RBA Consulting recently completed the integration of Ratchet  Inc., a digital marketing specialist that RBA acquired  in August. At the end of the process, both companies altered their  identities -- one a little and one a lot.
		Ratchet had 42 employees and about $5 million in 2010  revenues when it was acquired. RBA Consulting was a Wayzata, Minn.-based  Microsoft National Systems Integrator partner with offices in Minneapolis,  Dallas and Denver.
		Now both will do business under the "RBA" brand.
		The combined entity did about $35 million in revenue in 2011  and now has 245 employees, up from the 225 employees the two companies had at  the time of the acquisition.
		Going beyond the name change, RBA CEO Mike Reinhart  explained the Ratchet acquisition as part of a shift to focusing on the end  user, a logical outgrowth of the IT consumerization trend.
		"With the focus on the end user, we can leverage  technology to meet our clients' business objectives and reach, engage and  motivate end users across departments and multiple technology platforms,"  Reinhart said in a statement. "Additionally, because we understand how the  creative use of technology fits into the larger picture of a company's core  objectives, our clients reap the benefits of our unique expertise from concept  to deployment."
		RBA is one of 33 Microsoft NSIs, which are generally large  systems integration partners with a multi-regional presence in the United States.  According to RBA's Microsoft Pinpoint directory profile, the company has 13  Microsoft competencies.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 12, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		In technology, the idea with an appliance is unpack it,  start it and forget it.
		Things aren't quite so simple with the new Enterprise  Database Consolidation Appliances and SQL Server 2008 R2 Parallel Data  Warehouse Appliances from HP, Dell and others that package up SQL Server database  software, the Windows Server operating system, server hardware and storage that  can range up to 500 terabytes of data. It's designed with a simple purpose --  to centralize and simplify the data platform across an enterprise. But that's  no elementary task.
		That's why Microsoft is turning to a few highly specialized  partners, such as Dallas-based Microsoft National Systems Integrator  Scalability Experts, to walk customers through the process.
		"Scalability Experts' deep database experience will  help customers by providing assessments, architectural design review sessions,  proof of concepts and other implementation services to make sure customers get  the most value from their appliance," said Tobias Schmidt, senior product  manager at Microsoft,  in a statement announcing the Scalability Experts  service this month. Scalability Experts is a 10-year-old firm with Microsoft  Partner Network competencies in Data Platform and Business Intelligence.
		"We are seeing a significant increase in market  interest and demand for appliance solutions developed by Microsoft, HP and  other hardware vendors," said Raj Gill, CTO and president of Scalability  Experts,  in the statement. "With the growth in data that companies  are experiencing each year and the costs associated with application sprawl,  many are looking for easier solutions to improve capacity, increase scalability  and simplify their database infrastructure. These appliances provide a very  efficient way to meet a customer's growing needs."
		Scalability Experts joins Avanade, the global Microsoft-focused  systems integrator, which announced plans in December to spin up a 350-person  practice around the appliances. 
		Microsoft's appliance effort is often described as a  response to the success of Oracle's Exabyte database appliances.
		Avanade clearly believes the opportunity around the  appliances is huge. "This new practice represents a large opportunity, as  appliances are expected to account for approximately 40 percent of database  growth in the next three years," Avanade said in the statement announcing  its appliance practice plans.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 12, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		How much revenue is really at stake in the battle between  Google and Microsoft for online business mailboxes and documents?
		One analyst firm specializing in messaging tried to quantify  the number this month.
		Palo Alto, Calif.-based Radicati Group released the report "Google  vs. Microsoft Office 365 -- An Analyst Evaluation and Comparison," pitting  Google Apps against Office 365 in 10 categories.
		As part of the report, Radicati sized the market, which it  calls cloud-based productivity suites.
		The firm's estimate for 2012 revenues is nearly $1.6  billion. By the end of 2016, Radicati projects the cloud-based productivity  suites market will hit nearly $5.9 billion.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 12, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft's guest speaker at the 2012 Microsoft Worldwide  Partner Conference in Toronto  this July will be mind-body medicine pioneer Deepak Chopra.
Chopra has written 64 books, including 19 New York Times bestsellers, according to his speaker bio. Notable recent titles include  War of the Worldviews, Peace  is the Way and The Soul of Leadership.
Microsoft normally reserves the final keynote of the  conference for a general-interest keynote from a high-profile speaker. Previous  WPC guest speakers have included Sir Richard Branson and former President Bill  Clinton.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 11, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		One of the most promising Windows desktop apps for the Apple  iPad is in bad trouble -- the Microsoft licensing kind.
		Earlier this year, cloud gaming company OnLive Inc. released  an iPad app called OnLive Desktop that allowed remote display of a limited-functionality version of Windows 7 running in the Palo Alto, Calif.-based  company's datacenter.
		The version of Windows 7 served up by the datacenter-app  combo includes a keyboard button in the taskbar, fully functional versions of  Word, Excel and PowerPoint, and an eye-popping 1-gigabit-per-second Internet  connection (data only moves from the Internet to OnLive's datacenter rather  than from the Internet to the iPad).
		
