Microsoft is dusting off the "Big Easy" partner  subsidy program for another round of service.
A new version of Big Easy, called "Big Easy Offer 7,"  will start next Monday and run through Dec. 31 of this year.
"The Big Easy Offer 7 allows U.S. small and midsize business  customers who make a qualifying purchase to earn a partner subsidy," Diane  Golshan, a senior marketing manager at Microsoft, wrote Monday on the Microsoft  U.S. Partner Team blog.
"Similar to previous Big Easy Offers, you can benefit  from subsequent purchases of software solutions, hardware and/or services when  customers cash in their subsidy checks. Partners tell us that the Big Easy  Offer is a great conversation-starter with customers, and helps them close  business," Golshan said.
New elements in this round of the Big Easy are the inclusion  of Microsoft Online Services, a triple payout on Open Annuity licensing and  higher subsidies for virtualization, server management and identity and  security solutions.
More detail is available here.
 
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 12, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		At Salesforce.com's Dreamforce conference, CEO Marc Benioff  interviewed Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt. According to Michael J.  Miller's summary of the conversation on his PC Magazine blog,  Schmidt had a lot of interesting things to say.
		Schmidt's take on the difference between Apple and Microsoft  is one of the most insightful comments on the subject I've seen. From Miller's  summary:
		  [Schmidt] said Microsoft was built around control, and was  organized around the industry structure, not around the consumer. That's  something he said he didn't understand until he got to Google. He talked about  how Microsoft platforms expose that complexity, but Apple hid it. As a computer  scientist, he said he loved that complexity, but consumers don't want to see  it.
		It's a neat way of explaining the difference between the two  companies, and Schmidt puts his finger on something we've regularly, but less  elegantly, described at RCP. It's the reason Microsoft is such a great company  to partner with, and the reason its consumer products often struggle. Think of  all the weird rhetorical knots Microsoft executives must tie themselves into  when describing what a "consumer" can do with a feature, while Apple  just shows what "you" can do. (I do think Microsoft is getting better  at designing products with users at the center, but I've noticed the messaging awkwardness  as recently as during presentations on Windows Phone "Mango.")
		The rest of the Schmidt-Benioff conversation covers a lot of  ground and is well worth a read. You can find the whole thing here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 03, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		
				RBA  Consulting, a Microsoft National Systems Integrator, signed a definitive  agreement this month to acquire fellow Minneapolis-area firm Ratchet Inc. in a  deal expected to close this week.
		The move would give RBA a foothold in digital marketing,  which is the specialty of Ratchet, a firm  with 42 employees, $5 million in 2010 revenues and a Midwest-heavy client base  that includes Chicago-based Navistar and Fortune 500 companies in Minnesota.
		"We have been monitoring the direction of our industry  and determining the best path to define new growth opportunities for our  company which include expansion into the digital marketing and mobile  technology service areas," said Mike Reinhart, RBA president and COO,  in a  statement. "In order to keep up with the rapid pace of the market, we  needed to align with a firm that already has deep expertise, a strong  reputation and solid client relationships. Ratchet brings these attributes and aligns well with RBA's culture."
		The plan is to make Ratchet a wholly owned subsidiary of  RBA. Ratchet President Martin Davis will become general manager of digital  marketing and report to Reinhart. Ratchet employees will continue to report to  Davis, who worked at RBA's predecessor, Born Information Services, before  founding Ratchet in 2004.
		The combined company would have 225 employees and expected  full-year 2011 revenues of $35 million. A long-term company branding strategy  is under review.
		RBA is one of 34 Microsoft NSIs, an elite category of  U.S.-based systems integrators that merit dedicated national resources from  Microsoft's U.S.  subsidiary. Founded in 2006, RBA has practices in Minneapolis,  Denver and Dallas.
		RBA's Web site lists 10 Microsoft competencies, including  gold competencies in portals and collaboration, content management, application  lifecycle management, data platform, server platform and application  integration, and silver competencies in business intelligence, unified  communications, Web development and software development.
		The Ratchet acquisition gives RBA deep experience with  mobile and social applications while enhancing its Web applications business.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 30, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		A few high-profile Microsoft Dynamics partners are marketing  their status as holders of an exclusive badge that identifies them as experts  in specific industry verticals.
		The latest to highlight the badge is I.B.I.S., a multiple Microsoft award-winning  ERP and CRM partner based in Norcross,   Ga. CEO Andy Vabulas wrote a blog  post last week about I.B.I.S. achieving AMR Research Partner Industry  recognition as a Certified Microsoft Dynamics VAR for the discrete  manufacturing industry.
		"While there have been other Microsoft certification  programs for VARs, this one is different because it is administered by a  well-respected independent resource and the emphasis is on a VAR's ability to  meet the customer needs in a specific industry; not just knowing how the  software works but able to add real value for the customer," Vabulas  wrote.
		Microsoft worked with AMR Research, an analyst firm focused  on business processes and technology and which is now wholly owned  by Gartner,  to set up the certifications in the process of overhauling the Microsoft  Partner Program into the Microsoft Partner Network. While the MPN includes  efforts to illustrate the Microsoft product-expertise depth of partners through  the stringent requirements for silver and gold competencies, Microsoft's  Dynamics executives also wanted to find a way to point customers to partners  with vertical expertise, as well. The program went into effect in March 2010.
		According to an AMR page about its Partner Industry Certification  System process, the VAR must pay a $1,000 certification fee for each  industry certification being pursued. VARs take a self-assessment survey and  submit contact information for up to 10 customers in each industry. At least  five customers must return satisfaction surveys and the average score has to be  70 out of 100 for the VAR to pass. The certification lasts for two years.
		Among partners highlighting AMR industry certifications in  announcements and in achievement logos on their company Web sites, several have  multiple badges:
		
