The paper chase associated with becoming a Partner of Record (POR) for  Microsoft's Online Services Advisor Deploy incentives will end next week.
For the last few years, in order to be eligible for Online Services  Advisor (OSA) incentives, partners needed to track down such archaic details as  a customer's Enterprise Agreement (EA) ID number, the date of the agreement and the  type of agreement; put the data in a form; get an employee at the customer to  sign it; and finally send the paper to Microsoft. 
Several months later, partner incentives associated with Office 365,  Dynamics CRM Online or Windows Intune might start rolling in. That is, so long  as one of those details in the paperwork wasn't incorrect, in which case  partners began the bureaucratic slog to find any errors in the form and correct  them, adding several months to the process of getting that first check.
Change in the form of a new all-digital process is coming March 2,  according to a blog  post Monday by Osa Elaiho, senior program manager in Microsoft Partner  Network Support. "We've heard your feedback that attaching yourself as the  Advisor Partner of Record (POR) for Office 365, Windows Intune, CRM Online, and  Enterprise Mobility Suite [EMS] using the Online Services Advisor (OSA) form comes  with several challenges and takes too much time," Elaiho said. "We're  making a change to the Advisor Deploy incentives to automate the partner attach  process with a new, online capability."
As of next Monday, a customer's Online Services Global Administrator  will be able to attach a partner as the POR for any subscription a partner is  actively managing for that customer, Elaiho said. The change can be made in the  Office Customer Portal for Office 365 and Dynamics CRM Online and in the Intune  Account Portal for Windows Intune and EMS.
"We're definitely excited that it's moving to a digital mechanism,  because it has been a significant pain point for us and our customers over the  last two to three years," said Reed M. Wiedower, CTO at New Signature, the  2014 Microsoft U.S. Partner of the Year. "The biggest challenge  has often been in verifying that all the logistical information is correct.  Even the person in charge of the purchasing at the customer is often  hard-pressed to know."
One problem New Signature sometimes ran into was a customer might  provide a bad or an outdated EA number. "You would be attached, but you'd  never make any revenue off of it," Wiedower said.
Don MacNeil, managing partner at Strategic SaaS, said the EA agreement  date was another common obstacle. "You'd send in the paperwork, and you'd  get the agreement date wrong. That would kick it out," said MacNeil, who  is in the process of tracking down customer information for two of the paper  forms and added that he was "thrilled to hear" about the change.
"It wouldn't work about 5 to 15 percent of the time, depending on the  season," MacNeil estimated of the OSA form process.
Administrative problems weren't the only shortcoming of the paper  process. Both Wiedower and MacNeil say their companies lost POR status to  licensing solution providers (LSPs). POR is supposed to be for the deployment and  management partner; LSPs make a separate percentage on the sale of the license.  As Microsoft has reportedly clamped down on the LSP margin and encouraged those  partners to offer more services, the LSPs have come into conflict with systems  integration partners over POR fees.
"The pain point the LSPs were exploiting was they had a lot of  paperwork they had to shove in front of the customer," said Wiedower, who  added that the LSPs had the benefit of all the EA information at their  fingertips.
"In the digital process, we'll get an e-mail," Wiedower said. "It  also ensures that if someone does switch, it's a trivial solution to switch  them back. The new mechanism should allow us to have multiple layers of error  correction."
The new process will bring some headaches of its own for all concerned.  While new OSA forms will be accepted for new EA or Campus  Agreement/School Agreement deals until April 30, partners must go back to all  of their current customers to attach themselves as the Digital POR for each  subscription they currently manage. Elaiho's blog post didn't say when the  deadline for converting current customers would hit. Elaiho also said Microsoft  will use the Digital POR data to calculate sales goal requirements for Silver  and Gold competencies.
The change doesn't affect the related Online Services Advisor  Web-Direct POR process, which was already digital. Microsoft previously, and  somewhat confusingly, called both programs "Online Services Advisor  Incentives." In October, the MPN renamed the EA side of the program "Online  Services Advisor Deploy" and called the part for customers with fewer than  about 200 seats "Online Services Advisor Web-Direct."
