Notice how heavily Microsoft's been advertising lately to raise  awareness about Windows 8, Windows Phone 8 and the Microsoft Surface? You'd  have to be boycotting TV and the Web not to see the campaigns.
		Microsoft's bean counters certainly noticed. In the investor call on  Thursday to discuss earnings for the three months that ended in December, the  new general manager of investor relations, Chris Suh, made clear how significant  those ad buys and other marketing investments are to Microsoft's balance sheet.
		"Operating expenses grew 10 percent to $8.0 billion, primarily  related to marketing for product launches,"  Suh said, according to a  Microsoft transcript of the call. Slightly more detail on how much Microsoft  spent marketing Windows 8 and Surface is provided in the company's 10Q filing  with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Microsoft spent $592 million  more on sales and marketing expenses, mostly advertising, for the half compared  to the same period in 2011, and $420 million more on those costs in the most  recent quarter compared to the year-ago period.
		Microsoft's overall net  income for the quarter was $6.4 billion, so spending hundreds of millions  more on launch marketing is a significant investment.
		Critics could argue the money was wasted. After all, the global PC  market not only didn't get a bump from Windows 8 in Q4, demand  actually fell compared to the same quarter a year ago. Meanwhile, Windows  Phone sales did quadruple (from a tiny number in the comparable quarter.)
		Surely Microsoft can't be as thrilled with the quarter as it's  saying it is, but the company can and does play a long  game. Awareness investments are setting up customers for the coming months  when more PCs with touch capabilities and better prices are available through  more channel outlets. Microsoft CFO Peter Klein pretty much acknowledged that's  Microsoft's plan and expectation: "It's early days and an ambitious  endeavor like this takes time."
		Microsoft hasn't been advertising this much in years, but the company hasn't  had as much to tell consumers about since Windows 95. Investors may not love  the amount Microsoft is spending on marketing, but then again, investors haven't  liked much about Microsoft since 1999.
		Hopefully the added air cover in consumer advertising is also spurring  more business conversations for Microsoft partners.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 28, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		As Microsoft experiments with broader routes to market for the channel  with Office 365, one Microsoft National Systems Integrator (NSI) is trying out a new licensing  agreement model for government clients and their partners.
		
