Server System family and for Microsoft Applications."   
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 18, 20071 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates put the private branch exchange (PBX) in Microsoft's 
  crosshairs during his unified communications keynote on Tuesday. 
"This is a complete transformation of the business of the traditional 
  PBX. The PBX in some ways is almost like the mainframe was many years ago where 
  all of the functionality was there in that one piece. And the way that you had 
  flexibility to add value, to customize, to bring in third parties to do new 
  things, it just isn't there in that structure. And so by moving phone calls 
  onto the Internet, using the powerful industry standard servers, we've got a 
  very different way of being able to do things," Gates said.
But Gates acknowledged that corporations the world over won't go rip their 
  PBXs out of their closets tomorrow. (Maybe the reference to the mainframe was 
  a subtle acknowledgement that the old is never left completely behind? After 
  all, how many times was the mainframe declared dead?)
"This is happening in a way where it's an evolution, you can actually 
  take the software that we're talking about, and put that alongside the traditional 
  PBX, and by having software that takes the events in and out of that PBX, a 
  lot of these scenarios you can get without changing that out," Gates said. 
  "Now, over time the lowest cost structure will be to not have the PBX, 
  to simply rely on the software and the Internet connection as the way that communications 
  works."
In the meantime, Microsoft has partnerships lined up with three global telephony 
  providers, including Nortel Networks, Ericsson and Mitel Networks Corp., showing 
  that it's not a battle of the old hardware guard versus the new software kids. 
  Everybody is stumbling toward this new opportunity together.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 17, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft at last rolls out its unified communications opportunity, and partners 
  might ask, "Just how big is it?" At this point, I don't know, and 
  nobody else does either. But here are the numbers Microsoft is throwing around. 
  I'll pass them along without endorsement.
  
  In a published Q&A with some strategic partners, Microsoft pinned the total 
  revenue opportunity of the unified communications market at $45 billion.
Jeff Raikes, president of the Microsoft Business Division, put it another way 
  on Tuesday:
"For every dollar of Microsoft revenue on our unified communications products 
  in 2008, our partners are going to add an additional $3 of value." 
That estimate is not as eye-popping as the $18 in ecosystem revenues for every 
  $1 Microsoft gets in Windows Vista sales, but it's a nice number nonetheless.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 17, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I'm not the only one who sees a huge systems integration revenue opportunity 
  coming from Microsoft's stack of unified communications products launched Tuesday. 
  According to Microsoft Business Division President Jeff Raikes, 793 partners 
  achieved the Unified Communications Specialization in the Microsoft Partner 
  Program over the last four months.
For the record, the UC Specialization is part of the Information Worker Competency 
  educational effort. Requirements include three customer references and two employees 
  or contractors who have each passed any one of seven exams.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 17, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Tuesday was the huge Microsoft Unified Communications blowout in San Francisco. 
  If you're looking for a solid overview of the products and technologies involved, 
  surf on over to Keith Ward's comprehensive news story 
here.
My overriding impression from the festivities? I look at the software stack 
  Microsoft is putting forward for these solutions, and I can see why the channel 
  has been eager for Microsoft to get into unified communications.
Microsoft is vowing that customers will cut their costs for VoIP in half with 
  its solution. Research that Microsoft commissioned from Forrester claims customers 
  will get a 500 percent return on investment over three years. What I see is 
  a huge systems integration job, pulling together Office Communications Server 
  2007, Microsoft Office Communicator 2007, a service pack for Microsoft Exchange 
  Server 2007, and connectors to PBXs or advice on removing PBXs, as well as new 
  phones and possibly Microsoft Office Live Meeting or Microsoft RoundTable.
Getting the voice expertise right will be a challenge for partners coming from 
  the software and systems side of the equation. It's a topic that Lee Pender 
  will explore in next month's Redmond Channel Partner magazine print issue. But 
  it looks like it'll be well worth the try.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 17, 20071 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way Monday for Microsoft and Best Buy Co. 
  to be sued under a law originally created to help federal prosecutors bring 
  down the mafia. The ruling stems from a class-action civil lawsuit by a northern 
  California man, James Odom. He bought a laptop at Best Buy in 2003 that included 
  a six-month MSN trial CD. Odom's attorneys allege that Best Buy signed Odom 
  up for an MSN account with the credit card Odom used to pay for the computer, 
  and Microsoft began charging him for the MSN service six months later. The lawsuit 
  is filed under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. 
Perhaps the most eye-popping element comes from a friend-of-the court filing 
  by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. According to the Chamber, RICO is getting out 
  of control as a device against business. It has been used in more than 4,500 
  cases since 2001, with only 35 of those cases filed by the government, by the 
  Chamber's count. 
Meanwhile, arguments by Microsoft and Best Buy attorneys indicated that the 
  companies weren't thrilled about "the reputational injury" of being 
  sued under a law "associated with racketeers and mobsters," according 
  to the news article about the case. You can find out more here.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 16, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Tech Data Corp., kicking off its major business partner engagements for 2008, 
  plans to launch a series of six regional channel conferences. The Clearwater, 
  Fla.-based distributor of IT products will hold "Technology Solutions Tour" 
  stops in the Northeast, Chicago, Washington, D.C., California and Orlando. 
