As Redmond magazine columnist Mary Jo Foley explains, the idea is "integration as a  service" on Azure. In fact, she does such a good job of explaining this  concept that we'll just turn the whole thing over to her. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 04, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		We've been wondering aloud here for a while just how significant the  opportunities are for Microsoft partners to profit from Redmond's cloud efforts. Microsoft's recent  cloud-heavy win in New York City -- accomplished directly, sans channel involvement -- had us pondering that  issue again recently.  But reader Al offers a thoughtful perspective as to why Microsoft had to go  solo in Gotham and why partners can still succeed  with Microsoft in the cloud:
  "Realistically no partner could have pulled this off  except for MSFT themselves. Most partners are not even up to speed on MSFT's  latest technologies and have the practice of waiting until the 'first service  pack' before even delving into a new technology. No matter how promising it is.  The details, promises, guarantees, specifications, support and security  concerns are all for MSFT and only MSFT to answer. It's that simple. Bottom  line -- ONLY Microsoft could have done 'this' deal. I congratulate them. Very  often MSFT stands by the sidelines and watches the teams lose. 
  This is an opportunity for partners. MSFT will be a 'platform  provider.' Now the platform will be there and the smart partners with strong  cloud offerings will have opportunities. That part of the deal is not really  Microsoft's business model and presents opportunity for the MSFT partner  community. That is, for the few, truly progressive MSFT partners.
  The cloud is the future. There is no question about it.  Government and corporate have done a near-miserable job of deploying and  maintaining infrastructure, keeping it fresh and keeping it secure. There is no  doubt about this whatsoever. I know for a fact NYC is a litany of disparate  technologies, solutions and even platforms. In simple terms, it is a mess and  it is dysfunctional. This is an opportunity for the city to reinvent itself and  gravitate to the new normal, while providing its citizens with better services  than ever. All this while making available interfaces that vendor communities  could use for excellent information and saving huge bucks.
  This is BIG!"
Al, we're  totally with you on the notion that the cloud is the future, and you make a  very good point about Microsoft being ahead of most partners in this area. Our  main concern is that Microsoft had made no secret of the fact that it intends  to actually compete with partners on cloud deals. That, combined with what  appears to be in Redmond  a movement toward favoring larger partners, still leaves us wondering how many  channel players will have a real shot at making money in the cloud with  Microsoft. There's no question, though, that the NYC deal is huge and that it's  a move in the direction in which Microsoft and IT must go. Partners need to go  in that direction, too -- to the greatest extent that they can. As you said,  for the progressive Microsoft channel players out there, the cloud should rain  opportunities.
Have anything  to add to any of the discussions you've seen on RCPU lately? Add it at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 04, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				It's an  e-commerce software company (remember those? Commerce One, anyone? Ariba?), not  some massively expensive piece of Art or a guy named Art.  We'd change our name to Art for $1 billion, though.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 03, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Don't you  just love headlines? We adore headlines. Some of our favorites so far this week  include: "Google Sues US Government over Microsoft Favouritism" (complete with superfluous British "u" in "favoritism"), "Google  Sues Agency over Microsoft-Only Cloud Deal"  and "Google Sues US over Unfair Cloud Contract". 
Well, that's  that, then. Obviously, some U.S.  government agency has jobbed Google by showing blatant favoritism toward  Microsoft in the process of awarding a contract. Right? That's what the  headlines say. So, case closed; Google can wipe the floor with the U.S. government  -- the Department of the Interior in this case --in court and move on.
Or maybe  not. Check out this little tidbit from our own RCPmag.com story,  which has something of a more sophisticated headline:
  "Google is suing the Interior  Department for allegedly excluding Google's products in a request for quotation  the agency issued on Aug. 30. The RFQ, for hosted e-mail and collaboration  services, specifies that the proposed solutions must be part of the Microsoft  Business Productivity Online Suite.
  According to the court filing, Google  officials had met with the Interior department several times, and pursued  discussions in correspondence, in an effort to convince the department that  Google's applications were capable of handling Interior's needs, and that they  should also be considered as a possible solution.
  Ultimately,  however, Interior limited its scope to Microsoft with the requisite Limited  Sourcing Justification document, telling Google officials that Microsoft  offered unified/consolidated e-mail and better security than Google Apps."