				Planet Technologies announced this month that it is the first Microsoft  partner authorized under a new licensing model called the Microsoft Office 365  Agreement for Online Services for Government (AOS-G).
		The Germantown,  Md.-based NSI is a five-time Microsoft Federal Partner of the Year and has  a robust and growing business based on packaging services around Microsoft's  cloud services for federal, state and local government customers. While Planet  has been supporting the public sector on cloud since the Business Productivity  Online Suite days and has client deployments ranging from 50 users to more than  50,000 seats, licensing always went through a Microsoft Large Account Reseller.
		"Now I can offer my clients a one-stop shop and make the  procurement a lot more efficient," said Scott Tucker, CEO of Planet  Technologies. "They can get the license and services from me, and there's  additional margin to it."
		Tucker says he's expecting the arrangement will bring more incremental  revenue on individual deals for Planet even as the overall number of Office 365  opportunities is increasing.
		"Our Office 365 business today is going through the roof from a  services standpoint, and we're hiring people rapidly to support it. I'm  confident that this will augment our growth because [selling licenses] isn't  something we're able to do today," Tucker said.
		The pilot program for government partners comes as Microsoft is also  readying new direct  billing options for partners serving the private sector.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 23, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As PC sales continue to  decline, some analysts are revising their working hypothesis for how tablets  will affect the PC market.
		Earlier this week, Gartner  released preliminary results for worldwide PC sales in the fourth quarter. The  results were bracing for the PC industry. Overall shipments were down 5 percent  to 90 million units.
		Dell, reportedly on the  auction block to go private, fared worst with a 21 percent decline compared to  the prior-year quarter, followed by Acer Group's 11 percent drop. Lenovo did  best with an 8 percent increase in shipments. ASUS saw shipments increase 6  percent, while HP held steady.
		Principal analyst at Gartner  Mikako Kitagawa sees more than a weak economy at play.
		"Tablets have  dramatically changed the device landscape for PCs, not so much by 'cannibalizing'  PC sales, but by causing PC users to shift consumption to tablets rather than  replacing older PCs," Kitagawa said in a statement.
		Speaking for Gartner,  Kitagawa explained how the firm's framework for thinking about tablets is  changing.
		"Whereas as once we  imagined a world in which individual users would have both a PC and a tablet as  personal devices, we increasingly suspect that most individuals will shift  consumption to a personal tablet, and perform creative and administrative tasks  on a shared PC," Kitagawa said.
		That's leading Gartner to  hypothesize that buyers won't replace secondary PCs in their households. While  that's an overall negative for PC shipment volume, it could lead to higher  average selling prices to support richer applications, according to the  Stamford, Conn.-based market research firm.
		Of course, other factors are  at play. Gartner also pointed out that for the Windows 8 launch, PC vendors  offered products that were too expensive and "somewhat lackluster form  factors in their Windows 8 offerings and missed the excitement of touch."  It's worth noting that Lenovo, which did come out with exciting form factors and jumped on touch, had the best quarter.
		None of this is settled. But  this "shared PC for production and tablets for consumption"  hypothesis will be an interesting one to consider as the numbers roll in from  future quarters.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 18, 20132 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Red Hat Inc. highlighted its  channel momentum during its North America Partner Conference this week.
The open source solution  provider says channel bookings have increased from 53 percent of total bookings  in fiscal year 2008 to 60 percent in fiscal year 2012. The company also  suggested that its channel momentum is increasing, with a 65 percent booking percentage  from the channel in Red Hat's third quarter of fiscal year 2013.
Meanwhile, Red Hat rolled  out a few enhancements to its partner program this week. After introducing a  lead referral program and more channel staff last year, Red Hat is now bolstering  the program with an overhauled training curriculum for partners and a  browser-based demo lab.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 17, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Nokia, Microsoft's all-in Windows Phone partner, today announced it  will lay off 300 employees.
		The move is part of a streamlining of Nokia's global IT organization to  fit the company's smaller global scale and will also involve transferring IT  activities and about 820 employees to HCL Technologies and TATA Consultancy  Services. Most of the affected employees are in Nokia's home country of  Finland.
		According to Nokia, the effective cut of about 1,120 staff is the last  anticipated staff reduction in a massive restructuring announced in June 2012,  when Nokia said about 10,000 jobs would be eliminated by the end of 2013.
		The once-dominant phone maker is in the midst of a monumental turnaround  effort. Nokia found itself losing share rapidly as the Apple iPhone and Google Android-based  devices surged. In February 2011, CEO Stephen Elop responded with a  controversial revitalization plan that involved de-emphasizing  Nokia's own phone software in favor of  Windows Phone via a major partnership with Microsoft. Markets punished Nokia's  stock for the strategy and for Nokia's slow progress in taking share from other  smartphone makers and platforms with Windows Phones, even as sales of Nokia's  proprietary-OS phones declined faster than the company had projected.
		Last week, Nokia surprised the markets with better-than-expected sales  of the Lumia, Nokia's brand of smartphones running Windows Phone. The company  reported sales of 4.4 million Lumia smartphones in the fourth quarter of 2012,  aligning with a major wave of marketing for Windows Phone 8 by Microsoft and  major carriers. While the numbers still pale in comparison to sales volumes for  leading smartphone brands, the growth was far more robust than anything Nokia  has shown before with Windows Phones.
		Nokia reports earnings for the fourth quarter and the full year on Jan.  24.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 17, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		A boutique telephony distributor is launching an affiliate program for  Microsoft partners who sell and deploy Lync solutions, but who generally stay  away from the handset and telephony side.
		Novus LLC on Wednesday announced the Novus Endpoint Affiliate Program.  The program is designed for Microsoft partners who sell Lync but who lack the  expertise to push the enterprise voice component of Lync solutions that involve  full-fledged telephony along with handsets.
		"We view Microsoft Lync Enterprise Voice as a great revenue  generator, for both Microsoft Partners and resellers. We'll provide the  telephony expertise, so you can focus on software and server issues," Novus  wrote in a blog post announcing the affiliate program.
		To be eligible for the program, participants must be authorized  Microsoft partners and sign an agreement with Novus. From there, partners enter  an opportunity. If the deal has not already been registered, Novus works within  its own network to find a reseller to handle the handset and enterprise voice  side.
		If the lead culminates in sales of "Qualified for Microsoft Lync"  devices including IP desk phones, meeting room devices, headsets or cameras,  the affiliate partners are eligible for rebates ranging from $4 to $9 per  phone.
		Novus' description of the program is available here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 16, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				
Microsoft always plays long games, and the Microsoft Surface is no  exception. But a recent analyst's credible downgrade of Microsoft Surface RT  sales for the fourth quarter suggests the long game is getting even longer.
		