				
				A freebie released in January got a lot of reviews, but a  late February update with pay options seems to have gotten Microsoft's  attention, and probably prompted numerous angry calls to Microsoft from its  many hosting partners and virtual desktop vendor partners.
		OnLive offered OnLive Desktop Plus for $4.99 a month, which  included Windows 7, the Office apps and the super-fast data pipe; and promised a  Pro version coming soon for $9.99 a month that would add 25 times more storage and  the ability to customize the desktop with additional PC applications. Also  announced was an OnLive Enterprise version that would allow some IT control of  the environment.
		Noting the lack of pop-up prompts in his review of the app  and service last month, The New York Times' David Pogue quipped that it was "the least annoying version of Windows you've ever used."
		While users may not be annoyed by the OnLive version of  Windows, Microsoft is. On Thursday morning, Joe Matz, Microsoft corporate vice  president of worldwide pricing and licensing, suggested very strongly in a blog entry that OnLive is off the reservation.
		"We are actively engaged with OnLive with the hope of  bringing them into a properly licensed scenario, and we are committed to seeing  this issue is resolved," Matz wrote.
		Much of Matz's post was dedicated to spelling out how Windows  can only be provided by hosting partners either through a virtual desktop  infrastructure scheme that involves customers already having licenses or by having  limited desktop functionality served through Windows Server and the Remote  Desktop Protocol.
		"It is important to note that SPLA does not support  delivery of Windows 7 as a hosted client or provide the ability to access  Office as a service through Windows 7. Office may only be provided as a service  if it is hosted on Windows Server and Remote Desktop Services," said Matz,  substituting a shot across OnLive's bow for one straight through the hull.
		Simon Bramfitt, who has been providing analysis of the  OnLive-Microsoft licensing situation on his blog, speculates that OnLive may have  been trying to create this fight all along, and that the party in trouble could  be Microsoft -- not because it will lose to OnLive but because it's losing the  argument in the market.
		"You have to acknowledge that it is long past time for  Microsoft to address the shortcomings within its current licensing policy with  regard to VDI," Bramfitt commented on Matz' post. "The increasing  adoption of mobile technologies coupled with the consumerization of IT and  bring your own device programs is increasingly blurring the boundaries between  corporate devices and personal devices. Microsoft's licensing policies in this  regard have failed to keep up with these trends and needs to be addressed  promptly."
		What was refreshing about using the OnLive Desktop was that  it provided a Microsoft experience in a straightforward way -- no convoluted  licensing agreement with Microsoft, no setting anything up with the IT  department. It was just click, pay and start using. That's what users are  coming to expect from technology, but it's now clear that it wasn't Microsoft's  intention to have its software used that way -- at least in this case.
		If Bramfitt's speculation about OnLive intentionally picking  a fight is right, the company has picked a big one. Bramfitt notes that the  Office apps compete directly with Microsoft's Office 365 franchise, as well as  with some of Microsoft's most powerful partners.
		The fight actually goes much deeper than that. By packaging  Windows 7, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Flash video and a wicked-fast data pipe, it's  suddenly a threat to the whole concept of a Windows-based tablet. Sure, some  users will want the new tiled tablet experience of Windows 8. But for many  others, getting a pretty complete Windows 7 experience and an iPad will be  Windows enough.
		For strategic reasons, I'd be surprised if Microsoft allows OnLive  Desktop to license Windows 7 and Office for very long.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 08, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		The new iPad leaves Microsoft some breathing room.
		
				Granted, the higher-resolution display, the 4G networking,  the improved camera, the new dictation capabilities and the other features of  the new Apple iPad unveiled  today all look compelling.
  
    |  | 
  
    | Apple's third-generation iPad with 4G. (Source: Apple) | 
		But given Apple's roughly once-a-year release cycle for  iPads, this is probably the last release before Microsoft comes out with its  tablet-focused version of Windows. (The Windows 8 beta was released at the end of February.)
		