Read that  middle paragraph again; that's the money bit. Google officials had met with the  Interior Department... and got shot down. That's how we read it. So, Interior  is stipulating a Microsoft-only contract because it... prefers Microsoft's  product offering. Shocking! Well, that certainly is "favouritism" if  we've ever heard of it. It's called choosing one product over another. Of  course, in today's America,  that's ground for a lawsuit -- and for shocking headlines. Good luck with all  that, Google.
What's  your take on Google crying foul? Send it to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 03, 20104 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				Boomi sort  of sounds like something your editor's six-week-old son would do in his diaper,  but whatever...
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 03, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		This is the way of the future, and not just for Microsoft Dynamics.  Mark our words: Microsoft is moving toward rewarding larger partners and  sloughing off smaller ones, starting with the policy that will soon be in place  for Dynamics compensation. 
We're not saying that this is all bad, just that it's reality. Check  out how Jeff Edwards, director of Microsoft Dynamics Partner Strategy,  explained some of the changes to RCPmag.com:
"A new Dynamics Incentives Program, which will go into effect in  January 2012, will add growth into Microsoft's calculations of partner margins,  in addition to total revenues. Partner margins will go up by up to 20  percentage points if license revenue growth hits one-year and two-year targets,  and if customer additions hit certain targets. Conversely, if growth isn't  hitting Microsoft's targets, margins can go down by as much as 15 percentage  points, Edwards said.
"Additionally,  Microsoft will be separating license revenue targets from maintenance targets. 'Larger  portions of contracts renewed will get paid more, smaller portions of contracts  renewed will get paid less,'" he said.
"'The high-level  message is pay for performance. A partner can make more than they do today  selling Dynamics software. A partner can make less than they do today selling  Dynamics software,'" Edwards said.
Simple, right? Well, yes...depending on what those revenue targets are  and how they will play out in firms of various sizes. Larger firms with bigger  sales forces and more consultants would seem to have an advantage here, and  smaller partner shops that rely on deep relationships with a few customers  might be in trouble. Remember that quote: "A partner can make less than  they do today selling Dynamics software."
That hasn't been Microsoft's policy in the past, but it's likely to start  permeating other aspects of the forthcoming Microsoft Partner Network, which,  of course, is replacing the Microsoft Partner Program. It would be a bit harsh  to say that the free ride is over for some partners, but growth is clearly  going to be a much more important metric than it has ever been in the past.
For the smaller shop that's more about maintenance than aggressive  growth, that's not good news. It is however, exactly what Microsoft wants. The  days of Microsoft rewarding partners for treading water and opening its partner  program more or less equally to bigger and smaller firms are ending. Microsoft's  stock price is stagnant, and the company's future of growth is in doubt. Microsoft  needs pit bulls, not lap dogs, in its partner program. And instead of letting  the lap dogs feed, it's going to start kicking them to the curb.
Of course, the flipside of that is opportunity for any firm that can  meet Microsoft's revenue numbers. Microsoft folks and other observers in the  Dynamics area say that the key is for partners to move into microverticals -- really  small slices of vertical markets. That's easier said than done, of course, and to  some extent larger firms with more access to experts in specific fields are  once again at an advantage there. 
In any case, Dynamics looks like the test case for the direction of the  Microsoft Partner Network in general. It will pay to be aggressive and, in all  likelihood, larger rather than smaller. Failure to move in Microsoft's new  direction will, in a fairly literal sense, not pay at all.
How comfortable are you with the changes in Dynamics compensation? How  will this sort of change affect your business? Sound off at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on October 28, 20102 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The title of this entry pretty much says it all, apart from some  details about the product, such as Outlook and some collaboration stuff being  part of it. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 27, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The weird thing here is that IBM's stock is at a high, not a low...but  whatever. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 27, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft reports earnings Thursday afternoon, and with big  announcements like Windows Phone 7 and Office 365 still creating flotsam and  jetsam in various parts of the pundisphere, this week is a quiet one on the  Microsoft news front.
So, it'll be a quiet one here at RCPU, too, as we take this opportunity  to focus on a few other projects -- not that we don't love and appreciate you,  dear readers, because we do. Anyway, the news this week is that HP has released  Windows 7 tablet PC.
 That might sound like a big deal, but it's really not. This isn't exactly an  iPad killer; it's a slate targeted at particular vertical industries and not  really meant for consumer use.  Actually, it's pretty much exactly the kind of thing Microsoft should be doing  -- uncool, useful, enterprise-focused and fairly niche oriented.
This, then, counts as good news in RCPU world, even if it's not big  news. Honesty, we could do without big news for a few days, anyway.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 27, 20102 comments