		In addition to I.B.I.S., companies highlighting discrete  manufacturing badges include Streamline Systems, First Tech Direct LLC, eBECS and Ad  Ultima NV. Companies showcasing process manufacturing badges include Edgewater Fullscope and Merit Solutions. Professional  services badgeholders so far include ConsultCRM and Emerging Solutions. Customer Effective is highlighting  a financial services certification and Retail  Software Associates is displaying its retail certification from AMR.
		Streamline Systems was one of the first partners to achieve  the discrete manufacturing badge in May 2010. Streamline Systems Senior Partner  Larry Cohn said in a statement at the time, "Microsoft is attempting to  differentiate their partners within their large network. Today, 70 percent of  their partners are Gold Certified. This does not differentiate one partner from  another. Microsoft has established this new certification to differentiate  partners in certain industries. We are excited about that differentiation as it  enables us to highlight our industry expertise."
		Although other changes to the MPN have since substantially  cut the percentage of gold Dynamics partners, the AMR badges remain even more  of a differentiator.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 30, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		China  briefly grabbed the top spot from the United States as the top PC market  in the second quarter of this year, according to analysts at IDC.
		While the United States  will most likely retain the full-year lead as the top market for PCs in 2011,  IDC anticipates that China  will take over the top spot for the full year in 2012.
		By the numbers, China's  unit shipments accounted for 22 percent of the market in Q2, compared with 21  percent for the United    States. IDC's current forecast calls for the  U.S. to have full year  shipments of 73.6 million units to China's 72.4 million.
		Next year, barring major economic disruptions, IDC expects China to take first place with a bullet at 85.2  million units to 76.6 million in the U.S.
		"China's lead in the PC market is a huge shift that  reflects the rising fortunes of emerging markets as well as the relative  stagnation of more mature regions," said IDC analyst Loren Loverde  in a statement  this week. "While the immediate economic circumstances in the U.S. and other markets had a significant impact  on the timing of China's  move to the lead, they have not changed the trend, but accelerated it."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 27, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Here's a topic that combines two of my favorite topics:  technology and the NFL.
		Turns out the Tampa Bay Buccaneers have come up with a slick  solution to the old problem of printing up all those thick NFL playbooks -- and  making sure players don't leave them in opposing locker rooms or hotel rooms  where Bill Belichick might find them. OK, that was a cheap shot, but the Bucs  are putting their playbooks on iPads.
		According to an article in the St. Petersburg Times, the  team bought every player an iPad 2, which includes all the plays and video  files. Plus, if the iPad gets lost, it can be remotely wiped.
		"It's crazy how much technology has changed the game,"  second-year safety Cody Grimm told the paper. "Back in the day, I think  probably the whole team had to sit down with a projector and a reel, and watch  the film together. They'd have the whole offense in the same meeting room. Now  we all have our own iPad. Stuff that we used to come in here to see, we can sit  on our couch at home and have access to it 24-7. It's awesome."
  