				While an iterative iPad release is nice and should help  Apple continue to fend off Android-based tablet rivals, it also means that  Apple isn't changing the game completely once again before Microsoft takes a  turn.
		Microsoft may not be able to do any better against Apple  than anyone else has so far in the tablet world. At least, though, Microsoft  will be taking its shot against the device it has targeted all along. No need  for a Windows Vista-esque, pre-release course correction.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 07, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft seldom discloses specifics on how many of its partners  achieve a given competency. But one partner company that just attained gold  status in the Independent Software Vendor competency is providing a precise  figure for its category.
"Windward is one of only 787 ISVs in the world to attain Microsoft's  Gold Competency. Similar to Red Gate Software, Experian QAS, IBM, Barracuda  Networks, and Citrix, Windward is part of the Microsoft Partner Network,"  Boulder, Colo.-based Windward said in a  press release this week.
Founded in 2002, Windward develops business intelligence and enterprise  reporting solutions based on a Java and .NET engine using Microsoft Word, Excel  and PowerPoint on the front end.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 29, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Even as registration opens this week for the Microsoft 2012 Worldwide  Partner Conference in July, Microsoft partner executives are rolling out  changes to make Digital WPC a more valuable regular online stop for partners.
		"It's a bit of a departure for Digital WPC," Karl Noakes,  general manager of Worldwide Partner Strategy and Programs, said of the 2012  iteration of Digital WPC, Microsoft's online portal for its massive annual  partner conference. "We're moving the site to be a more permanent site,  rather than one that's just around the event. We're building more and more  social media features for partners to make connections beyond the event."
		WPC is scheduled for July 8-12 in Toronto.  Microsoft planned to open registration for the event on Monday, according to a  Microsoft spokesperson. A Microsoft pre-registration page projected the event would  attract 150,000 participants from 150 countries.  Attendees who register by April 5 will get $300 off the standard conference  price of $1,995.
		The new Digital WPC site has a four-column  format (suggestive of Microsoft's new infatuation with tiles) with general  conference information, multimedia, Microsoft blogs and social media feeds.
UPDATE, 2/27: The WPC pre-registration page was updated on Monday to say, "Registration opens Tuesday, February 28 at 10 AM PST!"
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 27, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		In the land of limited smartphone market share, 1 million units is  king.
		Market researchers at Strategy Analytics on Friday released a report  quantifying what became intuitively apparent when Nokia shared its earnings  last month: Nokia is now the leading Windows Phone smartphone vendor.
		In the culmination of a controversial strategic shift from Symbian to  Windows Phone, Nokia started selling its first Windows Phone devices in November.  During a late January earnings  call, Nokia executives said they had sold more than 1 million of the Lumia  800 and 710 phones to that point.
		Strategy Analytics counted 900,000 of those sales in Q4, and estimated  total quarterly Windows Phone device shipments for all  manufacturers at 2.7  million units. For Nokia, it's good for 33 percent of Windows Phone market  share and more than enough to supplant HTC as the top Windows Phone vendor for  the quarter.
		For Windows Phone, Nokia's sales drove 36 percent sequential unit  growth from the third quarter to the fourth -- an impressive boost and promising  for Microsoft given that Nokia is just getting started and hadn't started  selling units in the critical U.S. market at that point.
		Neil Mawston, executive director at Strategy Analytics, put the  milestone in perspective: "Nokia is by no means out of the woods yet, and  it is still on a long road to recovery, but capturing top spot in the Microsoft  ecosystem is an encouraging baby-step forward for the company."
See Also:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 25, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Earlier this month, Eric Ligman keyed in an  uncharacteristically menacing blog entry reminding Microsoft partners that they shouldn't be using the retired Microsoft  Certified and Microsoft Gold Certified partner logos.
		"To answer a question I received from a couple of  partners this week and last week, yes, those email/web messages that you  received saying they are from me advising you that you need to remove any and  all 'Microsoft Gold Certified partner' or 'Microsoft Certified partner' logos  that you still have on your websites, in your tweets, in your new press  releases, etc. right away really are coming directly from me," wrote  Ligman, the director of Partner Experience for Microsoft Corp.
		"Also, yes, when you see the phrase, 'you are out of  compliance with the Microsoft Partner Network program guidelines' in those  messages, it means exactly that, you are out of compliance and need to address  these items right away," Ligman wrote in the entry, which featured large  red "X"s over the outdated logos.
		Given that there were rumblings among Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group executives last year about policing the  partner logos more aggressively, I wondered if Ligman's post was part of a  broader effort to eliminate all use of the Gold Certified and Certified logos.
		