I argued recently that with the pricing of the original Microsoft  Surface, Microsoft wasn't aiming for a blockbuster success. Instead it just probably  wanted to stay in the consumer conversation and keep a place in line for the  Microsoft Surface Pro, which is Microsoft's best chance for beating Apple back  from the enterprise. (The full column, along with a lively thread, in which  readers alternately make good points and/or tell me I'm completely wrong, is  available here.)
		The analyst is Brent Thill at UBS AG and he cut  his estimate from 2 million units to 1 million units for the quarter ending  in December. Yes, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has said Microsoft expected to  sell a "few million" Surfaces in its first year. But selling 1  million in the quarter when it launched, during the holiday season, in  conjunction with a huge ad campaign? I find it hard to believe that kind of  number was even on the low end of anybody's "slow but steady" sales  projection PowerPoint slide in Redmond.
		Because the numbers appear to be disappointing, don't expect any word  at all from Microsoft. When a product performs poorly, Microsoft has a big  enough balance sheet to bury it and hide the details from investors. Next week's  earnings call is almost sure to be devoid of numbers for Surface sales.
		Nonetheless, Microsoft is used to disappointingly slow starts for its  long games lately. Look at Bing vs. Google or Windows Phone vs. iPhone/Android.  If those two are any guide, expect Microsoft to do what it's been doing -- keep  diligently plugging away. The company took the time (probably too much) to set  a coherent mobile strategy behind the current product mix, and it has little  choice now but to press on.
		Next up, the Surface Pro. Panos Panay, the general manager for  Microsoft Surface, Tweeted this week, "On my way to the factory to check  out #Surface Pro coming off the line...arriving in the coming weeks." In his  report, meanwhile, Thill wrote, "Surface Pro is the more promising"  model.
		Be that as it may, given Microsoft's recent track record, expect a slow  start for Surface Pro.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 16, 20139 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Kaseya began shipping a major update of its core management framework  this week for managed service providers and corporate IT departments.
		The Kaseya 6.3 Framework and several new and updated modules make hundreds  of improvements across the IT automation platform. Some of the most noteworthy  enhancements are:
		  - Version parity. Kaseya now boasts parity between the on-premise  version and the Software-as-a-Service version.
 
 
-  Improved discovery. A new Kaseya Discovery module is designed to cut  the time needed to bring a new network under Kaseya's management. A  consolidated network discovery process uses multiple scanning methods,  including ping, NMAP and domain scans, to quickly collect data on available  devices.
 
 
- Endpoint OS support. The Framework adds support for Windows 8,  Windows Server 2012, Apple OS X Mountain Lion and Apple iOS 6.
 
 
-  Best practices. Kaseya built in hundreds of pre-defined views,  maintenance routines and policies to help users get the most out of the toolset  based on previous users' and Kaseya's experience.
 
 
- Scalability increase. Each server can now manage up to 25,000  devices.
 