Josh Waldo, a longtime Microsoft  executive whose last job there was senior director of cloud partner strategy  before joining Nintex in November as vice president of channel strategy and  channel programs, said the move made a lot of tactical sense for Microsoft.  While echoing the reasons that Wiedower and MacNeil stated, Waldo also pointed  to the internal costs to Microsoft of the old process: "It takes a lot of  good, intelligent and expensive people to run a time-consuming manual process  like that and takes even longer when something goes wrong with the  process."
However, Waldo also sees some  strategic benefits for Microsoft. One is moving the customer decision maker  from a procurement person, who may not be familiar with various partners' roles  in the deployment, to the IT administrator, who knows the partners' roles  intimately.
"By making it digital, and  by making it something that only the person who has access to the tenancy can  do, you can inherently change the person who makes the decision to the right  person. I think that's a huge factor here," Waldo said.
Longer term, by digitizing and  segmenting the POR even for EA customers, Microsoft could be leaving itself  room to tie partner incentives to specific workloads over time, Waldo  speculated.
"I have to think that in the future this gives you a platform to  incent certain workloads that might not have as much usage as others," Waldo  said. "If you're only using Exchange but you have the rights to SharePoint or  Lync, you could incent on driving Lync usage or driving SharePoint usage, which  is great for Microsoft, great for partners and great for customers as they get  even more out of what they purchased."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 25, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    AVG Technologies is doubling down on its channel-centric SMB efforts by  rebranding those parts of the company as AVG Business.
"AVG Business is a dedicated business unit within AVG with its own  team and engineering, sales and marketing under the same roof," said Francois  Daumard, vice president of global channel sales at AVG,  in an interview. 
Daumard, a former Apple and Microsoft channel executive who joined AVG  in December, said the business unit, run by Mike Foreman, will remain part of  AVG Technologies.
By products, AVG Business includes AVG Business Managed Workplace, an  RMM suite; AVG Business CloudCare, a cloud-based security suite; a network  operations center and helpdesk; and AVG CloudCare SSO, a single sign-on  offering currently in beta that is a technology partnership with Centrify Corp.  
On Wednesday, AVG also released a VMware ESXi service module for Managed  Workplace. The VMware integration was a top request of many of AVG's 10,000  partners, Daumard said.
AVG recently completed acquisitions of Norman Safeground and Winco, and  the company will continue to expand geographically through M&A, Daumard  said. Distribution partnerships are another key part of the company's 2015  geographic expansion plans, he said.
"We'll continue our geographic development in 2015, and we're  going to localize our product. We see a lot of opportunity for growth in  Europe, for example, in Germany," he said.
In its 2014 financial results release last week, AVG said its small  business segment revenues grew 18.7 percent to $58.5 million of AVG's overall  $374.1 million in annual revenues.
See this feature  for recent RCP coverage of AVG's channel plans and product roadmap.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 25, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The award ceremony at the annual Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference  (WPC) has always been primarily a celebration of the partners who go deepest with Microsoft's  proprietary stack.
But this year, one of the partners called to the stage in July will be  recognized for deploying an open source solution on the Microsoft Azure  platform. 
"At Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) this year, we will  highlight how [our open source] momentum is made possible by our partners, and  their delivery of open cloud solutions, by awarding the first annual Open  Source on Microsoft Azure Partner of the Year Award," said Mark Hill, vice  president for Open Source Sales and Marketing Strategy at Microsoft,  in a blog post Thursday.
"This new award will recognize partners who build outstanding open  source-based solutions on our cloud platform, Microsoft Azure. This year's  winner will have illustrated customer success with an innovative Azure solution  that includes a significant, globally recognized open source project,"  Hill wrote.
The new open source award will be just one among dozens of categories  of awards Microsoft will hand out in July. Most will still reward partners for  Microsoft-heavy implementations.
