Microsoft will keep prices lower for  partners to enroll in the Small Business silver competency indefinitely,  Microsoft's top channel executive says.
		Since rolling out the Small Business  competency earlier this year, Microsoft has kept the enrollment fee of the  Small Business silver competency lower than for its other silver competencies  in the Microsoft Partner Network. In the United States, most silver  competencies cost $1,850. The Small Business silver competency was initially  priced at $999 through Dec. 31, 2012.
		"The  special promotion price will be extended through June 30, 2013. On July 1, 2013, the silver membership cost will be at  a global average price of $1,490USD," said Jon Roskill, corporate vice president of the  Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group,  in an e-mail interview with RCPmag.com  this week.
		For U.S. partners, that means that  even after the promotion ends, the price will still be $360 lower than most  other silver competencies would cost. In this case, the U.S. subsidiary price  and the global average price are the same.
		Microsoft is also holding the line on  the Small Business gold competency when the price of all other gold competencies  goes up later this month. While most gold competency fees will jump from $3,800  a year to $5,260 a year starting Nov. 19 (U.S. prices), the Small Business gold  competency will remain at $3,800.
		Many partners serving small business  have lobbied Microsoft for years to create a Small Business competency. The  competency structure, however, comes with much higher fees than the older Small  Business Specialist Community, which partners often joined for only a little  more than the few hundred dollars required to subscribe to Microsoft's Action  Pack.
		"Most Microsoft partners who specialize in providing solutions and  services to small businesses are small businesses themselves. The Microsoft  Small Business competency addresses the unique needs of these partners, with  more tailored benefits and requirements, and a cost-effective enrollment fee  for attaining the gold [or silver] competency," Roskill said in the e-mail.
		For more of our Q&A with Jon Roskill about the changes to the gold  competency fees and the general value proposition of the MPN, keep an eye out  for our December issue.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 12, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Ross Brown, a senior channel executive in charge of structuring  incentives for partners, left Microsoft and joined a business consulting  company, Touch Worldwide.
		Brown was most recently vice president of Partner Strategy in  Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Group reporting to Jon Roskill, corporate vice  president of the WPG. Brown joined Microsoft's WPG working for former Microsoft  channel chief Allison Watson in May 2008. Prior to Microsoft, Brown had been  CEO of eEye Digital Security and a senior channel executive at Citrix Systems  Inc.
		According to Brown's LinkedIn profile, he left Microsoft in September  and joined Touch in November. Touch specializes in business and channel  strategies, as well as creative and communication work, and has offices in  Seattle, Redmond, London, Helsinki and Beijing. The company has been a longtime  designer and producer of vision keynotes for the Microsoft Worldwide Partner  Conference and provided consulting on the creation of the Microsoft Partner  Network.
		"I first met Touch through the work they did with Microsoft on the  Worldwide Partner Conference and saw both sides of the firm come together to  deliver both compelling partner opportunities in support of Microsoft and  amazing visuals and creative delivery," Brown wrote in a blog  entry posted this week on the Touch Worldwide site.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 09, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft will raise the fee required for U.S. partners to achieve the  gold level of most competencies on Nov. 19 to $5,260.
		The new price represents a 38 percent increase over the old fee of  $3,800. The fee for a silver competency in the United States remains $1,850.  The price hike is global, although prices vary by country. Partners outside the  U.S. should be able to find their new prices on their local competency  requirement portal pages.
		The gold fee for the new Small Business competency will remain at the  old price of $3,800. The silver fee for the Small Business competency also  remains at a promotional level of $999 through Dec. 31, 2012. Microsoft kept  the fees on that new competency lower in part because it is already much higher  than the $329 it cost partners to subscribe to the Action Pack and join the  Microsoft Small Business Specialist Community.
		The gold fee hike is the first price increase aside from currency  adjustments to any of the Microsoft Partner Network's memberships since  Microsoft fully introduced a new competency structure in October 2010.
		Partners pay the fee once per year, and a partner with multiple gold competencies  only has to pay the fee for one competency. There are other costs in attaining  Microsoft competencies, such as employee training and testing costs and  investments in developing customer case studies.
		Microsoft did acknowledge that a price change was coming to the gold competencies a few weeks after the  Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in July and said it would disclose the  new price in November.
		In an MPN document published in August, "Competency Roadmap 2013,"  Microsoft offered some reasons that it would be raising the fee:
		  "Every year, the Microsoft Partner Network reviews the various  membership components to ensure that the value of the benefits we provide our  most committed partners is appropriately balanced with the cost of delivering  the benefits."
		The document went on to list some of the benefits that gold competency  partners get that Microsoft believes make the competency worth the increase,  including the Solution Incentives Program, dedicated tele-partner account  specialists and internal use licenses which are much more generous for gold  than silver.
		In a July whitepaper sponsored by Microsoft, researchers at IDC concluded that for a partner organization with 50 employees and $5 million to $10 million  in revenues, the gold competency benefits were worth about $320,000. IDC  singled out $125,000 for internal use rights, $83,000 for the included MSDN  subscriptions and $37,500 for the Partner Learning Center.
		In hindsight, the whitepaper looks like an effort by Microsoft to  soften up the channel for a price hike. Nonetheless, we've previously called  out the cost-to-benefit ratio of a gold competency as one of the best program  deals in the channel at $3,800. The new value calculation will no longer work  for some partners at the margins, although holding the silver competency and  Small Business gold competency fees steady gives them a place to turn. For  partners already in gold or considering gold, though, an additional $1,460  doesn't seem like it will change the overall ROI by much.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 01, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		At the  Microsoft Surface launch event on Thursday, 300 Surface devices were made available  to the press to test for about an hour. Here are my first impressions from my  limited time with the device:
		
