- Stay on top of changes to the Microsoft Partner Network with RCP's MPN  Roadmap.
Microsoft is pushing back on the start date for the new country  qualification requirements for partner competencies.
		The basic idea is that partners with practices in more than one country  will have to earn their competency in every country they want to claim the  competency in.
		So, for example, a partner who wants to claim a Small Business gold  competency in both the United States and the United Kingdom must have the full  complement of Microsoft Certified Professionals, customer case studies, and  people passing the required sales and licensing exams in both countries.
		When Microsoft Partner Network General Manager Julie Bennani originally  announced the change in May, the plan was to roll out the country  qualification requirements in October. A document distributed in July around  the time of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference pushed the date back to  January 2014.
		Now a Microsoft spokesperson says the country qualifications won't take  effect until the end of Microsoft's fiscal year 2014, which means the end of June  2014.
		Companies on the RCP "Most  Competent Partner" list, most of whom have a dozen or more  competencies with operations in multiple countries, and other large partner  organizations have to be breathing a sigh of relief at the extension.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 31, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
A week after almost giving away Microsoft Surface RTs to partners at  the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC), Microsoft has formally dropped the  price for all of its consumer-oriented productivity tablets running Windows RT  by $150.
A price cut appeared for all four Surface RT models on Sunday:
    -  The 32GB model is now $349, down from $499 (a 30 percent cut).
-  The 64GB model is now $449, down from $699 (a 21 percent cut).
-  The 32GB model with the black Touch Cover is now $449, down from  $599 (a 25 percent cut).
-  The 64GB model with the black Touch Cover is now $549, down from  $699 (a 21 percent cut).
The Microsoft Surface Pro, which runs a full version of Windows 8 Pro rather than the limited-functionality Windows RT OS, is not  marked down for now. Prices for that tablet remain $899 for the 64GB model and  $999 for the 128GB model.
At WPC, Microsoft offered partner attendees the chance to buy the 64GB  Surface RT with the black Touch Cover for $100, the 128GB Surface Pro for $400  or both for $500. Microsoft offered a similar deal to attendees of its TechEd  conference, and gave Surfaces away to developer attendees of Build.
During the WPC, Microsoft officials said more than 16,000 Surfaces had sold  by Wednesday morning with two full days of the conference to go.
Analysts at IDC have said Surface has sold about 900,000 units in each  of the last two quarters, which are relatively weak figures in the hyper-growth  tablet market. The price cuts come just as Microsoft is releasing an aggressive  series of commercials comparing Windows 8-based tablets and iPad.
The new Surface RT prices give Microsoft a much stronger story against  the full-sized Apple iPad on price. The 16GB iPad starts at $499, which is the  same price as Surface with a keyboard and double the storage, although Windows  RT gobbles up much more of the internal storage than iOS.
Game on or just clearing inventory ahead of Surface 2/Surface Plus? Leave your thoughts below or drop me a line at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 15, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		  - Stay up-to-date on the latest news from WPC here. 
Once again, Scott live-Tweeted his way through today's Worldwide Partner Conference keynote, which featured the always-entertaining Kevin Turner, Microsoft COO. Follow Scott  @scottbekker and visit our WPC 2013 portal page here to stay on top of all the conference happenings.
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		  More News and Analysis from WPC 2013:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 10, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Earlier this year, Redmond Channel Partner magazine teamed with Revenue Rocket Consulting Group to  create an award for IT services companies with unique business strategies that  are resulting in sustained growth.
		Today we're pleased to announce the three winners of our inaugural  award:  Axis Group, LLC, a business  intelligence (BI) solutions provider for mid-market and Global 1000 companies; Envision LLC, a provider of custom  applications development, integration services, software product and staffing  services; and Intellinet Corporation, an  IT Management as a Service (MaaS) company, specializing in network management,  cloud innovation and information technology services.
		The award recognizes the companies for their innovative business  strategies that resulted in sustained growth over a three-year period, from  2010 through 2012.
		The award sought applications from U.S.-based IT services firms with  annual revenues between $5 and $75 million.
		Stay tuned for the October issue of RCP when we'll profile the winners  and tell their inspiring growth stories.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 09, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		  - Stay up-to-date on the latest news from WPC here. 
Steve Ballmer paused in Microsoft's flurry of datacenter construction to assess Microsoft's position in the race among the megavendors investing in  scaled public cloud infrastructure.
		Speaking at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference Monday in  Houston, Ballmer provided some rare context on the size of Microsoft's server  farms and how big he thinks the company's main competitors have gotten.
		"We have something over a million servers in our datacenter  infrastructure," said Ballmer, noting that the build-out started in  support of the Bing and Office 365 services, which provided institutional  knowledge that is being built into Azure server farms.
			     Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer at Monday's WPC keynote. (Source: Microsoft)
						Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer at Monday's WPC keynote. (Source: Microsoft)	
		Ballmer only lays claim to second place from those billions of dollars  in capital expenditures that funded datacenters all over the world. "Google  is bigger than we are. Amazon is a little bit smaller," he said.
		The rest of the field is pretty limited -- at least at the  Google-Microsoft-Amazon order of magnitude, Ballmer suggested. "You get  Yahoo and Facebook, and then everybody else is 100,000 units probably or less,"  he said.
		Like any good businessman, Ballmer then rephrased the issue to make the  case that Microsoft is still No. 1 even if it's No. 2.
		"The number of companies that are at the same time seriously  investing in the private cloud, which is not going away, and in these hybrid  clouds is really just one and that's us," he said.
		