Hill put the new award in the context of Microsoft's increased emphasis  on openness over the last year, which has coincided with Satya Nadella's tenure  as CEO. Among Microsoft's open source milestones, according to Hill, are a  20-percent-plus share for Linux-based solutions of all Azure compute usage and  the move in November to make server-side .NET open source.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 20, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It was during a conversation with a VAR that Axcient CEO Justin Moore  decided there had to be a better way for vendors to pay partners for selling  their cloud services.
The VAR professed love for Axcient's Recovery-as-a-Service (RaaS) product,  Business Recovery Cloud, Moore recalled. Yet the VAR had only sold Axcient to  one customer during a period when the VAR had sold about 40 traditional  software-hardware solutions that were twice as expensive, and took 10 times more  time to recover. 
"I asked the sales guy why," Moore said. "He said it was  how sales reps were compensated. If they sold a $10,000 solution with a $2,000  margin, the sales rep gets a check for $200. Conversely, if they sold Axcient  for $500 a month, and margin was about $100, the sales rep got $10 a month."  
Imagining a 20-something sales rep who may not still be at the same VAR in two  years as the cloud margins potentially start adding up, it's easy to see why  cloud doesn't get the same focus as legacy systems.
"That was the lightbulb moment when we realized that the entire  economic model is broken for VARs and resellers," Moore said. "There  is a reason that Salesforce, Box and every other SaaS vendor has a relatively  small amount of revenue going through VARs."
 "We believe that value-added resellers play a critical role in sales to midmarket and enterprise IT as trusted advisors. Customers rely on the value-added reseller to ensure best practices implementation of the new technology"
"We believe that value-added resellers play a critical role in sales to midmarket and enterprise IT as trusted advisors. Customers rely on the value-added reseller to ensure best practices implementation of the new technology"
Justin Moore, CEO, Axcient
 
Axcient on Wednesday announced what Moore called "an entirely new  economic model for value-added resellers." Calling it "SaaS:FLO,"  short for Software as a Service: Front Loaded Option, Axcient will cut a check  equal to the first five months of revenue from its RaaS. By the company's math,  that's equivalent to two years worth of normal partner margin, but all up  front. The partner will also get a renewal margin at the beginning of each year  that the customer stays with Axcient.
According to Moore, the SaaS:FLO upfront year one margin is better than  what a partner would earn on a traditional software-hardware sale.
MSPs, who are more comfortable fitting monthly  recurring SaaS revenues into their business models, have been a strong area for  Axcient, but Moore said the pricing move is designed to help Axcient build a  complementary base of VAR partners. "We believe that value-added resellers  play a critical role in sales to midmarket and enterprise IT as trusted  advisors. Customers rely on the value-added reseller to ensure best practices  implementation of the new technology," Moore said.
About 30 VARs are already signed up with SaaS:FLO, Moore said. Al  Chien, executive vice president of sales at Dasher Technologies, and Michael  Souza, senior vice president at FusionStorm, each provided enthusiastic quotes  about the program for Axcient's announcement.
The program seems like an answer to the problem that Microsoft,  analysts and other vendors with the monthly recurring revenue approach have  been trying to advise partners to solve for the last five years -- how to make  that leap from relying on big deal-based payouts to surviving on the smaller  monthly recurring payments that could eventually bring in more money than the  big deals.
By putting its money where its mouth is, saying effectively that "if  the monthly recurring revenue is going to be better over time, we'll pay the  partners up front," Axcient is taking on a huge amount of risk that other  vendors may not want, or be able, to match. The risk could sink Axcient, as  well.
That's partly why the program is going to be limited to about 100 VARs  this year. "We're being picky, very picky," Moore admitted.
What's enabling Axcient to try the upfront payments for cloud services  is a new Series E funding round of $25 million, also announced Wednesday, and a  new debt facility. "[One] risk is that it consumes a lot of cash. We have  mitigated that risk by partnering with people who have extremely deep pockets,"  Moore said.
The other risk involves customer retention. If partners are paid  upfront and customers abandon the platform before Axcient breaks even, the  company would be in trouble. "If you don't retain your customers for at  least five years, then it's a model you can't possibly afford," Moore said. "We have the  benefit of seven years of retention data, and we know and can project that we  will keep our customers for at least seven years."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 18, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    When it comes to the baseline  security of all those cloud services companies are using for every conceivable  business function, there's good news and bad news in Skyhigh Networks' latest  quarterly Cloud Adoption and Risk Report.