				
				Microsoft stopped issuing new Certified and Gold Certified  partner designations by November 2010 and all grandfathered authorization of  the logos ended nearly four months ago on Nov. 1, 2011. Partners now earn  either "Gold" or "Silver" for their expertise in specific  competencies; there are no longer broad company-level partner certifications.
		I e-mailed Ligman, a genuinely nice guy, asking for an interview  about his new role as a logo enforcer. Microsoft's PR agency redirected me to  Karl Noakes, who spoke to me by phone from the back of a taxi in Paris, where he was  meeting with partners this week.
		Noakes, general manager of Microsoft Worldwide Partner  Strategy and Programs, said there's no coordinated effort to get partners  compliant on logos. The Ligman e-mails, and some of his own, are one-off notes  related to specific partner sites or communications that they happen to notice.
		"We work with our partners on trust. There's a set of  policies and brand guidelines that they sign up for, and we trust that they'll  honor those," Noakes said. "I think we're on track, and we're pretty  pleased with the uptake on the new logos."
		Noakes isn't sure how many of Microsoft's formerly tens of  thousands of Certified and Gold Certified partners are still using old logos. "We  haven't gone out there and quantified it; there's no easy way to do that,"  he said. Generally, though, he added, "I don't see it as a particular  problem."
		Meanwhile, Ligman abandoned sticks and returned to his usual  emphasis on carrots this week with a post pulling together different existing resources to help partners promote  themselves when they achieve Gold and Silver competencies.
		Of course, anytime you're promoting new competencies, we'd  like to hear about it.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 23, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Reports have another Nokia Lumia device heading into the  Windows Phone stable.
		Citing two unnamed sources "close to the company,"  the Reuters news service today reported that Nokia will unveil a Nokia Lumia 610 next week at the Mobile World Congress  trade show in Barcelona.
		
The key selling point of the device is supposed to be a very  low price tag designed to make the Lumia, and by extension the Windows Phone  OS, more competitive with Google Android-based devices.
		According to the report, Nokia also next week will reveal a  global version of the Lumia 900,  the high-end phone AT&T is scheduled to roll out in the United States in the middle of next  month.
		If true, the release would bring to four the number of  phones Nokia has created for the Windows Phone platform since October, when it unveiled the Lumia 800 and the Lumia 710.  Early last year, Nokia announced plans  to pivot from delivering phones with its own Symbian OS to devices based on  Windows Phone. For Microsoft, the success of Nokia is critical to the market  share of the Windows Phone OS, which is desperately far behind Android and  Apple iOS but seems to be gaining steam.
		Reuters didn't say what countries or what networks would get  the Lumia 610.
UPDATE, 2/27: Nokia unveiled the low-cost Lumia 610,  which it says is aimed at younger smartphone users, at the Mobile World Congress event. The phone will cost 189 euros, making it the least-expensive Lumia phone. It will begin shipping in Q2 2012 and  run on a Windows Phone software update that is "available from April," the company said in its press release. 
      |  | 
      | Lumia 610 (Source: Nokia) | 
The company also announced that beginning Q2 2012, it will make the Lumia 900 available outside the United States "in a DC-HSPA variant, for high speed data connection (42Mbits download) in countries where LTE is not available." The phone will cost 480 euros.
Nokia's release does not say in which countries either phone will be made available.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 22, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Perficient, the mega-Microsoft National Systems Integrator based in St. Louis, snapped up  PointBridge Solutions, another high-profile NSI, in a $22 million deal this month.
		
				NSIs are  generally Microsoft's biggest systems integration partners in the United States  (excluding U.S.-based global systems integrators). To be invited into the NSI  program, partners need to hit certain revenue bars and investment levels and  meet a "law of threes" --  being able to engage in three or  more U.S.  locations, customer size segments or vertical markets. Perficient's acquisition  of Chicago-based PointBridge reduces the number of NSIs to 33 by RCP's count.
		With PointBridge,  Perficient picks up an NSI with $17 million in revenues, 130 employees and  branch offices in Milwaukee and Boston, two cities without  a significant Perficient presence. Staying on with Perficient are top  executives Mike Gersten, PointBridge co-founder and CEO, and Todd Golden,  PointBridge partner.
		
				
				"PointBridge's SharePoint expertise is highly  complementary to Perficient's existing solutions portfolio and focus areas,"  said Kathy Henely, Perficient's chief operating officer,  in a statement. "This  acquisition further solidifies Perficient's position amongst the very largest  and most capable Microsoft systems integrator consulting firms."
		The transaction is expected to be accretive to earnings per  share immediately and brings Perficient's annualized revenues to more than $300  million, according to company statements.
		According to the Microsoft Pinpoint directory, PointBridge  has seven Microsoft gold competencies and two silver competencies, while  Perficient has two gold competencies and four silver competencies.
		It's not Perficient's first NSI acquisition. Toward the end  of 2010, Perficient acquired  former NSI speakTECH in a similarly sized deal. Perficient's business focus  goes well beyond Microsoft-based projects, with other key vendors including  IBM, Oracle and Documentum.
		
				
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	Posted  on February 17, 20120 comments