 
-  Automated policy management and more customizable reporting.
More information on the release is available here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 16, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As he embarks on his post-Microsoft career, the executive force behind  Windows 8 and the Microsoft Surface took 15 hours to cruise the Consumer Electronics  Show floor in Vegas.
		Upon his return from CES this week, Steven Sinofsky wrote up his  observations in a massive blog post called "Learning  by Sharing: Snark-free CES observations." The whole thing is worth  reading for observations on mobile computing, design trends, product quality  and other topics from an ultimate tech industry mover and shaker.
		But a portion of the blog that's especially interesting from the former  president of Windows for Microsoft is Sinofsky's take on the PC hardware on  display at CES. Sinofsky is largely responsible for the Microsoft Surface, a  piece of technology that angered many of the PC OEMs that are traditionally  Microsoft's closest partners. Opinions vary on whether Microsoft was trying to  crowd OEMs out or inspire them with better designs, but neither approach was  very encouraging for Microsoft's longtime hardware partners.
		Sinofsky had enthusiastic words for the new Windows 8 PCs on display,  including the categories of devices most similar to the Surface.
		"There were a number of hybrid PCs (tablet with  removeable/hideable/flippable keyboards) that are becoming clearer and more  refined -- I especially liked the Samsung and Lenovo entries," Sinofsky wrote.
		He noted that Dell, HP and Microsoft didn't have their own booths, but  pointed out that there were plenty of PCs designed for Windows 8.
		"Samsung, LG, Toshiba, Sony, Panasonic, Lenovo all had very nice  PCs with hiqh-quality touch, nice trackpads, great screens, thin, light, and in  a variety of screen sizes 11-15," he wrote. "The All-In-One PCs with  touch were quite nice as well, especially Sony and Samsung's models. The Vizio  lineup continues to evolve and show unique designs and good value."
		He called out a Razer Core i7 gaming tablet for having "some  awesome gaming attachments" and described being blown away by a Panasonic  20-inch tablet. "Seeing the quality of AutoCAD drawings showed a real  value to the full 'stack' of hardware and software," Sinofsky said of the  Panasonic.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 15, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Continuum is opening up its network operations center to provide custom  projects on behalf of its MSPs.
		The Boston-based company announced the program, called Continuum Tech  Advantage, this week as an addition to its SaaS-based managed services platform  that currently serves 3,300 MSPs and around 500,000 endpoints. In short,  Continuum MSPs can now take advantage of the expertise of 200 of Continuum's  certified engineers and technicians who will offer a menu of about 80 server  and desktop projects.
		Examples of projects Continuum's NOC staff can carry out for customers  on behalf of an MSP include Active Directory setup; installation and  configuration of VMware vCenter, ESX and ESXi; Exchange Server migrations; and  installation and configuration of Citrix XenApp.
		In a statement, Rob Autor, senior vice president of global service  delivery at Continuum, said the 24x7 service will be expanded in the coming  months to cover more types of low-cost, high-value projects.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 15, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Juniper Networks used its partner conference in Las Vegas this week to  make two big, public bets. One is to realign the company's products around  Software Defined Networks (SDN). The other is to go deeper with the channel.
		"SDN is a major shift in the networking industry. At Juniper, we  think the impact of SDN will be much broader than others have suggested. It  will redefine networking and create new winners and losers," Bob Muglia,  executive vice president of the Software Solutions Division at Juniper, said in  a statement. Muglia, who like many on Juniper's executive management team was a longtime  Microsoft executive, also detailed Juniper's vision for SDN in a  whitepaper-like blog  post this week.
		In concrete terms, Juniper plans to take several steps through 2013 to  realign its products around SDN. Much of it involves the separation of  networking software into new layers and realigning management software and  hardware to centralize network control. Significantly, Juniper also introduced  a software licensing model, called Juniper Software Advantage, which will allow  for Juniper's networking software to be virtualized and moved back and forth  between networking devices and x86 servers. Juniper says the program will also  allow customers to calibrate their purchases to actual usage for flexibility  and cost savings.
		On the partner side, Juniper is doubling down on the major investments  the company made a year ago to beef up its channel presence. Last January, the  Sunnyvale, Calif.-based networking company launched Juniper Partner Advantage,  which included partner segmentation, financial incentives, sales resources and  marketing investments.
		Juniper is expanding Partner Advantage throughout 2013 with the  addition of services and cloud solutions, which the company describes as  "incremental" opportunities for its 12,000 partners.
		Partner Advantage Services has two specializations, Partner Support  Services and Partner Professional Services. The support piece focuses on  support and maintenance services and will be enhanced later in the year with  troubleshooting workshops in four areas -- service provider routing, enterprise  routing, enterprise switching and security. On the professional services side,  Juniper will be sharing internally developed best practices with partners to  help them gain expertise and establish authority. In a statement describing the  professional services specialization, the company said, "Juniper Networks  is building a deliberate dependence on its partners to deliver these services  while helping generate more revenue per engagement and grow profit for  partners."
		Partner Advantage Cloud covers a newer area and is less prescriptive.  According to Juniper, partners in cloud solutions will be developing unique  cloud-based solutions to meet customers' needs, supported by Juniper's internal  resources along with technology partnerships and marketing development funds  from a new Juniper Cloud Innovation Fund.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 15, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		If you're looking for a quick visual tour of some of the Windows 8  hardware options for yourself or your customers, Microsoft put a nice one  online this month.
		Microsoft's U.S. OEM chief Peter Han leads the five-minute walkthrough  in a showroom on the Microsoft corporate campus. He runs through some of the  best features of some convertibles, tablets and all-in-ones. Models include the  Sony VAIO Duo 11, Dell XPS 13, Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga 13, Toshiba Satellite U945,  ASUS VivoBook, ASUS VivoTab RT and HP TouchSmart.
		Plus, it's not every day you get to see a convertible shown off on a  table with a grass surface.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 14, 20130 comments