Campbell, Calif.-based Skyhigh helps enterprise customers manage their  use of cloud services with appropriate levels of security, compliance and  governance. Over the last year, Skyhigh has been releasing a quarterly report  based on analysis of the usage patterns of millions of employees at hundreds of  enterprise companies. Skyhigh released its Q4 2014 report on Wednesday (available here, but registration required). 
The good news is that more than twice as many cloud service providers  (CSPs) encrypted customer data at rest in the fourth quarter of 2014 compared to the  fourth quarter of 2013, Skyhigh found. Skyhigh defines CSPs as the companies  providing the cloud services employees are using to do their work.
"They're investing more in security," said Kamal Shah, vice  president of products and marketing at Skyhigh,  in an interview. "That  was encouraging to see."
In raw numbers, that means 1,082 CSPs encrypted data at rest in Q4  2014, compared with 470 taking that step in the same period of 2013.
But given the massive number of cloud services in use in enterprise  organizations, the services encrypting data at rest are barely in double-digit  percentage territory. "Roughly 11 percent of these cloud providers now encrypt  data at rest. The risks are still great because you still have 89 percent of  cloud service providers who don't encrypt data at rest," Shah said.
A parallel trend is in play for multi-factor authentication -- 1,459  services used in the last quarter of 2014 compared against 705 in Q4 2013.
Use of cloud services is on an upward tear, according to Skyhigh's  analysis, with the average employee using 27 of them and the average company  using 897.
Shah doesn't think organizations can afford to clamp down on usage too  much. "The services are faster, cheaper, better and help them get their  jobs done quicker," he said. It's just a clear case of buyer beware. "As  enterprises are using cloud file sharing services, it's important that they're  choosing ones that are using security."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 11, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    CDW Corp. in its earnings call Tuesday provided a look at how the Windows  Server 2003 refresh cycle is playing out for one of Microsoft's largest  partners.
Microsoft is cutting off support for Windows Server 2003 on July 14,  and many Microsoft partners are focused on the server refresh business,  including CDW, which spun up a Windows 2003 migration practice in the middle of  2014. 
Tom Richards, chairman and CEO of CDW, said Windows Server 2003  refreshes accounted for a small part of what he characterized as high  single-digit growth in server sales for CDW in the fourth quarter of 2014.
"The other thing that we're hearing is the many customers either  through virtualization have created capacity and so [they're] not necessarily  automatically adding new servers, but maybe expanding the capacity of existing  servers, in addition to looking at cloud-based solutions, which, as turned out  great for us, it's one of the reasons our cloud business has had such  exceptional growth," Richards said, according to a Seeking  Alpha transcript of the call.
"I hesitate to use the word tailwind, because of what a big  tailwind XP was, but I think it will be a mild tailwind from -- for 2015,"  Richards said.
The XP tailwind referred to the Windows XP end of support in 2014,  which fueled CDW growth well throughout the year and later than he expected,  Richards said.
"My expectation for 2015 is we'll return to what I would describe  as a more normal rhythm that we have had in previous years," Richards said  of client-side demand.
CDW's fourth quarter results included adjusted earnings of 59 cents per  share, which was 5 cents ahead of analysts' estimates, and revenue growth of  12.4 percent to $3.05 billion. The company also declared a dividend of 6.75  cents a share to be paid on March 10. 
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 11, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    In a shrewd attempt to get the next runaway success Silicon Valley  startup onto the Azure cloud platform, Microsoft is giving away bucketloads of  Azure credits to Y Combinator's current class.
Positioning the move as part of Microsoft's long commitment to  startups, Microsoft Chief Evangelist Steve Guggenheimer blogged this week, "In this pursuit, Microsoft will provide Y Combinator's current  class access to Microsoft Azure and a broad suite of Microsoft technology, as  well as support. This will include $500,000 in Microsoft Azure credit, three  years of Office 365, as well as direct access to Microsoft's engineering teams  -- for Y Combinator's Winter 2015 batch of startups." 
