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        Microsoft Touts Managed Services for Hosting Partners
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- March 10, 2009
        Microsoft encouraged its hosting partners to move more into  the "managed  services" realm, offering incentives toward that end at last week's Microsoft  Hosting Summit 2009 event. 
"There is a tremendous opportunity for hosting  providers to partner with Microsoft to transition from mass-market hosting into  higher-margin managed services to deliver compelling new solutions to their  customers," said John Zanni, general manager of the worldwide Software  plus Services industry for Microsoft's Communications Sector, in a prepared  statement.
Zanni delivered the keynote address at the invitation-only  meeting in Bellevue, Wash. He described managed hosting as offering  better profit margins and better growth prospects (better than the current "10  percent" figure) than operations lower on the value chain, according to a  blog account describing the keynote. "As Zanni puts it, the company wants to focus on  driving new sources of revenue for a business with diminishing margins (even if  the market is growing)," the  blog stated. "Managed hosting, in addition to having better margins,  is seeing more growth too, more in the 25 percent year-over-year range."
The incentives that Microsoft announced on Wednesday for its  hosting partners included a Services Provider License Agreement (SPLA)  discount, plus the rollout of a tool providing technical and marketing support for  hosting operations called Dynamic Data Center Tool Kit. Microsoft's partners have been using the toolkit in pilot  trials, but it had its debut at the Hosting Summit. The kit includes sample  code to "rapidly build and launch managed services powered by Windows  Server 2008 Hyper-V and Microsoft System Center," according to Microsoft's  announcement.
Those products are offered to partners through the SPLA,  along with other Microsoft solutions, including Dynamics, Exchange, SharePoint  and SQL Server. SPLA licensees hold the license for three years.  Microsoft sweetened the deal by announcing that partners can now pay annually instead  of monthly for SPLA, and get a 12 percent price discount.
Microsoft also added two new SKUs ("stock keeping units"  or inventory identifiers) to the SPLA product list: Windows Server 2008 Anonymous  with Hyper-V and Windows Server 2008 Anonymous without Hyper-V.
Microsoft's discount for its hosting partners is "good  for server licensing," according to Kevin Doherty, CEO of Honolulu-based PHASE 2 International, in an e-mailed  response, although Doherty doesn't consider PHASE 2 to be a pure-play Microsoft  hosting provider. Instead, the Microsoft Gold Certified partner provides best-of-breed  hosted solutions for its enterprise and small-to-medium business customers  worldwide.
PHASE 2 uses Microsoft Windows Server 2008 with Hyper-V  along with Microsoft System Center Virtual Machine Manager, but just using  virtualization to provide hosting services isn't PHASE 2's main goal.
"We are not in the business of simply hosting VMs for  customers," Doherty said. "This is commodity business that is not  part of our strategy." He added that partners could benefit more if  Microsoft relaxed its licensing restrictions on virtualization.
Microsoft has been building out its own servers and hosting  capacity, and announced its Windows Azure cloud computing initiative in  November. In working with its hosting partners, Microsoft appears to be driving  them toward customers with less than 5,000 seats who have more complex needs  to support, explained Christopher Voce, an analyst with Forrester  Research.
"Microsoft has made a big splash into the hosting  market, particularly around their BPOS [Business Productivity  Online Suite], which uses a combination of Exchange, SharePoint and Office  Communications Server," Voce said. "And, of course, that creates a bit  of conflict with their partners who have been hosting these products for their  own customers for years." 
Microsoft is targeting the mass market by running services  in the cloud or a multi-tenanted environment, and it can do it "at a price  point that is unachievable by the individual partner," Voce said. Microsoft  still needs its partners, particularly to tackle the complexity of working with  smaller businesses -- a more expensive proposition for Microsoft, Voce  added.
Voce described Microsoft's discount announcement as a  concession to its hosting partners as Microsoft targets larger enterprises.  Microsoft did something similar in 2001 when it took control of Software  Assurance licensing, which used to be an indirect sale by resellers. It created  the role of the VAR as a concession to partners, Voce explained. 
"If you're going to take with one hand, you have to  give with the other," he said.    
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.