Bill Gates often cites luck as a critical factor in his  success with Microsoft.
		Best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell famously developed the  theme in Outliers,  in which he argued that Gates and a few other tech titans were born in the  right circumstances at the right time to strike it rich in the computer  industry.
		While Gladwell's point was about the social dependencies and  very narrow launching windows of great historical fortunes, another thought-provoking,  best-selling writer just finished a study looking at the case  from another  angle. Jim Collins, who wrote the business classic Good  to Great, has wrapped up one of his data-based, multi-year research  projects that culminate in books -- this one partly on the role of luck.
		Collins and co-author Morten T. Hansen summarized the book, Great  by Choice, in an  article in The New York Times this weekend.
		In the article, they recap the Gladwell argument on Gates:
		  He just happened to have been born into an  upper-middle-class American family that had the resources to send him to a  private school. His family happened to enroll him at Lakeside  School in Seattle, which had a Teletype connection to a  computer upon which he could learn to program -- something that was unusual for  schools in the late 1960s and early '70s.
		But Collins and Hansen go on to argue:
		  The difference between Mr. Gates and similarly  advantaged people is not luck. Mr. Gates went further, taking a confluence of  lucky circumstances and creating a huge return on his luck. And this is the  important difference.
  Bill Gates didn't just get a lucky break and cash in  his chips. He kept pushing, driving, working -- and sustained that effort for  more than two decades. That's not luck -- that's return on luck.
		In other words, by historical accident, the opportunity to  make $100  billion out of software was probably reserved for a few thousand people  born in the right places in the mid-'50s. That said, looking closely at why some  of those thousands made huge fortunes and others didn't is still a source of  some pretty interesting business lessons.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 31, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft pulled the switch today on a previously announced  shuffle of competencies in the Microsoft Partner Network.
		"Today, the [Unified Communications] competency has  been officially retired and we officially launch the Messaging and  Communications competencies," wrote Ian Hameroff, group product manager of  Exchange Partner Marketing at Microsoft, in a blog  post.
		Microsoft announced  in May that the competency shift would be coming. The move takes the 28-competency MPN structure up to 29 competencies.
		By product, the Messaging competency is focused on Microsoft  Exchange and the Communications competency is focused on Microsoft Lync.  Assessments for the new competencies are scheduled to become available in English  by December, with versions in other languages coming later. The assessments will  be voluntary until May 2012, when they become mandatory.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 31, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Here in the States it's Halloween, the day we all try to  freak ourselves and each other out with scary costumes and scary movies. In the  spirit of the holiday, I'll offer up my seven worst nightmares for Microsoft  partners.
What would be the worst-case scenarios for solution  providers who have made big bets on Microsoft technologies?
					1. Windows Phone Drifts Into Oblivion				
With an innovative smartphone operating system and with  Nokia going all-in on Windows Phone, Microsoft believes it can build its market  share from the current low single-digits into a credible third player in the  smartphone market. Analysts at IDC and Gartner like Microsoft's chances and  also believe the company could hit roughly 20 percent market share for Windows  Phone by 2015. But if the platform's share continues to show zero growth, more  partners than just Nokia will be left holding the bag. Any solution provider  who invested development and other types of resources in the phone will be in  trouble.
								2. Windows 8 Becomes a Tombstone Instead of a Tablet				
Microsoft made a huge bet on a Windows Phone-like interface  for Windows 8, with a touch-first approach designed to win share on tablets.  The move involves significant new industry partnerships around ARM processors -- it's no longer just Intel (and AMD) inside. Solution providers, too, are being  encouraged to design solutions around Windows 8-based tablets. But what if  users decide that they still like the iPad better? After all, that's what's  happened to every other iPad killer on the market so far.
								3. Windows 8 Sucks the Blood Out of Microsoft's Desktop  Dominance				
Scarier still on Windows 8: Microsoft is putting all its  user interface eggs in the touch-first basket. Many observers think it's  brilliant. But what if the naysayers are right -- that the tried-and-true,  mouse-and-keyboard approach has worked for so long because it's how users want  to interact with a PC? Could Microsoft Windows 8 catastrophically damage  Microsoft's one-billion PC installed base? One other thing to note --  developers have already expressed unhappiness with some of the language and  development tool decisions in the complex Windows 8 version matrix. Poor  execution on the transition could alienate the developers that have made  Microsoft dominant.