  Meanwhile, this has got to hurt for RIM. Even when the app  itself is a playbook, the choice is an iPad over a BlackBerry PlayBook.
		Check out the story here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 26, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		A new Microsoft Store is coming to the Washington, D.C.  area as part of a drastic planned expansion in the company's number of retail  locations over the next few years.
		"Breaking news from the capital! A new power player is  making headlines in the D.C. area. The Microsoft Store is coming soon to Tysons Corner   Center," Microsoft  announced in a post Thursday on the Microsoft Store Facebook page.
		Microsoft's official Microsoft Store locations  page lists the Tysons  Corner,   Va. location among 14 current or  planned locations. Five are in California and  two are in Washington  state. States with one location include Arizona,  Colorado, Georgia,  Illinois, Minnesota  and Texas in addition to Virginia. Of those, locations that are  listed as coming soon, aside from the Tysons Corner location, are one in University  Village in Seattle  and one in Westfield Valley Fair in Santa    Clara, Calif.
		The Tysons Corner store appears to be the first one planned  for the northeast megapolis from Washington, D.C.'s southern suburbs to Boston's northern suburbs.
		At the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in July, Chief  Operating Officer and former Walmart executive Kevin Turner said the company  would rapidly increase the number of retail  locations.
		"We're going to open up to 75 more stores over the next  two to three years, and continue to bring our stores outside the U.S.  as well," Turner said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 26, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		We ran a feature in Redmond Channel  Partner magazine this month about where partners can find caches of Microsoft software and cloud licenses  within the Microsoft Partner Network (see "Partners: 6 Ways To Get Free Microsoft Product Licenses"). 
		All these caches of licenses, known  as Internal Use Rights (or IURs), are free in the sense that the costs of the  relevant programs are quickly covered by the use of one or two licenses when  hundreds of licenses are available to each partner organization.
		We focused mostly on benefits for  smaller partners. For space considerations, we had to cut a section from the  print version about how larger partners can game the system -- with Microsoft's  blessing. Online, there are no space constraints, so here's the deal.
		Microsoft structured its IUR handouts  with the idea that a large Microsoft partner practice would have about 100  employees needing licenses, and geared the IURs for gold  competency partners to get 100 client IURs. But, of course, there are massive  partners with more than 100 employees in their Microsoft practices.
		Understandably, Microsoft doesn't  want to shoot itself in the foot by providing alliance partner companies, each  with thousands of employees, with free licenses that would be an important  source of revenue for Redmond.
		In an interesting Q&A with  partners earlier this year, Julie Bennani, the general manager of the Microsoft  Partner Network, explained Microsoft's thinking and how Microsoft intends for  large partners to get around the 100-IUR limitation.
		"This isn't a licensing program  for the entire organization. There are large companies that are a combination  of partners of ours, but they are also customers. We are trying to enable the  Microsoft practice in your organization," Bennani explained.
		"One of the things that we do  recommend for those larger organizations is that the way that you qualify and  structure yourself within the Network is open to how you want to do it. We  actually recommend for multinational companies that they qualify their  organization at least at a country level. But it's open to you if you want to  qualify each individual office," Bennani said.
		"Let's say within the U.S.  you have a number of offices. If you want to qualify regionally within the U.S.,  that's fantastic, and [there's a cap of 500 licenses that] applies to the  qualifying organization, to be clear. But that also means you need to meet the  requirements in each of those locations, including the fee. That's the  principle, and I want to re-emphasize that it's about the practice of  Microsoft, which may or may not represent your entire organization," she  said.
		Whether partners are outfitting a  staff of 10 with Action Pack licenses or a staff of 500 with IURs, however, the  problem is usually not that partners are taking too much. Bennani argued that  the bigger problem from Microsoft's standpoint is that partners are taking too  few of their available IURs.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 24, 20112 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Microsoft is providing another carrot to encourage partners  to pursue a gold competency in the Microsoft Partner Network -- solution  incentives for Windows 7 sales.
		"Partners with a Gold Desktop competency are now  eligible to earn Windows 7 solution incentive fees up to 10 percent of a  customer deal involving Windows 7 Enterprise or Windows 7 Enterprise with MDOP,"  wrote Karl  Noakes, general manager of Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Strategy &  Programs, in a blog entry Tuesday.
		The solution incentive applies to deals larger than $10,000  and the payout percentages are higher for deals that include Windows 7  Enterprise with Software Assurance and the Microsoft Desktop  Optimization Pack,  as opposed to Windows 7 Enterprise with SA or MDOP on their own.
		A Gold Desktop competency partner must use the Partner Sales  Exchange (PSX) and the Channel Incentives Platform (CHIP), which launched in  June, to participate in the Windows 7 solution incentive.
		Noakes also wrote that Microsoft is adding an exam  requirement for the Gold Desktop competency starting Oct. 31. The exam covers  deployment of Windows 7 and Office 2010. It will also be required for Silver  Desktop competency partners on May 31, 2012.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 24, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The Windows Phone "Mango" drumbeat is getting faster  and louder. The latest developments:
		  - Microsoft on Tuesday began accepting and certifying  Windows Phone "Mango" apps through the App Hub, according to a blog  post by Windows Phone executive Todd  Brix.
 
