Microsoft Partner Opportunities in SharePoint 2016
    Last week's "Future of SharePoint" event held by  Microsoft in San Francisco earned high praise from the SharePoint community. The  importance of SharePoint in the Microsoft ecosystem was reconfirmed, which  seemed to reignite energy in the SharePoint community. 
To help those of us who  don't live and breathe SharePoint understand the impact of the 2016 release on  partners, I spoke to Naomi Moneypenny, chief technology officer at ManyWorlds Inc. 
"From the visionary standpoint, SharePoint 2016 and  Office 365 will deliver the intelligent Internet, which surrounds employees  with the conversations, the content and the apps they need to get their work  done," said Moneypenny, an MVP for Office Servers and Services. "Intelligence  built into SharePoint is one of the building blocks that will really make a  difference for customers and service providers." 
For the two core groups  of SharePoint service providers, system integrators (SIs) and ISVs, Moneypenny  highlighted the top opportunities as she sees them.
Top Opportunities for  System Integrators 
Moneypenny sees the role of SI as "the  architect of change readiness." As partners have already experienced, the  cadence of releases -- from versions to feature packs -- is increasing. Updates with  new tools and new functionality will be coming out continuously. 
"As an  SI, you need to look at the framework you can deploy to help your clients'  internal IT teams manage that level of change," said Moneypenny. "It's  not just the SharePoint installation that we are all familiar with; the readiness  aspect has become critical."
A second major opportunity exists by helping those internal  IT teams look at the interconnected pieces of the corporate SharePoint  experience from a higher-level perspective. As enterprises implement across the  stack with Office 365, Azure Active Directory, SQL Server 2012 and SharePoint, they  need guidance to optimize their overall architecture and use of SharePoint.  
Search is another big opportunity opened in SharePoint 2016  through extended functionality. "One of the wonderful things with  SharePoint 2016 is the ability to search from a cloud or hybrid version and  extend it back into previous versions of SharePoint," explained  Moneypenny. "That allows you to treat your on-premises content the same as  the content contained in SharePoint 2016." 
Since clients won't need to  spend their budgets on massive migration projects, this ease of content  accessibility has the potential to free up funds for more productive service  projects.   
Next up is the governance opportunity emerging from the  announcement that many of the  security and compliance tools that are a part of Office 365 will now be  shared with SharePoint. "The whole area of governance -- helping clients  design their architecture to best support their security, compliance and  reporting requirements," noted Moneypenny. "And also the aspect of governance  inside of the organization -- defining who can do what through authoring  capabilities. The new functionality of SharePoint 2016 makes governance a big  opportunity from a consulting perspective." 
And finally, Moneypenny recommends that SI partners work  proactively with their clients to take full advantage of the enhanced  compatibility in the SharePoint 2016 development framework. "If you have  customers currently building Web parts for SharePoint 2013, looking at the  functional compatibility is important," she said. "You want to make  sure what you are building now for the customer will work now and port into the  future."  
Top Opportunities for  ISVs
For those partners building custom applications on  SharePoint, the new model framework supports a much wider range of development  tools. "With support of client-side object models, developers can  incorporate newer technologies into SharePoint 2016," said Moneypenny. "The  new framework supports more standard Web technology, so it opens up opportunity  for a lot of development folks."
While a separate product from SharePoint 2016, Moneypenny  sees Microsoft Flow as a game  changer. "Amazing potential is being unleashed with native support of Microsoft  Flow in SharePoint 2016," she said. "Microsoft Flow is sort of the enterprise  version equivalent of IFTTT [If This, Then  That], bringing disparate data streams together. For example, you could mine  data out of Dynamics and Twitter and put them together as a list in SharePoint.  Combining workflow with the data pulled through Microsoft Flow is powerful  stuff."  
Last, but not least, the graphing APIs available through Office Graph allows developers to  personalize applications for the user. "From the SharePoint perspective,  whether you are delivering content to specific employees or a team site, you  can mold the experience to the individual or group," said Moneypenny.
Given this huge challenge to pare a list down to the top  opportunities for partners, Moneypenny pointed out that there is much more that  she didn't cover that partners should consider. "In the end, there is huge  opportunity for every type of partner," she said. "SharePoint 2016 is  making the platform -- which we always said we had -- a reality for both delivering  data, as well as consuming data. That data can come from anywhere inside your  business or beyond."
Microsoft's Web site describes the current state of  SharePoint this way: "More than 200,000 organizations use SharePoint today and an  extraordinary community of more than 50,000 partners and 1 million developers  make up a $10 billion solutions ecosystem around SharePoint." With a  renewed sense of future, SharePoint partners will be doubling down, continuing to  build that ecosystem. The best may be yet to come. 
How are you going to capitalize on the SharePoint 2016 opportunities?  Add a comment below or drop me a note and let's share your story.
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on May 11, 2016