				More News and Analysis from WPC 2013:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 09, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		  - Stay up-to-date on the latest news from WPC here. 
In yet another sign of Microsoft's newfound commitment to aesthetics,  the Microsoft Partner Network (MPN) will add a competency in User Experience Design  in January.
		MPN competencies are badges that partners can earn to demonstrate their  expertise in a given practice area. Microsoft currently has 25  competencies, each with either a silver or gold level. Achieving a  competency requires a partner to employ professionals with relevant  certifications, pay a joining fee, complete other training and, in some cases,  make revenue commitments.
		Tami Reller, Microsoft's chief marketing officer and chief financial  officer for Windows, announced the User Experience Design competency during her  keynote Monday at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in Houston.
		   Microsoft's Tami Reller speaking at Monday's WPC keynote. (Source: Microsoft)
					Microsoft's Tami Reller speaking at Monday's WPC keynote. (Source: Microsoft)	
		"Apps that are better designed, they absolutely achieve better  ratings in the Windows Store, and even equally as important, they are more  engaging for customers, and they deliver greater monetization opportunities,"  Reller said. "The whole idea behind this competency is to give you the  best way to train your designers and to get recognized for your expertise with  the Microsoft design language and user experience for app building."
		Microsoft first began gaining notice for its design work with the  Windows Phone launch several years ago, and many of the design principles  behind the Windows Phone UI and that platform's apps influenced the design of  Windows 8.
		In a blog posting about the new competency, Orlando O'Neill, product marketing manager  for Windows Apps, reinforced Microsoft's current attitude toward design.
		"In the past few years, we've focused on improving the user  experience and design of our platforms, making them more intuitive, familiar  and enjoyable to engage with. Our point of view is embodied in the Microsoft  design language: we sweat the details of every pixel, we let the OS fade into  the background while your ideas and content come to the fore, and we believe in  presenting content and controls in a way that is authentically digital," O'Neill  wrote. "We firmly believe that user experience and design are going to be  the next big differentiators for Microsoft and, more importantly, for the apps  and experiences that you build for your customers."
		While Reller didn't say so, Microsoft has been increasingly steering  incentive money through Gold Competency partners in recent years, and Microsoft's  ongoing efforts to expand the number of Windows Store apps are likely to mean  more MDF funds and other incentives for partners with the competency than those  without.
		More News and Analysis from WPC 2013:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 09, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		  - Stay up-to-date on the latest news from WPC here. 
RCP Editor in Chief Scott Bekker is in Houston this week for Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Conference. He live-Tweeted all through Monday's opening keynote -- the high points are below. Stay up-to-date on all WPC-related news and impressions by following Scott at @scottbekker and bookmarking our WPC 2013 page here.
More News and Analysis from WPC 2013:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 08, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		  - Stay up-to-date on the latest news from WPC here. 
Microsoft's Server and Tools Business on Monday rolled out a series of  technology previews and incentives aimed at making Microsoft's cloud and big  data offerings more robust and easy for businesses to use.
		Satya Nadella, Microsoft STB president, announced the cloud offerings  during a keynote Monday at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in  Houston and in a blog post.
		"The technology to help our partners realize the opportunities in  cloud computing and big data is here and the time to collectively help our  customers embrace these mega trends is now," Nadella wrote in his blog entry.
		Nadella provided details on five programs:
		