Sam Altman, president of Y Combinator, separately blogged,  "This is a big deal for many startups -- it's common for hosting to be the  second largest expense after salaries." 
Altman said Microsoft's donations  also include a year of free enterprise services from CloudFlare and DataStax.
"This brings the total value of special offers extended to each YC  company to well over $1,000,000," Altman wrote. "The relentless  nagging from partners to grow faster we throw in for free."
Among the 700 startups funded by Y Combinator since 2005 are reddit,  Dropbox, Docker, Airbnb, Coinbase and Codeacademy.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 10, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Enterprise collaboration vendor PGi bought a substantial Microsoft Lync  practice with the acquisition last week of Modality Systems Limited.
PGi, an Atlanta-based publicly traded company with $527 million in 2013  revenues and 2,100 employees selling and supporting solutions in 25 countries,  will maintain the acquired company as a wholly owned subsidiary doing business  as Modality Systems, a PGi company. 
"In our account base over the last few years, we've seen  increasing momentum toward unified communications in general and Microsoft Lync  in particular," said Sean O'Brien, executive vice president for strategy and  communications at PGi,  in an interview. "Catering to the large  enterprise, Lync is a force to be reckoned with in the market. We've seen a lot  of opportunity, and embracing Lync is a key tenet in our strategy."
After a lengthy process of evaluating Lync partners, including  consultation with Microsoft, PGi pursued Modality, O'Brien said. "We are  buying Modality and its platform because they have a vision of the future of  Lync that we think is very complementary with our vision," he said.
Terms of the deal, which PGi funded through a credit facility, weren't  disclosed. Modality is an international practice with 75 employees and offices  in London, Seattle, San Jose and Sydney. Staff include 45 Lync certified  professionals, six Lync MVPs and three certified Lync Masters. The company was  a finalist for Microsoft 2014 Communications Partner of the Year.
O'Brien said Modality's 100 percent focus on Lync, through enterprise  consulting services and software development, was key for PGi.
John Lamb, president of Modality Systems and co-founder of the company  with James Rodd in 2007, said PGi, with its iMeet and GlobalMeet products, will  give Modality's current and future customers new options. "We really see  it as a service continuum. You might use Lync for five- to six-party conferences  and collaboration. You're really going to want to use a company like a PGi for  the critical components [above that]," he said.
O'Brien said the new ownership by PGi will also give Modality access to  corporate resources that will help the Lync practice to continue "growing  like a weed."
While PGi has a broad market focus, O'Brien said the company is not  new to the Microsoft partner community. The company supports Lync Online clients  in its collaboration products and was an early industry conferencing partner for  the Lync server platform.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 09, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Cloud security and compliance solution specialist Qualys Inc. is adding  progressive scanning capabilities to its Web Application Scanning (WAS) product.
Making custom Web apps more secure has gotten increased attention  recently as attackers have come to view Web app code as low-hanging fruit for  intrusions. 
The existing Qualys WAS  solution is a cloud  service designed for automated crawling and testing of custom Web applications.  The idea is to catch common problems that are difficult to find manually, such  as cross-site scripting vulnerabilities, SQL injection vulnerabilities and,  later, malware infections. The defensive automated tool races against attackers'  automated offensive tools to discover problems.
New with this week's announcement is a progressive scanning algorithm  constructed to scan only parts of the Web site that have changed between scans.
The Qualys WAS now includes progressive crawling that expands the  testing coverage over time; progressive testing that automatically starts,  stops and resumes scans; and new report templates.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 05, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Privately-held Veeam Software booked $389 million in revenues in 2014,  a 40 percent increase compared to 2013, the company declared in a press release this week.
Veeam, which has been selling software since 2007, released the Veeam  Availability Suite v8 during 2014 and upgraded more than a third of its  customers within 60 days, CEO Ratmir Timashev said in a statement. Veeam  positions itself as a datacenter availability vendor and helps users manage  virtualization, cloud and storage technologies. 