				Look and  Feel: The device, with its VaporMG casing and its 200 custom-fit parts, feels  very light but completely solid. The click as the keyboard attaches to the  tablet is satisfying. More importantly, the click is useful in the sense that  you know for sure that the keyboard is properly seated. I tested Microsoft's  claim that the aligning magnets make it possible to attach the keyboard without  looking, and it's true. As for the kickstand, which holds the tablet component  up at an angle for use with the keyboard or for watching videos, it also worked  perfectly. I'm not sure I buy the design point that it feels like closing an  expensive car door when shutting the kickstand, but it's about as good as  personal electronics get.
		      |  | 
  
		
				Ergonomics:  The ergonomics of the device are very nice. I used it mostly standing at a  table, but found it pretty comfortable. It would have been nice to be able to  adjust the kickstand to be able to angle the screen a little higher, but I  completely understand why Microsoft chose to do what it did. I wouldn't be  using the device in this standing position for a long time (or any time) in any  circumstances other than this limited test, anyway.
		
				Touch  Cover:  The Surface can come with two types of magnetically attachable  keyboards. The main option is the Touch Cover, which has keys that don't move.  Typing on the Touch Cover takes some getting used to. I found myself making a  lot of mistakes, but I'll take Microsoft Surface team leader Panos Panay at his  word during the keynote that it takes four to five days to fully get used to. The feel  of the Touch Cover is unique -- the closest thing I can compare it to is tapping  lightly on cement through a light rubber cover. That might sound negative; in  fact, it's a reassuring feeling.
		
				Type Cover:  Microsoft also made available the Type Cover for testing. I greatly preferred  it. It's not as aesthetically pleasing as the Touch Cover -- it's slightly  thicker and comes only in black, while the Touch Cover comes in black, white,  blue, orange, pink and red. But the Type Cover has movable keys, which feel  much more like a laptop keyboard. Typing on the Type Cover takes no time to get  used to and is very accurate. It costs $10 more, but it's well worth it for  people expecting to do a lot of typing.
		
				Durability:  So, for a while I lived in Missouri, the "Show Me" state. When Panay hung the  Surface by its Touch Cover during the Surface keynote, it impressed me. The  minute I got to the table, I tried it. The magnets held and I'm happy to report  that I didn't break one of Microsoft's first Surfaces. One of the journalists  next to me was even braver/more reckless. He took Panay's claim that the thing  could be dropped 72 different ways very literally and immediately dropped his  test unit on the carpeted floor from over waist-height. It kept on working  fine.
		
				Laptop Use:  Some reviewers have complained about sitting down and using the Surface. I sat  on the floor for a bit and found it easy to use. There were some periods when  the keyboard (the Type Cover, in this case) didn't register some keystrokes, but  I suspect it's a matter of getting used to putting the right amount of pressure  on it. I didn't experience that problem on the table.
		
