Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) will move its headquarters across  town by the end of 2018.
The company announced the headquarters move from Palo Alto,  Calif., to nearby Santa Clara, Calif., on Thursday, almost two years to the day after the official split of the old Hewlett-Packard Co. into HPE and HP Inc. 
With the move, HPE will leave the headquarters campus area  that it currently still shares with HP Inc.
"Over the past two years we've made tremendous progress  towards becoming a simpler, nimbler and more focused company," said HPE CEO Meg  Whitman in a statement. "I'm excited to move our headquarters to an  innovative new building that provides a next-generation digital experience for  our employees, customers and partners."
HPE will consolidate its Silicon Valley real estate for its  smaller workforce by selling the Palo Alto building and relocating employees to  the Santa Clara offices, as well as existing offices, including those in San  Jose and Milpitas.
The Santa Clara office building that will become the HPE  headquarters was already a showcase  structure for the wireless and collaboration technologies of Aruba  Networks, which HP acquired for $2.7 billion in 2015. The Aruba unit started  designing the 230,000-square-foot, six-story, open-floor-plan office space  after the acquisition. A local  business report at the time suggested the facility would have space for  hundreds more employees than the nearly 700 that Aruba had at the time. 
HPE and HP Inc. will continue to cooperate to support two  Silicon Valley landmarks that are part of their shared heritage -- the  Hewlett-Packard Garage and the Founder's Office of Bill Hewlett and Dave  Packard.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 02, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The ongoing reorganization of the Microsoft channel operation,  One Commercial Partner (OCP), includes a new concept called the "swarm," a  pool of technical experts at Microsoft available to strategic partners.
The term came up during the most  recent podcast in the "The  Ultimate Guide to Partnering" series as host Vince Menzione was  interviewing Scott Buth, director of partner development in the Microsoft U.S. OCP. Buth, a 10-year Microsoft veteran, is  responsible for improving the capabilities of Microsoft Licensing Solution  Provider (LSP) partners, an elite group that currently consists of 16  companies. 
Specifically, he works with those partners in the newly  defined solution areas -- Modern Workplace, Apps & Infrastructure, Data  & AI and Business Applications. Those four topics were laid out as major  horizontal solution focus areas in the field reorganization that was laid out  in July.
Asked by Menzione to elaborate after mentioning the "swarm"  term, Buth offered this description: "It is the pool of essentially of Cloud  Solution Architects that align to our four solution areas...Those resources are  aligned so those solution areas and the [Partner Technical Strategist] who  quarterbacks the technology and the solution development for our strategic  partners has the ability to engage those individuals and bring them into the  conversation, help train and enable the partner technical resources, as well as  create a deeper roadmap for where they want to go with their solutions."
The definition came up as Buth was describing Microsoft's  overall efforts to deploy Microsoft's partner-supporting business and technical  experts in combination for the benefit of partners.
"It's really to get under the hood of our partners'  capabilities, understand the types of practices that they have in place today,  the offerings that are generating profit for them, and then also work with them  in a strategic way to align them on a road map of offering development that we  want to work on," Buth said.
You can listen to Menzione's interview with Buth here:
While the "swarm" term doesn't seem to be commonly  used outside of Microsoft or confidential briefings with individual partners,  the concept lines up with floating technical resources in Microsoft OCP  organizational charts (see below). Those charts mention Cloud Solution  Architects and Partner Technical Architects that are outside the main  organization buckets of OCP (Build-with, Go-To-Market and Sell-with).
   [Click on image for larger view.]
 
   [Click on image for larger view.]
The "swarm" idea offers hints of how Microsoft  intends for those technical experts to be deployed.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 30, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Investment firm Vista Equity Partners shook up the managed  service provider (MSP) market on Thursday by announcing an agreement to acquire Datto and to combine that data protection specialist company with another of its  holdings, MSP tools vendor Autotask Corp.
Assuming the deal closes as expected by the end of this  year, it will create a powerhouse MSP tools company with offerings ranging from  backup and disaster recovery (BDR) to remote monitoring and management (RMM) to  professional services automation (PSA), along with file sync and share and SMB  networking. Datto founder and CEO Austin McChord will serve as CEO overseeing a  combined management team, while Autotask President and CEO Mark Cattini will  act as a strategic advisor to the board of directors. Branding for the combined  company has not been determined. 
"This unique combination of talent with a track record  of success marks a new chapter that will make an even bigger impact for our managed  service provider partners, by delivering an unprecedented set of capabilities  for them to serve millions of small businesses in the future," McChord  said in a statement. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, although Datto has  previously been valued as a $1 billion company after securing $75 million in a  Series B financing round two years ago.
Datto is based in Norwalk, Conn. Autotask, with  headquarters in New York, was acquired by Vista Equity Partners in June 2014.  Vista, which focuses on enterprise technology companies and has invested $30  billion since 2000, has offices in Austin, Texas; San Francisco and Chicago.