The revenues included $288 million in new license bookings, a 33  percent year-over-year increase, and $101 million in renewals bookings, a 66  percent increase.
"We fully expect our momentum to continue, carrying us toward our  goal of $1 billion in annual revenue by 2018," Timashev said.
The company also released some channel stats. It now has 29,000  ProPartners worldwide, and the Veeam Cloud Provider (VCP) program added 2,500 service  and cloud providers in 2014 to bring total VCP partners to 6,800.
Paid customers number 135,000 worldwide, with 44,000 customers added in  2014, the company said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 05, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The cloud successes that peppered Microsoft's most recent financial  earnings report are helping Microsoft rack up higher growth rates on cloud  revenues than any of the other major cloud infrastructure vendors.
Yet new industrywide data released by Synergy Research Group this week show that market leader Amazon's own  consistently high growth rate, despite its comparatively huge market share,  make Amazon Web Services (AWS) a tough-to-catch target. 
In earnings statements and calls last week, Microsoft reported that commercial cloud revenues grew by 114 percent year-over-year, for the  sixth straight quarter of triple-digit growth. Sales of its cloud products,  including Office 365, Azure and Dynamics CRM, are at an annualized revenue run  rate of $5.5 billion.
Synergy, which looks strictly at IaaS, PaaS and private and hybrid  cloud, put Microsoft's year-over-year growth for the quarter slightly lower, at  96 percent. That was still good enough for the highest year-on-year revenue  growth among the leaders. For the quarter, and for the year, Microsoft's share  was 10 percent of a market Synergy valued at $5 billion and $16 billion,  respectively.
Yet AWS remains in a league of its own. Amazon's share for the quarter  hit 30 percent and for the full year was 28 percent. Despite enjoying triple  the market share of its next closest rival (Microsoft), Amazon still managed 51  percent year-over-year growth for the quarter (see figure). The next three contenders after  Microsoft were, in order, IBM, Google, Salesforce.com and Rackspace.
   [Click on image for larger view.]
 
   [Click on image for larger view.]
"The momentum that has been built up at AWS and Microsoft is  particularly impressive," said John Dinsdale, chief analyst and research  director at Synergy,  in a statement. "They have an ever-broadening  portfolio of services and they are also benefitting from a slowdown in the  super-aggressive price competition that was a feature of the first half of  2014."
Amazon's position remains strong, but the company is less dominant than  it was earlier this year. After slipping in the second quarter of 2014, Amazon  could no longer claim to be bigger than its four closest rivals, Dinsdale pointed  out at the time.
Microsoft's 96 percent growth rate and Google's 81 percent growth rate  in this latest quarter has to have Amazon focused on the rearview mirror in the  IaaS/PaaS world. At the same time, Amazon is trying to turn the tables in the  overall cloud market with the recent debut of Amazon  WorkMail, which allows the company to come after Microsoft Office 365 and  Google Apps.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 05, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Salesforce.com this week unveiled a new partner program with an elaborate  scoring system designed to evaluate the comprehensive value of each partner,  but the online CRM giant also introduced an annual partner fee.
The Salesforce Partner Program now involves a Partner Value Score, or  PVS, that determines the tier for consulting partners -- either Platinum, Gold,  Silver or Registered. 
"Every partner receives a PVS based on the total contribution they  make to Salesforce's business across three primary 'categories': ACV,  Expertise, and Customer Success," Salesforce.com explained in a blog  post. The ACV, or annual contract value, category counts for 45 percent of  the PVS and is determined based on ACV and ACV growth. Expertise, at 35 percent  of the score, includes ratings for certifications and specialization. The  remaining 20 percent comes in the Customer Success category, which is based on  customer satisfaction surveys and customer stories.
The new fees start for the Registered level at $1,000 in mature markets  and $750 in emerging markets. Current partners have until April 30 to pay for  their highest eligible tier, while new partners submit payments when they join,  according to the blog post.
Other enhancements to the program include onboarding resources, updates  to the Partner Community site, more partner development resources, sales and  marketing aids, training resources and co-marketing funding.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 05, 20150 comments