 "This means that new and existing titles optimized for  Mango features like fast app switching, background audio, multiple and double  sided Live Tiles, better Search integration and more will begin publishing in a  matter of days," Brix wrote.
 
 
- Also Tuesday, Microsoft announced that a release candidate  (RC) of the latest software development kit (SDK) for Windows Phone "Mango"  was available. Kurt Mackie has the  details here,  where he notes that the new RC version of the kit will support the previous  build 7712 of Mango, and that it uses an emulator that supports the  release-to-manufacturing (RTM) build of Mango (7720). The RC SDK also has a "Go  Live" license allowing developers to submit their applications directly to  the App Hub.
 
 
-  While the Windows Phone app marketplace lags way behind  market leaders Apple and Google in terms of the number of apps, Microsoft's  progress has been quite rapid. Brix provided a new milestone in his blog: "The  nearly 30,000 Windows Phone app and game titles available today will also run  on Mango." That's up from a 22,000-app count Microsoft was touting just a  month ago at its Worldwide Partner Conference.
 
 
-  Brix hedged his developer milestone announcements Tuesday  with this caveat:     
 
 "Now that's not to say that Mango will arrive on  existing devices in the coming days (sorry, not quite yet). It does, however,  mean that people running early builds of Mango will see these new apps and  games."
 
 The key word there appears to be "existing." According  to the site Winrumors,  Microsoft's first Windows Phone Mango device went on sale in Japan today. The device in question  is the Japan-only Fujitsu  IS12T, a waterproof device that comes in several colors, including pink.
 