				Power BI for Office 365 got the biggest crowd reaction at WPC, especially after an entertaining demo by  Microsoft Technical Fellow Amir Netz, who pulled visual data on the comparative  popularity of different music stars over the decades and breathlessly narrated  the results as if it were a horse race.
		Nadella described Power BI as "our new self-service business  intelligence (BI) solution that combines the data analysis and visualization  capabilities of Excel with the power of collaboration, scale and trusted cloud  environment of Office 365."
		Power BI requires an IT department or partner to prepare data sets,  such as company financial data or CRM data, and place them in a Data Catalog,  which is hosted in SharePoint Online. IT can configure how frequently the data  is updated. Users can then import that internal data and combine it with public  data prepared by Microsoft from sources such as Wikipedia.
		Once they've found data from the catalog, end users can use Excel to connect  data from different sources and analyze it.
		Power BI also allows the creation of BI Sites, where companies can set  up dedicated workspaces for business intelligence projects. Mobile apps will  allow for access to those BI sites from iPads or Windows 8 devices. Another  feature, called Q&A, includes a natural language query experience in which  users ask questions of the data in a search box and get back answers in a  table, graph or map, depending on how Power BI interprets the question.
			     [Click on image for larger view.]			Q&A in Power BI. (Source: Microsoft)
    			[Click on image for larger view.]			Q&A in Power BI. (Source: Microsoft)	
		Jon Roskill, corporate vice president of the Worldwide Partner Group,  highlighted Power BI as a huge partner opportunity. "With the launch of  Power BI for Office 365, partners will be able to bring powerful BI solutions  to SMBs," Roskill said.
		A public preview of Power BI for Office 365 will be available later  this summer. Microsoft has not released pricing for the production version, but  officials say it will be a per-user, per-month model. 
		
				A Premium offer for Windows  Azure SQL Database will offer dedicated capacity "for more powerful  and predictable performance from Azure databases," Nadella said.
		"One of the challenges with [Windows Azure] SQL is what I'll call  noisy neighbors," said Eron Kelly, general manager of SQL Server Product  Marketing,  in an interview. "With the new premium version, we're  locking down and dedicating a certain amount of capacity -- bandwidth and CPU."
		The premium Platform as a Service database will debut as a preview  toward the end of July. Once in production, customers will pay an additional  fee per core along with the standard per-gigabyte price of SQL Azure. The  per-core price will be disclosed later.
		
				New Windows Azure Active  Directory capabilities will extend AD management to third-party cloud  services, making it possible for organizations to control employee accounts for  cloud services used as part of their job. While Microsoft is working with some  of the biggest Software as a Service vendors to integrate their services with  Azure AD, the  system is also extensible so ISVs and other third parties can create their own  integrations.
		
				Cloud OS Accelerate is an  incentive program to encourage new private and hybrid cloud solutions for  customers. A $100 million combined investment in incentives for Cloud OS  Accelerate will be made by Microsoft, Cisco, NetApp, Hitachi Data Systems, HP  and Dell.
		
				A Windows Intune offer will  go into effect Oct. 1 for discounting Microsoft's cloud management suite.  Customers who buy Windows Intune as part of the Office 365 or CAL suite will  get a 30 percent discount, Microsoft officials said.
More News and Analysis from WPC 2013:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 08, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Don Mattrick's departure for Zynga could be delaying CEO Steve Ballmer's  rumored reorganization plan for Microsoft.
		All Things D's Kara Swisher in early June reported, based on anonymous  sources, that Ballmer was in the midst of a major "devices and services"-themed  reorganization. According to Swisher's original report and a late June update, Mattrick,  president of Microsoft's Interactive Entertainment Business, seemed slated for  a major role in the executive shuffle, which Swisher reported might come as  soon as July 1.
		On July 1, however, Microsoft released a company  memo from Ballmer about Mattrick's planned departure to become CEO of the  social gaming company, which is best known for FarmVille.
		Swisher's reporting had emphasized that the suspected winners in the reorganization would be Satya Nadella,  president of the Microsoft Servers and Tools division; Tony Bates, president of  Skype; and Don Mattrick, president of the Interactive Entertainment Division.
		