				Video Mode: I launched the Netflix app and started the first episode of "The Walking Dead."  The 16:9 aspect ratio worked well with the video and the picture was sharp and  bright.
		
				Tablet  Mode: As a tablet, the device was indeed "fast and fluid," as  Microsoft is fond of saying. There's a slight but noticeable delay when  shifting from portrait to landscape mode, but otherwise the screen was  extremely responsive. Having tried a number of Microsoft's gestures before, the  learning curve was fairly slight to use the various apps available on the  system.
		
				Office  2013: I wrote most of this review in the preview version of Word 2013 that comes  with the Surface RT and found it virtually identical to using Word 2010 on a  Windows 7 system in that limited use-case. Also present are Excel 2013,  PowerPoint 2013 and OneNote 2013. A Microsoft tech also downloaded a version of  OneNote optimized for the new user interface. I didn't get much of a chance to  test that, but it looked promising. The one annoyance in Word was in the  dual-screen multitasking mode for Windows RT. When Word is in the small column  view, it appears only as an unusable icon on a desktop background. You have to  click on it to see what's in it, and then it goes back to taking up the larger  screen. This is a multitasking problem for people like me who live in Word for  notetaking, although the new UI OneNote is one way around it.
		
				Multitasking: The multitasking scenarios in the Surface RT were refreshingly robust. As  a power user, I had fairly low expectations for the two-app limitation on open  windows. However, the way the system handles tasks like clicking on links from  one of the apps by switching that app to the browser was nicely thought out. As  a journalist who interviews people, one of the demos in the keynote struck me  as especially useful. It's using the Surface's rear-facing camera to record the  room on a third of the screen while taking notes in OneNote on the rest of the  screen. The rear-facing camera's angle makes it possible to record an interview  subject on video while simultaneously typing notes. A test on the Surface  worked well for me.
		
				Apps: I  didn't have time to surf through the Windows Store so I can't say how many of  the few thousand available apps look useful to me.
		
				My Snap  Judgment: I could work and play on this device and will consider it as my next  PC. I suspect the Surface Pro version to come in January would be  far more  robust for work environments (and more expensive), but in a short test, the  Surface RT was surprisingly strong.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 25, 20124 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Thursday's launch event for Windows 8 was short on news, but long on...well, it was short on news. But Scott was there to live-Tweet the entire proceedings, anyway.  Check out the highlights below and follow him at @scottbekker.
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 25, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
  - Check out Scott's own review of the Surface RT here.
				
We haven't gotten our hands on one of the Microsoft Surface RT devices  yet, but a few reviewers around the Web have. The consensus seems to be that  the Surface hardware is extremely strong but that the software and especially  the app ecosystem, two areas where Microsoft should theoretically shine, are  problem areas.
		
				The New York Times
				
  Hardware: "succeeded brilliantly."
Software: "an insanely confusing split personality."
		David Pogue painted the big picture in The  New York Times with his lead:
		  "How would you like to move into a stunning mansion on a bluff  overlooking the sea -- in Somalia? Or would you like the chance to own a new  Ferrari -- that has to be refueled every three miles? Would you take a job that  pays $1 million a year -- cutting football fields with toenail clippers?"
		It's a nice analogy for using Microsoft products these days in many  circumstances. (It captures my feelings this weekend, for example, in the  Smithsonian Natural History Museum. An app to see what you'd look like as a  Neanderthal was available only for iPhone and Android. Yes, it was a frivolous  app, but walking around with a Windows Phone often leaves me feeling like I'm  outside the party looking in.)
		Pogue writes that on "the hardware front, Microsoft has succeeded  brilliantly." He writes lovingly of the many ports and jacks, the  kickstand and the magnetic hinged Touch Cover. In use, he notes that Touch  Cover occasionally misses keystrokes if you type too fast and finds the battery  life underwhelming, but these are minor complaints in a very positive take on  the hardware.
		Of the software, on the other hand, Pogue calls it a "heartbreak."  Many of his problems have to do with the intentional (though certainly not  beyond questionable) limitations of Windows RT -- the preview-only versions of  Office 2013, the inability to run legacy Windows applications, 
		Worse, though, he accuses the Surface with Windows RT of having what he  calls "an insanely confusing split personality." He also legitimately  knocks Microsoft for having only 3,500 apps available for Windows RT at the  launch, given that Windows RT can't run older apps. This is where all the  analogies about the mansion in Somalia and the Ferrari come from.
		