								4. Internet Explorer Evaporates to a Shadow of Its Former  Self				
Windows' market share has been falling slowly, especially  when you count tablets as PCs, as market research firm Canalys does. But  Internet Explorer has been losing users at an extremely rapid clip. Microsoft's  days of strict antitrust oversight are over, but will the company's slide in  browser usage make the rekindled Windows-IE bundling possibilities irrelevant?
								5. Microsoft Chainsaws Partners Out of the Cloud.				
The first four scenarios involve potential Microsoft  missteps, where partners are pulling for Microsoft's success because it  contributes to their own success. But what about cases where Microsoft turns  away from partners? Some evidence of friction is already apparent when it comes  to Office 365/BPOS, where control of customer billing has been an issue.  Clearly, partners need different business models to make good money in the  cloud. But solution providers' bread-and-butter has been server installation  and maintenance. As more and more of that infrastructure gets absorbed by large  cloud providers, including Microsoft, more brutal battles could be coming.
								6. Dynamics Changes Leave Small Partners in the Cold				
Microsoft this month launched the Master VAR program,  partially as an acknowledgement that the new Microsoft Partner Network leaves  less room for small partners with stable, rather than fast-growing, practices  in the business applications market. Partners who don't like the Master VAR  model may find themselves with few places to turn -- at least in the Microsoft  ecosystem.
								7. Small Partners Become Ghosts in the Microsoft Partner  Network				
A common criticism of the year-old Microsoft Partner  Network, which went fully live on Nov. 1, 2010, was that it's geared toward  larger partner companies, not just in the Dynamics area but across the board.  Requirements for minimum numbers of certified people to achieve gold and silver  competencies mean companies with fewer than about 10 employees will have a very  difficult time achieving competencies. Will those partners become the ghosts of  the MPN -- still formally enrolled in Microsoft's program but looking to other  vendors as their most strategic partners?
				Will any of these nightmares come true? There's evidence of  the last few taking place, although none of it is definitive or irreversible.  As for  Windows 8 and Windows Phone, there are a lot of reasons to be  enthusiastic about Microsoft's recent strategy shifts. But talking about reasons  for bullishness wouldn't be very much fun on Halloween. Check back with us on  Thanksgiving.
 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on October 31, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Every now and again Microsoft pulls product plans, R&D  Division projects and a little creativity together to come up with a video showing  what technology could allow in the near future.
		A few years ago, a Microsoft  video popped up at trade shows and on YouTube showing ubiquitous surface computing  on walls, floors and windows, accompanied by credit card-sized handheld  devices.
								
				
								Microsoft went back to the future again this week with a new  concept video.
		Kurt DelBene, president of the Microsoft Office Division,  explained the rationale for the videos in a blog  post today:
		  We create these videos to help tell the story we see  unfolding in technology, and how it will impact our lives in the future.
  All of the ideas in the video are based on real  technology. Some of the capabilities, such as speech recognition, real time  collaboration and data visualization already exist today. Others are not yet  available in specific products, but represent active research and development  happening at Microsoft and other companies.
		This video wasn't as stunning to me as the one from 2009. I  think it's partly because the industry has come so far in the interim with tablets,  smartphones, motion sensors and voice recognition, and partly because this video  seems to be projecting only a few years into the future rather than a decade.
		Still, it's well worth a six-minute, 17-second investment of time:
		 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 27, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Microsoft cited Office 365 as a bright spot in the otherwise  lackluster quarterly earnings announced  last week. For full coverage, see Kurt Mackie's  story, "Bing  Drags Down Microsoft's Q1 Earnings."
		"The early success of Office 365 has surpassed our  expectations. Businesses around the world, and of all sizes, are making the  commitment to Microsoft's cloud services," CFO Peter Klein said during the  earnings call.