				Bloomberg reporter Dina Bass moved the story forward Wednesday morning with  an anonymously sourced story of her own suggesting that Ballmer was considering Mattrick to run hardware  engineering, an important post in a devices and services reorganization. Now,  according to Bass, that job may go to Windows engineering head Julie  Larson-Green, currently a corporate vice president.
		The Bloomberg report also has:
		  - Tony  Bates, president of the Skype division, running acquisitions and  relationships with software developers and OEM partners.
 
 
- Satya Nadella,  president of the Server & Tools Business, running cloud computing and  products for corporate customers.
 
 
- Qi  Lu, president of the Online Services Division, running an applications and  services engineering unit covering Bing, Office and Skype engineering.
 
 
- Tami  Reller, chief marketing officer and chief financial officer for Windows,  running an overall Microsoft marketing unit.
Posted by Scott Bekker on July 03, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Windows  8.1 is coming fast on the heels of Windows 8 -- for a Microsoft update, at least.
		Microsoft  released a preview of Windows 8.1 yesterday, a scant seven months  after the release of Windows 8, with a final version of Windows 8.1 coming as a  free upgrade from Windows 8 later this year.
		Microsoft  CEO Steve Ballmer, for one, wanted to make sure the 6,000 developers at  Microsoft's Build show, and the 60,000 people watching Build online, took note  of that speed.
		"If  there's not one other message that I reach you with in my opening remarks, it's  about the transformation that we are going through as a company to move to an  absolutely rapid-release cycle -- rapid release, rapid release," Ballmer  said.
			     Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer on stage at Wednesday's opening Build keynote. (Source: Microsoft)
    						Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer on stage at Wednesday's opening Build keynote. (Source: Microsoft)	
		To  be sure, Windows 8.1 is not a Windows-7-to-Windows-8-scale transition, or even  a Windows-Vista-to-Windows-7-class update. Julie Larson-Green, corporate vice  president of Windows Engineering, defined Windows 8.1 as a refinement that  brings about 800 changes to the operating system. The changes, Larson-Green  said, "address everything from performance,  efficiency, to the look and feel and new features in the product. We designed  8.1 to feel natural [on] everything from the new mini small tablets up to large,  powerful work stations." (Click here for  more details on the changes in Windows 8.1.)
		Even  though it's not a lot of feature change on a Microsoft OS scale, it's a lot of  updates for Microsoft to jam through an OS release process that used to last  about three years.
		It's  another example of the way Apple, and then Google, have shocked Microsoft into  action. Just as the iPad's near-instant-on finally scared Microsoft and its OEM  partners into really prioritizing that capability, the fast cycle of iterative  feature releases Apple adopted with iOS is finding its way into the Windows  release cycle.
		Ballmer  promised attendees that the release cycle was not a one-time thing, and used  the opportunity to make sure Microsoft partners understood their role in the  new cycle. "We're certainly going to show you Windows 8.1 today. But you  can think of that, in a sense, as the new norm for everything we do," he said. "For Windows  releases, in addition to what we're doing with devices through our partners,  what we're doing with Azure and Office 365, rapid-release cadence is absolutely  fundamental to what we're doing and, frankly, to the way we need to mobilize  our ecosystem of hardware and software development partners."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 27, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Internal rumblings from Microsoft make it sound as if the executive  shakeup that CEO Steve Ballmer is rumored to be working on will be more than  the usual late-June game of musical chairs.
		