				The Wall Street Journal
				
  Hardware: "better for traditional productivity tasks than any  tablet I've tested."
Software: "fluid" but with "a paucity of apps."
		After testing his Surface for three weeks, Walt Mossberg of The Wall  Street Journal gives this as his bottom line:
		  "Microsoft's Surface is a tablet with some pluses: the major  Office apps and nice, optional keyboards. If you can live with its tiny number  of third-party apps, and somewhat disappointing battery life, it may give you  the productivity some miss in other tablets."
		Mossberg says the device "isn't a cheap iPad knockoff," a  complaint often leveled at various Android tablets. Instead, he says the  magnesium device has a feeling of "quality and care." He has some  problems with the software but isn't nearly as negative about it as Pogue. He's  also brings up some interesting limitations of the hardware.
		While overall he calls the keyboards "better than any of the  add-on keyboards I've seen for the iPad," Mossberg also notes, "They  are almost useless in your lap." On a table or desk, though, the  combination of keyboard and kickstand "make the Surface better for  traditional productivity tasks than any tablet I've tested."
		Other hardware negatives -- the battery life is seven hours compared to  10 for the iPad, the 1 megapixel rear camera takes fair pictures and "only  OK" videos, and the screen is sharp and vivid but inferior to the iPad 3's  Retina display.
		Mossberg found the software less frustrating than Pogue. He had trouble  with Mail and with syncing to some Microsoft services and to Evernote, but he  says the Office programs work fine and really sees potential in the Xbox Music  app. His largest criticism was with the available apps. Microsoft officials  told him more will be available than he and Pogue were able to see in their  tests, however -- 10,000 worldwide and 5,000 in the United States at launch.
		
				Laptop Magazine
				
  Hardware: "proves that Microsoft can beat its own partners on  hardware"
Software: "a fledgling ecosystem"
		Writing in Laptop  Magazine, Avram Piltch gives the Surface 3.5 out of 5 stars and his verdict  is a tough one for Microsoft's OEM partners:
		  "The Surface with Windows RT proves that Microsoft can beat its  own partners on hardware. Between the build quality, kickstand, and truly  innovative Touch Cover, this is a tablet whose design and fresh interface will  turn heads away from the iPad."
		Not that Piltch believes every head that turns will chose the Surface  over the iPad -- far from it. "For a flagship product with a premium price,  Microsoft compromises on too many things by including poor cameras, weak  speakers, slow internal memory and a screen that, while better than most, isn't  as good as the iPad's Retina display," he writes.
		Apps are also an Achilles Heel in Piltch's view: "Right now, $599...is a lot to spend on a fledgling ecosystem."
		
				NBCNews Gadgetbox
				
  Hardware: "a hardware success...the company should be proud"
Software: "keeps this from being a home run  for Microsoft"
		The headline of Wilson Rothman's review on NBC News.com's Gadgetbox sums it up: "Microsoft's New Tablet is a Mixed  Blessing." Calling the Surface a "hardware success" that "the  company should be proud" of, Rothman argues the Windows RT software "keeps  this from being a home run for Microsoft."
		Rothman likes many of the same things that other reviewers liked about  the hardware -- the Touch Cover, the kickstand, the feel of the device. He  breaks some new ground on battery by comparing the experience to laptops rather  than other tablets.
		  "Having never met a Windows laptop that didn't die a quiet,  lonesome death every time I left it unplugged overnight, I was stunned to see  how exceptionally well the Surface RT manages power. Even under heavy use, the  battery will carry you at least eight hours, but even more impressive is the  fact that if you leave it sitting for hours or even days on end, the battery  will show little if any signs of expenditure. Even if you have your Exchange  email, messaging and all kinds of social feeds on, you can expect very little  draw when your screen is off. Better still, the battery charges quickly, and  can be completely topped off in two hours."
		He nicely captures the problem on the app side, though, with a zinger: "You can practically hear an echo in the Windows 8 app store right  now. There's a serious lack of games and, aside from Netflix and Kindle Reader,  not much major video, music and book apps."
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 24, 20123 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Apple pulled one of the oldest tricks in the IT marketing book this  week. When your competitor is about to make a highly anticipated, long-planned  announcement, muddy the waters with a major announcement of your own earlier in  the same week. As Microsoft was finalizing its PowerPoint decks and teleprompter scripts for the Windows 8/Surface launch events on Thursday, Apple snuck in with the launch of the iPad mini -- a 7.9-inch, 0.68-pound, $329  tablet.
		The announcement doesn't blow up Microsoft's event before it happens,  but it does add some twists to challenges Microsoft already faced.
		