		Bill Koefoed, Microsoft's general manager for investor  relations, added some detail about the cloud computing productivity suite,  which formally launched at the very end of June, right around the start of  Microsoft's current fiscal year.
		"In the first 10 weeks of Office 365 availability, the  number of new customers exceeded what took us over two years to build with the  first version of our business productivity online service," Koefoed said.
		A key difference for Office 365 is the ability for customers  to purchase the full Office suite as part of the subscription, an option that  wasn't available in the former Business Productivity Online Suite.
		Koefoed also said Office 365 customers are buying more  products and driving new revenue streams. "For example, when we've won a  competitive bid in the enterprise for messaging and email, 80 percent of the  new customers have bought SharePoint and Lync, in addition to Exchange,"  he said.
		The expansive customer behavior extends to small businesses,  which historically have only bought Office, Koefoed said: "Today with  Office 365, 80 percent of the time, we've seen them buy the bundle of  SharePoint, Lync and Exchange."
		All that sounds good for the suite, as far as it goes.  Microsoft has always been cagey about the number of customers buying BPOS --  the fact that Office 365 outsold it in 10 weeks underscores why. At the same  time, the absence of a comprehensive advertising campaign behind Office 365 has  been surprising.
		The fact that Microsoft isn't yet sharing the numbers of  Office 365 seats sold probably indicates that although it's exceeding Microsoft's  expectations, those expectations may have been quite low.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 27, 20112 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Details are emerging in a published report on how exactly  Microsoft is entering the mix for a potential Yahoo Inc. acquisition.
		The  Wall Street Journal is reporting today that Microsoft is working with  Silver Lake Partners and one of Silver   Lake's investors, the  Canada Pension Plan (CPP). Silver   Lake and the CPP were  co-investors in Skype, which Microsoft acquired earlier this year for $8.5  billion.
		According to the WSJ, Microsoft has been wary of a solo  offer for Yahoo after its $44.6 billion bid for the search company failed in  2008. Yahoo's value has fallen considerably since then. At the same time, the WSJ's unnamed sources claim that Microsoft's interest is primarily driven  by a desire to protect the search-advertising partnership with Yahoo that has  helped Microsoft Bing make gains against Google.
		While the potential for Microsoft to get involved has been  reported previously, the WSJ's reporting brings new details about the  specifics. According to the story: 
		  "Under the proposal being discussed,  Microsoft would put up several billion dollars of funding, with additional  financing being arranged by banks, the people said. Silver Lake  and the CPP Investment Board would kick in the rest of the amount, which would  be less than what Microsoft contributes, the people said."
		Microsoft and its partners haven't decided if they'll  proceed. They are also not alone in their interest in Yahoo; the newspaper said  at least nine private equity firms have been looking at a Yahoo buyout.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 20, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		It shouldn't surprise anyone that Stuxnet's authors -- be  they in the U.S.,  Israeli or other intelligence establishments -- are still toiling away to find  virtual ways to do real-world damage.
		What we do have now is tangible evidence that attackers are  using the complex code of Stuxnet as a foundation for other attacks.
		On its Security Response blog, Symantec this week posted an  entry about a new threat called Duqu:
		  "Duqu is essentially the precursor to a future  Stuxnet-like attack. The threat was written by the same authors (or those that  have access to the Stuxnet source code) and appears to have been created since  the last Stuxnet file was recovered. Duqu's purpose is to gather intelligence  data and assets from entities, such as industrial control system manufacturers,  in order to more easily conduct a future attack against another third party.  The attackers are looking for information such as design documents that could  help them mount a future attack on an industrial control facility."
		
				
				What made Stuxnet stand out was that it appeared to have as  its purpose the destruction of a real-world facility -- centrifuges at an  Iranian nuclear facility -- making it the first known code used for real-world  sabotage. What made Stuxnet stand out for Microsoft  partners was that Stuxnet used four zero-day vulnerabilities in Windows and  had at least two stolen digital signatures.