				AllThingsD's Kara Swisher, who broke the story of the pending executive  shakeup in early June, wrote an update Sunday night suggesting that the "level of worry" is growing among  Microsoft executives.
		"Ballmer has been making these significant plans with limited  consultation with the wider leadership group at the software giant. Instead, he  has been working with only a small group of his direct reports and also some  Microsoft board members, numerous sources said," Swisher wrote.
		She quoted one anonymous source "close to the situation" as  saying the reorg has the feel of a "legacy" project for Ballmer: "It's  the first time in a long time that it feels like that there will be some major  shifts, including some departures."
		According to Swisher, Ballmer is likely to unveil the reorg plans to  top executives on July 1. In the past, Microsoft has often revealed executive  changes in the last few weeks of June as the end of the company's fiscal year approached.
		Ballmer reportedly is reorganizing the company around the "devices  and services" meme that he broached in a shareholder  letter in October. The nuance of that letter's text left Microsoft's  position as a software company that produces a few hardware devices unchanged,  but emphasized that the software is mostly aimed now at powering devices and  increasingly enabling cloud services.
		Along those lines, Swisher's reporting has emphasized that the  suspected winners in the reorganization will be Satya Nadella, president of the  Microsoft Servers and Tools division; Tony Bates, president of Skype; and Don  Mattrick, president of the Interactive Entertainment Division.
		A big open question since the departure  of Windows President Steven Sinofsky in November is where the core Windows  business would fall within a devices-and-services structure. Ballmer did little  to clarify Windows' direction when he let Sinofsky's departure pass without handing  the bureaucratic authority of a presidential title to another executive.  Instead he split the job between Tami Reller and Julie Larson-Green.
		In an interview with RCP this month, Jon Roskill, corporate vice  president of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group, declined to comment on the  reorganization rumors. Roskill has been Microsoft's channel chief for three  years -- a short tenure compared to his immediate predecessor Allison Watson's  eight-year term, but a respectable amount of time compared to Watson's  predecessors.
		Meanwhile, the speaker lineup for the Microsoft Worldwide Partner  Conference keynotes July 8-10 sheds some possible light on the situation, but  could obviously be changed in the wake of a reorg. Current keynoters include  Ballmer, Roskill, Nadella, Reller, COO Kevin Turner and Worldwide Public Sector  Corporate Vice President Laura Ipsen.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 24, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Microsoft partners attending the Worldwide Partner Conference in  Houston next month will have a crack at the same cut-rate deal on Microsoft  Surface that TechEd attendees got a few weeks ago -- $100 for a Surface RT and  $400 for a Surface Pro.
		Jon Roskill, corporate vice president of the Microsoft Worldwide  Partner Group, unveiled the offer Thursday on his Channel  Chief blog.
		"We want to make the Surface easily available to our WPC partners,  who tend to be some of the most invested and innovative partners Microsoft has  the pleasure of working with. In deep appreciation of our WPC partners and with  much excitement for the opportunities we share in devices and services, we are  excited to announce a special offer for WPC partner participants," Roskill  wrote.
			     
   
		Roskill said that from July 7 through July 11, WPC attendees will be  able to buy the Surface RT 64 GB with touch cover for $100 and the Surface Pro  128 GB standalone for $400. By comparison, the Surface RT 64 GB is currently  listed in the online Microsoft Store for $500 with a free Touch Cover or Type  Cover, while the Surface Pro 128 GB without a cover is currently going for  $1,000.
		In a nod to the OEM partners who have been unnerved by Microsoft's  entry into PC hardware and who will be on hand at WPC, Roskill called their  devices "incredible" and said, "In addition to this offer,  attendees will be able to see and touch the latest Windows 8 devices and  software at our expansive device showcase, customer immersion experience area  and device sessions throughout the week."
		The similar deals at TechEd in early June led to lines of up to three  hours as attendees waited to buy Surfaces.
		Aside from the reasons Roskill stated for offering deals on the  Surfaces, including getting the devices into the hands of market influencers,  Microsoft also reportedly has a new generation of Surfaces nearing launch.
UPDATE (6/24/13): In response to some questions from RCP,  Microsoft provided a few additional details about the Surface offer at WPC. For  one thing, we confirmed that partners who buy Surfaces at WPC won't be  pre-ordering -- they'll be taking possession of them right then and there. Asked  about keeping enough Surfaces in stock for a show that drew 16,000 attendees  last year, a Microsoft spokesperson said, "We have enough inventory to  cover all attendees at the show. Point of sales details will be available close  to the conference." TechEd attendees we've talked to said that despite the  three-hour lines early on, inventory for both the Pro and RT models stayed  strong even as the show wound down.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 20, 20130 comments