				Price: With a $329 starting price for the iPad mini, Apple moves the baseline on the iPad-vs.-Surface price  conversation down by about $70. When Microsoft announced its Surface pricing last week, it was already even with the base third-generation iPad at $499. But there were two caveats. One is that the key feature of the Surface is  laptop-like productivity and to really unlock that requires the Type Cover.  With a Type Cover, the Surface starts at $599. The other caveat is that the  perfectly serviceable iPad 2 could be had for $399. Now, with the mini, the lowest-end iPad is $170 cheaper than the lowest-end Surface. Investors didn't like the price because it doesn't help Apple too much with low-end tablet  competitors. But for Microsoft, trying to go shoulder-to-shoulder with Apple,  the price hurts. Effect of the mini launch: Bombshell
		
				Apps: It was already clear  that Windows RT devices were going to have a steep hill to climb with apps.  Given that Windows RT can't run standard Windows applications, and can only run  apps that are either pre-loaded (even if they're great apps like Word 2013,  Excel 2013 and PowerPoint 2013) or available through the fledgling Windows  Store, there was never any doubt that there would be fewer Windows RT apps than  Apple iPad apps. By launching the iPad mini, which can run every iPad app,  Apple got a large megaphone to shout to the world that there are 275,000  iPad-specific apps and about 700,000 apps that can run on the iPad when you  count all the iPhone apps that can also run on the device. Microsoft, with apps  numbering in the 3,500-10,000 range for the Windows RT launch, doesn't want  people thinking about that comparison right now. Effect of the mini launch: High
		
				Cellular: Apple had the  cellular connectivity option with the iPad. Microsoft won't offer it on the  Surface. The iPad mini will have it. This is another unwelcome reminder of a  limitation of the Surface. To the extent that price is an important  consideration in the tablet wars, this is far less of a consideration, as  cellular adds substantially to the cost and is chosen by relatively few buyers. Effect of the mini launch: Low
		
				Screen resolution: With the  iPad mini, Apple chose not to include its Retina display. This is actually a  win for Microsoft because it makes for a less clear story on iPad device  resolution versus Surface. By the numbers, the iPad with Retina display is  2048x1536. The iPad mini, like the iPad 2, is 1024x768. The Surface is  1366x768. Effect of the mini launch: None
  Look and Feel: The iPad mini  is tremendously light and small without being uselessly tiny -- it should change  the dynamics of the smaller tablet market. But Microsoft's Surface tablet is so  different from any other tablets out there that it should be largely unaffected  by the advances made by the mini. The kickstand and the Touch Cover guarantee  that the new device won't be crowded out visually by a miniaturized version of  a tablet the world is already very familiar with.  Effect of the mini launch: Small
 Stealing Microsoft's Thunder: Clearly, Apple is trying to raise the maximum amount of attention for the mini, with a side benefit of undercutting Microsoft's announcement. So Apple's launch will be judged by iPad mini sales, not by its effect on a competitor that is  struggling mightily to stay relevant. But from Microsoft's view, how much does  the iPad mini hurt the Surface launch?
In the consumer market, the answer is quite a bit. Windows RT was  always going to have challenges making inroads with consumers. Whatever factors  went into Microsoft's pricing on the Surface RT, the decision to put the low  end at $499 (without the keyboard) severely limited its prospects as an impulse  purchase. Apple's iPad mini pricing makes it even harder for the first Surface  RT to become a mainstream consumer device.
In the higher-end consumer market, people looking to replace PCs for  students or home business use, the iPad mini isn't an option and the pricing is  less of an issue. So, Microsoft probably didn't lose much there. In the  corporate market, neither the iPad mini nor the Surface RT seems to have much  to offer. Companies interested in a Surface device would be holding out for the  Surface Pro in January. All told, Apple's pre-launch launch will probably  freeze a few mid-range consumer buyers who might have considered a Surface but  will note Apple's reminder of how much they're giving up in the way of apps.
Total effect of the mini launch: Medium.
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 24, 20122 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft has no better technology evangelist than Bill Gates.
		And with this being the start of a huge launch week for Microsoft --  Windows 8 and the Surface RT on Thursday and Windows Phone 8 the following  Monday -- Microsoft posted a corporate Q&A video this morning featuring the  chairman, who normally leaves most of the technology pitching work to CEO Steve  Ballmer.
		Gates started out with nods to both Ballmer's authority and to  Microsoft's precarious position in the IT industry if its Windows 8 tablet-PC  hybrid gamble doesn't work.
		"As Steve Ballmer has said, this is an absolutely critical  product. It takes Windows into the world of touch, low-power devices, really  giving people the best of what you think of as a tablet-type experience and the  PC experience," Gates told his Microsoft interviewer Steve Clayton in the  five-minute video.
		