 
-  Meanwhile, more rumors surround a joint HTC-Microsoft  announcement scheduled for Sept. 1. The event will reportedly mark the launch  of several Mango phones by HTC.
Posted by Scott Bekker on August 24, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		By demonstrating Windows 8 with a tablet-first interface earlier this summer, Microsoft implicitly argued that the PC ecosystem should  include tablets.
One analyst firm is measuring the market exactly that way,  and concluding that the market share of the "Wintel" paradigm is  dropping.
Canalys released the research late last month in a news  release under the headline, "Wintel share of global PC industry falls to  under 82%." The Wall Street Journal cited the research in an article this  week about the increasing challenges to Windows in a post-PC world. The Journal reported that Canalys' 82 percent figure for Windows and Intel chips  represented the platform's worst showing in more than 20 years.
Looking at data for the second quarter, Canalys put global  PC shipments at 97 million, with notebooks at 49 million, desktops at 28  million, netbooks at 7 million and "pads" (the company's term for tablets or slates) at 14 million. Overall growth compared  to Q2 2010 was nearly 18 percent. Pads grew a phenomenal 316 percent, notebooks  grew 10 percent and desktops grew almost 9 percent. Netbook sales sank 25  percent.
The firm's method of counting PC shipments puts Apple as the  No. 2 PC maker, sitting just behind HP's 15 million units with 13 million units  in the quarter.
To Canalys, the implosion of the netbook market and  struggles elsewhere in the traditional PC market are directly attributable to  pads.
"Some notebook and netbook vendors are blaming the  economy for their setbacks in the consumer segment, but our research shows that  this has been a relatively minor factor," Canalys analyst Tim Coulling  said in a statement. "Established PC vendors have to come to terms with  the fundamental industry shift ushered in by the pad's popularity."
Coulling also argued that Microsoft and Intel are "rapidly  losing their ability to control standards and are no longer the main source of  innovation within the PC market."
All is not lost for Microsoft, in Canalys' analysis. The  company pointed to the popularity of Windows 7, especially among businesses,  and noted that regulators are increasingly turning their attention to Apple,  Google and Facebook, "leaving Microsoft and Intel freer to expand than in  the past."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 18, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Google's $12.5 billion acquisition of Motorola Mobility  Holdings Inc. seems aimed at competing with the Apple iPhone, but the move may  give Microsoft an important opening for its struggling Windows Phone smartphone platform.
		Google and Motorola Mobility announced the deal Monday  morning. It's been approved by both companies' boards of directors.
		What Motorola brings is the ability for Google to work  closely on both the Android mobility software and the Motorola device hardware  to potentially create the kind of tight device integration Apple offers with  its iPhones (and the possibility of taking that close working relationship to  tablets later.) In a blog  posting, Google CEO Larry Page said the move would "supercharge the Android  ecosystem."
		Until this deal, Google and Microsoft both were taking "open  platform" approaches -- in the sense of providing the software that  hardware OEMs built devices on. The open source element of Android added  another dimension to Google's "open" approach. But strictly using the  software platform definition, the open approach is the one Microsoft rode to  massive success on PCs and servers. Despite that history, Redmond has had a hard time getting  manufacturers' attention when Google's Android platform owned the largest piece  of the smartphone market.
		Suddenly, Google is muddying its own waters when it comes to  that open platform. It's hard not to suspect that once Motorola is in-house,  some device manufacturers will be more equal than others.
		Google executives were quick to offer assurances to the  network of 39 manufacturers and 231 carriers in 123 countries that partners  wouldn't be cut out. "Our vision for Android is unchanged and Google  remains firmly committed to Android as an open platform and a vibrant open  source community. We will continue to work with all of our valued Android  partners to develop and distribute innovative Android-powered devices," said Andy  Rubin, senior vice president of Mobile  at Google,  in an official statement accompanying the deal announcement.
		Page expanded on the theme in his blog: "Motorola will  remain a licensee of Android and  Android  will remain open. We will run Motorola as a separate business. Many hardware  partners have contributed to Android's success and we look forward to  continuing to work with all of them to deliver outstanding user experiences."
		Does Google mean it, or is an iPhone-like device the end  game?
		Microsoft doesn't know, but the company's obvious play is to  reinforce the legitimate doubts Google's many other device manufacturers will  have. There's nothing wrong with emphasizing Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt about  your competitor when your competitor is responsible for creating the FUD.
		Here Microsoft stands with a new mobile OS, "Mango,"  and a huge opportunity to get hardware partners enthusiastic about putting  marketing weight behind Windows Phone "Mango" devices.
		(That's minus one potential partner: Motorola, whose recent  talk of considering the Windows platform looks in hindsight like a  negotiating tactic that may have helped the Android-exclusive manufacturer get  a 63 percent premium on its stock price in the Google offer.)
		The markets may be reading the situation otherwise. As Business  Insider reported this morning, RIM and Nokia were up pre-market "as  the focus turns to Microsoft: Is it now forced to buy them?" Microsoft has  reportedly considered buying Nokia before. Rather than emphasizing its newfound  attractiveness to other device manufacturers, Microsoft may simply follow  Google's lead and buy a partner.
		One other interpretation of the deal is that Google was  motivated to make some headway in its patent battle against Microsoft and  Apple, which is costing handset manufacturers dearly.
		Page made a note of the patent issue in his blog post, "Our  acquisition of Motorola will increase competition by strengthening Google's  patent portfolio, which will enable us to better protect Android from  anti-competitive threats from Microsoft, Apple and other companies."
		Even in the unlikely event that Google's primary aim was to  shore up its patent defenses and the company plans to keep Motorola at arms'  length, Google's smartphone manufacturing partners won't know for sure. And  that's a break for Microsoft.
		
				
						Related:
				
		
		
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 15, 20112 comments