Some of Tech Data's existing events will be held in conjunction with the tour, 
  such as the TechEDG Government and Education Services Conference. Tech Data 
  hopes to bring together hundreds of resellers at each event with the company's 
  vendor business partners to highlight emerging opportunities. Keep an eye on 
  Tech Data's site for dates and more precise 
  locations.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 16, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Distribution giant Ingram Micro Inc. is inserting itself into the partner-to-partner 
  trend that channel analysts say is so hot this year. Yesterday, at its fall 
  VentureTech Network Invitational conference in Las Vegas, Ingram Micro announced 
  two online networking resources for its partners.
The first is "The Zone," online business-to-business social networking 
  sites that are supposed to facilitate partner-to-partner networking among Ingram 
  Micro's solution provider communities. There will be a separate section for 
  each of Ingram Micro's four communities: VentureTech Zone, SMB Alliance Zone, 
  System ArchiTECHS Zone and GovEd Alliance Zone.
The second resource, called "M&A Forum," will target solution 
  providers looking to acquire, be acquired or expand through capital investments. 
  The M&A Forum is co-sponsored by Ingram Micro and the M&A Forum LLC. 
  The forum is online immediately for Ingram Micro solution providers, and the 
  zones will go live next month.
More information is available at http://www.ingrammicro.com.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 16, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft's OEM chief, Scott Di Valerio, is leaving the company to join Chinese 
  computermaker Lenovo. Di Valerio will be senior vice president at Lenovo and 
  president of the Americas Group.
Di Valerio, 45, starts his new job on Dec. 3. He'll report to William Amelio, 
  president and CEO of Lenovo Group Ltd. Di Valerio will be responsible for sales 
  for the Americas. He replaces Rory Read, acting president since January 2007. 
  Read will continue his position as senior vice president for global operations.
Di Valerio's title at Microsoft since November 2005 was corporate vice president 
  of the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) Division, and his duties included 
  overseeing relationships with PC manufacturers, such as Lenovo. He also managed 
  relationships with multinational and regional OEMs and embedded systems manufacturers.
Di Valerio served on the Microsoft 
  Worldwide Partner Leadership Team, a Microsoft subsidiary made up of partner-facing 
  executives from across the company that set strategy and policy direction. 
Prior to the OEM role, Di Valerio was corporate vice president of Finance and 
  Administration and chief accounting officer. He had also been Microsoft's corporate 
  controller. Before joining Microsoft, Di Valerio was corporate vice president 
  at The Walt Disney Co., CFO at MindWave Software Inc and a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers.
James Pickney will serve as the interim leader of the Microsoft OEM Division, 
  working with Bill Veghte, corporate vice president of the Windows Business Group, 
  and COO Kevin Turner.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 06, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    An effort to connect partners with customers on Microsoft's Web site is gathering a slight head of steam. One instance is Microsoft's Solution Finder, which the company launched in March of 2006. 
  
Solution Finder is a customer-facing directory of partner solutions that appears in many places on the Microsoft Web site. It's also intended as a master directory of partner solutions -- consolidating the many such directories that exist across Microsoft.com.
  At the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in Denver, Microsoft channel chief Allison Watson said that the Solution Finder portal is driving about 10,000 contacts per month between customers and partners.
  That figure is up from about 1,400 leads per month reported last September. That's good momentum, but Microsoft still has a long way to go. The company hopes to eventually generate one million customer leads per month through the tool.  
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on July 11, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The Microsoft Small Business Specialist Community (SBSC) is on the march, with 80 percent growth in the number of new partners reported over the last year, according to Allison Watson, corporate vice president for Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Group.
At the Worldwide Partner Conference in Denver, Watson said there are now 4,200 members of the SBSC in the United States and 12,800 members worldwide.
Small businesses are a customer category that every major IT vendor wants to tap. Microsoft defines the space as companies with fewer than 50 employees, a category that includes 40 million companies worldwide spending $40 billion a year on software.
Those customers are notoriously hard to reach, and Microsoft's approach is to create a large community of specialists to take its software to small businesses. The community is carved largely out of Microsoft's massive Registered Member tier of its partner program -- about half of Small Business Specialists are at the Registered level. While the growth of the SBSC is certainly strong, it's not going as quickly as Microsoft hoped when it launched SBSC in July of 2005 or even when RCP asked about the program's potential last November.
In late 2005, Microsoft had hopes to have 5,000 U.S. Small Business Specialists by early 2006 and 20,000 worldwide by now. Last November, with enrollment at 3,100 in the United States and 9,800 worldwide, Microsoft still had hopes for 5,000 U.S. members and 14,855 worldwide by the time of its Worldwide Partner Conference.   
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on July 11, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    There's been a lot of buzz over the last few months about "Octane." It's the code-name for the unspecified changes coming to the Microsoft Partner Program (MSPP). And we've all been expecting those changes to be announced, presumably, at the 
Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC), which is happening this week.
It made sense; the MSPP has had very few structural changes since the current framework was set up in 2004. Then there were the Microsoft executives and spokespeople repeatedly saying over the last few months that they weren't ready to talk about Octane. Later the message changed: Microsoft probably wouldn't be ready to talk about Octane at the partner conference. All of that mystery reinforced the idea that Octane might be a big deal.
Well, maybe not. I talked to Julie Bennani, new general manager of the Microsoft Partner Program, here at the WPC in Denver. According to Bennani, Octane is just a code-name for MSPP enhancements; it's not some massive overhaul of the program.
"I think people came under the impression that Octane was a point in time," Bennani said. Instead, she said, it's more routine, ongoing enhancements taking place now and into the next year. Major elements of Octane include evolving the initiatives to help Microsoft partners get more profitable, making an effort to collect customer satisfaction data on partners, and working to improve skills development and bridge current gaps.   
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on July 11, 20070 comments