		
		Gates starts off slowly with a few comments that seemed pulled from his  keynotes in the late 1990s and early 2000s when he used to advocate for  Microsoft's technology more regularly. "It's key to where personal  computing is going, and you know we're going to get software developers behind  this like we have with every big new version of Windows," Gates said.
		But about two minutes in, Gates switches out of his logical, analytical  delivery and seems to wake up as he's talking about the opportunities in the  shared platform among Windows 8, Windows Phone 8 and the next version of Office  and their connection to the cloud.
		"They all go get their storage, go get your personalization, and  so, that's a wonderful thing. And when it works, you just sit there going, 'Wow,'"  Gates said with visible enthusiasm. 
		Referring to an app store with "tons and tons of applications,"  Gates sets a pretty high expectations bar for Microsoft to clear at the events  over the coming week.
		"People will be pretty amazed at the energy Microsoft is putting  behind this new wave of products. We've really saved up in terms of knowing  that this was such an important set of innovations that whether it's great new  applications or ISV engagement or just plain marketing, this is the big time  for us," he said.
		One of the lessons of the new technology marketing reality that Gates  does seem to have absorbed is that Microsoft can no longer win by selling its  technology to the IT managers, who make the decisions and pass devices onto  their users. Gates doesn't make any of Microsoft's frequent and awkward  references to what "consumers" or third-person users will be able to  do with Windows 8 or the Surface.
		Instead he focuses on his own excitement about getting a Surface with a  story about how he ended up with the magnetic keyboard in black.
		"I've got the basic black. It was one of the first ones off the  line and I was anxious to get one," Gates said. His own, obviously biased,  opinion from using it day and night is that it's an "unbelievably great  product. It's really amazing."
		In a strong bring-your-own-device pitch, Gates urges people to go try  one at a Microsoft Store, suggesting that features such as the kickstand and  the keyboard have to be experienced to be appreciated. "Get to a store,  play around with this thing -- the way you put that keyboard on and off, the  richness of the swiping that takes the touch interface to a new level."
		The chairman came out of retirement to give the launches a good setup.  We'll see if Ballmer and his marketers can execute on the expectations.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 22, 20123 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As HP's  ServiceOne channel program comes up on its official one-year anniversary, it's  getting fleshed out with new components for partners.
		ServiceOne  extends to qualifying partners the ability to sell or deliver on HP-branded  services that used to be direct-only, especially maintenance of HP equipment  and software. While HP has over 100,000 partners, the numbers in ServiceOne are  much smaller. There are about 2,300 ServiceOne Specialist partners and 750 partners  in the premier level, ServiceOne Expert.
		"We  never intended it to be something like a program element to roll out. It's  really for those partners that had a similar business model," said Ken Archer,  vice president of Americas Channels and Alliances for the HP Enterprise Group,   in an interview this week.
		