		That Duqu seems to be information-collection malware rather  than a code missile for causing real-world destruction makes it a more  traditional form of threat. That the Stuxnet code is a foundation for future  malware is a reminder -- if one were needed -- that Stuxnet won't be a unique  event.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 19, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Most of the focus surrounding Apple's earnings yesterday is  on the dip in iPhone sales and Cupertino's  whiff on financial analysts' expectations. It's got to be bracing to Tim Cook  that his first two major public events as CEO -- the iPhone 4S launch and the  quarterly earnings -- have come across as disappointments. At this point,  though, it seems like a hiccup rather than a trend.
		In any case, sales of the iPad, and company officials'  comments about iPad in the earnings call, continue  to validate the market for tablets as business -- not just personal --  devices.
		First, the numbers. Apple sold 11.1 million iPads during the  September quarter. That's a 166 percent increase from the 4.2 million sold in  the year-ago quarter and a sequential gain of 20 percent over the 9.25 million  iPads sold in the prior quarter.
		
				
				
The iPad business generated nearly $7 billion of revenue for  Apple in the latest quarter, and CFO Peter Oppenheimer said business interest in  the device is only increasing.
		
"It's been just 18 months since we introduced iPad and  the pace at which businesses worldwide are adopting this technology is  unprecedented," Oppenheimer said, according to a Seeking  Alpha transcript of the earnings call. "Today, 92 percent of the  Fortune 500 are testing or deploying iPad within their enterprises, up from 86  percent last year. Internationally, 52 percent of the Global 500 are testing or  deploying iPad, up from 47 percent last quarter."
		Oppenheimer's examples of enterprise iPad deployments  included:
		  -  United Continental Holdings replacing heavy, paper-based  flight bags with iPads in every cockpit.
-  All Nippon Airways using iPads in training programs for  flight attendants.
-  Sonic Automotive using iPads for customer check-in at the  service department and also to provide analytics to regional managers.
-  Internally developed apps for field sales teams at Aflac,  Biogen and General Mills.
-  Siemens Energy technicians taking iPads on wind turbine  maintenance jobs.
Apple's iPad results validate Microsoft's intense focus on  getting tablets right with Windows 8. There's a business market for tablets,  slates or whatever you want to call them. Given Apple's iPad growth and the PC  market's slow growth, the pressure is on to get Windows 8 not just right, but  right quick.
		In the meantime, the opportunity for Microsoft partners to  meet customers demands for tablet-based solutions will continue to force them  toward the iPad, at least until Microsoft ships Windows 8.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 19, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		It looks like Microsoft will have a tablet ally in Dell.
Speaking in a press and analyst Q&A at Dell World 2011 this week in Texas, CEO Michael Dell reportedly said, "We are very aligned with Microsoft around Windows 8. You'll hear more about Windows 8 from us and see a wide range of products released" (emphasis mine). 
In an apparent reference to the company's Google Android tablet effort in the Dell Streak 7, Michael Dell said, "Android is certainly another opportunity as well, but that market has not developed to the expectations they would have had."
While Dell has been a reliable partner with Microsoft in many areas over the years, the company generally only throws its weight behind the Microsoft products that are going to lead to big revenues.
For example, Dell has become very quiet about its Windows Phone lineup after launching the Dell Venue Pro for Windows Phone 7. During the same Q&A, Michael Dell and other company executives suggested that the company's forays into consumer products, such as the Venue Pro and the Streak 7, are often more like market tests than major efforts.
They suggested that for Dell, the ballgame is the PC market and the corporate side. "Dell is much more focused on providing a complete set of solutions to customers, including the device, but we're not really focused on the device," Michael Dell was quoted as saying.
From that standpoint, a serious Dell push behind Microsoft's Windows 8 tablets has more strategic logic for the company than an Android tablet effort.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 16, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		A recurring theme here at Redmond Channel Partner is to  highlight some of the best benefits of the Microsoft Partner Network. We've  done that since we started in 2005 and update that info all the time. (See here for a story about where Microsoft caches Internal Use Rights for partners and here for one about how various benefits map to the cost of joining the MPN.)
Which is why we perked up and took notice when Jon Roskill,  corporate vice president of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group, posted a blog about which of the benefits he thinks bring the best value to partners.