The companies did make public a few scale metrics, including  that Datto-Autotask have a combined 13,000 providers/MSPs, 500,000 SMB  customers and a geographic reach that covers 125 countries.
Cattini emphasized the future company's potential for  creating integrations between the product lines and improve the products. "With  the powerful combination of the Autotask Unified PSA-RMM platform and Datto's  industry leading business continuity solutions, together we can now deliver  unprecedented innovation and unmatched levels of value and service to our  customers and partners worldwide," Cattini said in a statement.
Executives from both Datto and Autotask assured both MSPs  and industry partners that the new company will continue to work openly with  its competitors/partners to ensure that products are interoperable -- allowing  MSPs to continue to mix and match among RMM, PSA and BDR tools.
"We're going to continue to have an open philosophy.  That's worked well for Autotask in the past, and it's certainly worked well for  Datto," said Patrick Burns, vice president of product management for Autotask,   in an interview.
Citing BDR and file sharing competitor eFolder and PSA/RMM  vendor ConnectWise as examples, Datto Chief Revenue Officer Brooks Borcherding  elaborated on the interoperability philosophy: "Going forward we would  certainly expect and encourage Autotask partners to continue on with an eFolder  or for ourselves to continue to have a strong relationship with ConnectWise and  all the importance of the integration and ease of use that come along with that  because all the MSPs have their different needs and they're fulfilled better by  one or a mix of those different services."
Borcherding and Burns both said that even as Datto-Autotask  works in cooperation with industry partners, look for the Vista-backed entity  to continue to add new elements to the stack via acquisition, as well as  innovation, and to compete vigorously.
Outside of the Vista investment community, other industry  figures confirmed the importance of the deal.
"The merger between Autotask and Datto signifies a  major shift in the MSP vendor landscape," said Fred Voccola, CEO of Kaseya,   in a statement.
"Investor-backed companies, like Datto/Autotask and  Kaseya, will continue to acquire technologies that will help them bring more  comprehensive solutions to benefit the greater MSP community. On the other  hand, those without the necessary financial backing (like ConnectWise,  TigerPaw, and others) will steadily lose ground as they are unable to invest in  the products to help take their MSPs to the next level of growth," Voccola  said. "Kaseya will continue to work harmoniously with Datto/Autotask to  deepen the integration between our products and fully support our mutual  customers who use VSA by Kaseya."
UPDATE: 
In a statement Thursday night, ConnectWise CEO Arnie Bellini  offered congratulations but emphasized the internal tensions that Datto and  Autotask will face in driving forward their own products while integrating with  industry partners.
"Today's Datto/Autotask merger announcement is exactly  what we expect to see in a rapidly expanding ecosystem," Bellini said.  "ConnectWise's acquisition strategy is different. We are focused on building a  completely integrated business platform for Technology Solution Providers of  all kinds, including MSPs. We also believe in an open and connected ecosystem  of choices. For example, ConnectWise currently offers our customers six  different data protection solutions: Infrascale, Acronis, Storage Craft, Veeam,  Centrestack and Storage Guardian. Those choices are important! It seems the new  Datto/Autotask merger will offer a single data protection solution. That may  not work out well for them. Regardless, we congratulate them and welcome the  competition. It makes all of us better."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 26, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Cisco made a major move to expand its collaboration  footprint within small and medium businesses worldwide on Monday with the  announcement of its intent to acquire cloud-calling and contact center solution  vendor BroadSoft for $1.9 billion.
"Following the close of the acquisition, Cisco and  BroadSoft will provide a comprehensive SaaS portfolio of cloud based unified  communications, collaboration, and contact center software solutions and  services for customers of all sizes," said Rob Salvagno, vice president of  corporate business development for Cisco,  in a blog post about the deal. 
BroadSoft is a publicly held company based in Gaithersburg,  Md., and the agreement calls for Cisco to pay $55 per share in cash. The board  of directors of each company has approved the deal, which is expected to close  in the first quarter of 2018.
Rowan Trollope, senior vice president and general manager of  Cisco's Applications Business Group, emphasized the way the deal expands the  types of customers Cisco can now reach. "We believe that our combined  offers, from Cisco's collaboration technology for enterprises to BroadSoft's  suite for small and medium businesses delivered through Service Providers will  give customers more choice and flexibility," Trollope said in a statement.
BroadSoft executives played up the potential for Cisco's  collaboration tools and services to improve the performance and capabilities of  BroadSoft's hosted solutions.
According to the companies, BroadSoft partners with 450  telecom carriers in 80 countries, reaching more than 19 million business  subscribers.
Once the deal closes, the BroadSoft employees and operations  will be part of the Cisco Unified Communications Technology Group run by Vice  President and General Manager Tom Puorro. That group is part of Trollope's  organization within San Jose, Calif.-based Cisco.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 23, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A long-standing pillar of modern computer security sustained  major damage on Monday when researchers revealed a serious weakness in WPA2,  the gold-standard protocol for protecting wireless networks.