				
				HP  touts about 20 percent growth in partners over the course of HP's fiscal year,  which starts in November. (ServiceOne had a soft launch in July 2011  before the formal ServiceOne launch on Nov. 1, 2011.)
		The  new components are a management tool called Rapid, a partner financial  simulator and the ability for ServiceOne partners to deliver HP Multivendor  Services to support non-HP technologies in a datacenter.
		The  Rapid tool gives ServiceOne partners visibility into their entire HP contract  business. "We want you to understand what renewal opportunities exist. We're  going to give you that opportunity way ahead of when that contract comes up for  termination," Archer said.
		The  financial simulator is designed to help current and potential ServiceOne  partners explore "what if" scenarios around offering ServiceOne. "We  give partners a lot of flexibility on the different services -- sell HP's  branded service, sell and deliver on HP-branded services, or sell their own  branded services with HP inside. But the financials weren't necessarily  internalized by a lot of owners," Archer said.
		With  the simulator, HP Partner Business Managers sit down with HP partners to walk  through revenue and profit scenarios using the ServiceOne offerings in various  combinations.
		The  final component is a new type of ServiceOne offering. While previous lines available  to partners were HP-only maintenance contracts, Archer said that ServiceOne  partners wanted to meet customer demands to maintain other common datacenter  equipment, from vendors such as EMC or Oracle. HP added its integrated  multivendor service line to the menu of services available for ServiceOne  partners to offer. "They can take on maintenance and servicing of  everything in that datacenter," Archer said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 18, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		As if Internal Use Rights aren't enough of a benefit for U.S.-based  Microsoft partners, Microsoft and Dell-owned ISV partner Quest Software are  sweetening the pot for partners to try out Office 365.
		Already, partners who participate in Microsoft's free Cloud Essentials  Pack get 25 seats of Office 365 for internal use. (Partners enrolled in the $1,850 Cloud Accelerate program get 250 seats of Office 365.)
		
				
				Under an arrangement with Quest announced last week that runs until the  end of the year, partners in either program can use Quest OnDemand Migration  for Email to get up to 25 seats migrated to Office 365 at no cost. (Migrating  more than 25 seats costs $10 for each additional seat.)
		The tool works for migrating seats from Exchange 2000 and above,  Microsoft Live@edu, Microsoft BPOS, Gmail, GroupWise and Sun ONE/iPlanet.
		Obviously, Quest Software gets something out of the arrangement, just  like Microsoft does with Internal Use Rights. The theory is the more partners  use and get familiar with the products, the better partners get at selling  them. More details are available at Diane Golshan's U.S. Partner Team blog.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 15, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		In a move to maintain its recent rapid revenue growth, the already  channel-only Datto Inc. is fine-tuning its partner program.
		Datto, a provider of hardware-based backup, disaster recovery and  business continuity solutions, on Thursday launched a Partner Alliance Program,  which is aimed at both its current base of 4,000 resale partners and potential  new partners.
		The program has three tiers: Authorized, Certified and Premier.  Partners advance through the tiers by accumulating points based on the amount  of device storage they purchase through Datto and by participating in Datto  activities and promotions.
		Components of the program include customizable marketing materials,  lead-sharing opportunities, sales and marketing training, and not-for-resale  opportunities.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 11, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		PC sales were supposed to be ugly in the third quarter, but they came  in even worse than expected.
		Worldwide PC shipments contracted 8.6 percent in the third quarter of  2012 compared to the same period a year ago, according to preliminary figures  released this week by IDC for the July-through-September period, which includes  the critical back-to-school buying season. As recently as August, IDC had  forecast a more modest 3.8 percent drop.
		The market was even worse in the United States, contracting 12.4  percent compared to a forecast of negative 9.4 percent.
		HP and Dell both underperformed in the bad global market. HP's PC  shipments fell more than 16 percent. With Lenovo's 10 percent shipment gain,  the Chinese OEM is challenging HP for the top spot in PC sales. Dell also saw  shipments drop by 14 percent, according to IDC's figures.
		"PCs are going through a severe slump," said Jay Chou, senior  research analyst at IDC,  in a statement. "The industry had already  weathered a rough second quarter, and now the third quarter was even worse."
		IDC chalked up the extremely bad quarter to economic concerns, PC  market saturation, the diversion of PC spending to tablets and smartphones, and  the wait for Windows 8, which becomes generally available on Oct. 26.
		Even with Windows 8 in the mix for most of the fourth quarter, IDC isn't  expecting a blockbuster holiday season. The firm's forecast calls for a "potential  return to positive growth at the end of this year."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 11, 20121 comments