His top tip was to use Internal Use Rights. "Use the  software to sell the software," Roskill wrote. "The added value here  for partners is that by taking advantage of IURs you can run your business and  test compatibility with your solutions, strengthen staff expertise with business  and technical training and sell confidently the software you use yourself."
Roskill's other recommendations all surrounded the silver  competency, the relatively new MPN competency level that Microsoft has been  promoting aggressively for months. His silver benefits list included the  expanded number of Internal Use Rights for silver, along with the 20 advisory  hours, the support incident five-pack, free technical pre-sales on deals worth  more than $3,000, practice accelerators, presentations, demos, financing and  training.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 13, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Has Windows Phone hit the bottom of the trough? Figures  released this week by market watchers at comScore could be a good sign for the Microsoft  smartphone platform.
		Windows Phone faced a challenge familiar to anyone who takes  a moderately successful product and sends it back to the whiteboard for a  do-over. I'm sure many a PowerPoint presentation projected on many a Microsoft  corporate meeting room wall showed optimistic forecasts of Windows Phone being  additive to Windows Mobile market share, with overall Microsoft share marching  up and to the right in a confident and orderly fashion on the charts.
		
				
				As often happens, the reality hasn't matched the budget  forecasts. Rather than building on Windows Mobile market share, Windows Phone  seemed to subtract from Microsoft's piece of the pie. The phenomenon was most  strikingly illustrated in the August comparisons by Gartner of Q2 2010 to Q2 2011. Gartner's figures  showed Windows Mobile's worldwide share in Q2 2010 was 5 percent, while Windows  Phone 7's share in Q2 2011 was 1.6 percent. Looked at by another measure, Microsoft  managed to sell about 1.3 million fewer Windows-based smartphones in the  quarter, despite a rapidly expanding overall market.
		Now come comScore's  latest numbers for U.S.  mobile subscribers, released this week. They're abysmal for Microsoft, but less  alarmingly so than before. ComScore measured the three-month average for the  period ending in August and compared it to the three-month average for the  period ending in May. While Google rose by 5.6 points of share to 43.7 percent  and Apple rose by 0.7 points to 27.3 percent, Microsoft fell by 0.1 points to  5.7 percent of the market.
		One of the reasons that it may be OK for Microsoft is that  Research In Motion shed 5.0 points of share to hit 19.7 percent -- so Microsoft  is doing better than someone. Another is that Microsoft's rate of market share  loss is moving in the right direction. Previous comScore reports had Microsoft  dropping 1.7 points of share in June and 1.0 points in July, so the 0.1 point  loss is downright stable. At the same time, RIM's market share losses have  accelerated from 3.7 points in June to 4.0 points in July to the previously  mentioned 5.0 points in August.
		With the Windows Phone 7.5 updates hitting Microsoft's user  base and coming out on new phones in September, the stable market share could  be a bottom that Microsoft can build from. Then again, this could just be a  plateau before a new drop. Only the numbers will tell.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 10, 20113 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		It is hard to separate the incredible burst of creativity of  Steve Jobs' last few years from the illnesses that consumed him before our eyes.
		The iPod arrived a few years before the 2004 diagnosis of a  rare form of pancreatic cancer and certainly followed a long career of  innovation.
		But Jobs' post-diagnosis period brought the iterative  improvements to iPod that, to cite one small example, spurred my family to buy  three in six years, and the breakthroughs of the iPhone and the iPad.
		For someone who has said he always sensed death over his  shoulder, knowing which of death's horsemen was most likely to catch him appeared  to be incredibly motivating for Jobs. While many of us would be frazzled by  constant bouts with life-threatening illness, Jobs seemed to find sharper focus  and must have come to the realization that his life's work was, even in the end,  the most important thing he could be doing.
		No matter how inseparable his illness was from his last  creative period, though, it's still like they say of the death of the young in  war -- it's as if Jobs were doubly dead. We mourn his passing as well as what  he had left to give.
		The world has lost a visionary who could see a little  further into the future than the rest of us and who chose to use that gift to  fashion the beautiful things he found there.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 07, 20113 comments