The Belgian researcher who discovered the weakness, Mathy  Vanhoef of KU Leuven, dubbed the new category of attacks "KRACK" for  "key reinstallation attacks." 
KRACK exploits a flaw in the way a client joins a  WPA2-protected network, a procedure known as the four-way handshake.  Critically, Vanhoef noted that the flaw exists in properly configured wireless  networks. "The weaknesses are in the Wi-Fi standard itself, and not in  individual products or implementations. Therefore, any correct implementation  of WPA2 is likely affected," Vanhoef wrote on a Web site created to explain  the vulnerability, www.krackattacks.com.
By manipulating and replaying cryptographic handshake  messages, KRACK tricks the victim system into re-installing keys that are  already in use, Vanhoef wrote. While the attack does not reveal the wireless  network password, it does allow some to all of the network traffic to be  visible to an attacker, depending on the encryption protocol in use.
Like any wireless attack, KRACK requires the attacker to be  within wireless signal range of the target, and only circumvents the encryption  provided by WPA2, not the encryption of the underlying data using Transport  Layer Security or other types of protection. (In a proof-of-concept video on  his Web site, however, Vanhoef used the SSLStrip tool in combination with KRACK  methods to simulate a man-in-the-middle attack to view an Android phone user's  encrypted Internet traffic.)
"Attackers can use this novel attack technique to read  information that was previously assumed to be safely encrypted. This can be  abused to steal sensitive information such as credit card numbers, passwords,  chat messages, emails, photos, and so on," Vanhoef said. "Depending  on the network configuration, it is also possible to inject and manipulate  data. For example, an attacker might be able to inject ransomware or other malware  into websites."
Vanhoef began notifying affected vendors in mid-July and had  originally planned to go public with details in August, but began working with industry  organizations as the scope and scale of the problem became evident.
The coordinated public release of the details of the attack  Monday morning caused a flurry of activity in the security community. A CERT Vulnerability Note #228519 titled, "[WPA2] handshake traffic can be manipulated to induce nonce and  session key reuse," went out Monday with a list of 15 affected vendors,  including Cisco, Intel, Juniper Networks, Red Hat, Toshiba and others. Vanhoef's  own tests found Android, Linux, Apple, Windows, OpenBSD, MediaTek, Linksys and  others vulnerable, although the problems are particularly acute for Android and  Linux.
Because of the early notice, Microsoft has already issued  fixes for the flaw, a Microsoft spokesperson said in an e-mail: "Microsoft  released security updates on October 10th and customers who have Windows Update  enabled and applied the security updates, are protected automatically. We  updated to protect customers as soon as possible, but as a responsible industry  partner, we withheld disclosure until other vendors could develop and release  updates."
In a post on  his personal blog, Alex Hudson, CTO at the Iron Group, ranked his impressions  of risk by platform. "Attacks against Android Phones are very easy!"  he wrote. "Best to turn off wifi on these devices until fixes are applied.  Windows and Mac OS users are much safer. Updates for other OSes will come quite  quickly, the big problem is embedded devices for whom updates are slow / never  coming."
Hudson also pointed out that the main attack was against  clients, not access points. "Updating your router may or may not be  necessary: updating your client devices absolutely is! Keep your laptops  patched, and particularly get your Android phone updated."
Meanwhile, vendors that are focused on other layers of  security were quick to pounce on the incident as further evidence of the need  for multifaceted security approaches.
"There's no stopping users from connecting to public  Wi-Fi hotspots, so it's up to the enterprise to layer on protection mechanisms.  This vulnerability speaks to the importance of ensuring that all connections  from endpoints leverage strong encryption, such as the latest versions of Transport  Layer Security (TLS). Intermediary proxies can ensure that regardless of what  the application supports, all connections from end-user devices leverage strong  encryption," said Rich Campagna, CEO of Bitglass, in a statement.
While WPA2 has not been impervious to attack, the flaw  represents a significant chink in the armor of one of the more robust quarters  of computer security. Previous attacks on WPA2 mostly involved hitting  surrounding technologies, such as vulnerabilities in Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS),  or required either password-guessing or an attack from a table of hashed  passwords that could only succeed if the correct password was already included.
It will be possible to issue patches in a  backward-compatible manner, meaning that KRACK doesn't create a need for a  WPA3, Vanhoef noted. Nonetheless, the combination of unpatched and unpatchable  systems mean attacks based on this new method are likely to be a factor in  wireless network attacking and defending for a long time to come.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 16, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The recent discovery of a botnet aimed at Office 365  customers puts a spotlight on a commonly overlooked category of system  accounts.
Skyhigh Networks this month reported a botnet it dubbed "KnockKnock"  that it discovered several weeks ago. Active since at least May, and especially  active from June through August, the relatively small botnet seems to have been  highly targeted in both the types of accounts it attacked and the types of  organizations it went after. 
"The reason this is interesting is not that a botnet is  trying to get into accounts, but the fact that it is trying to get into system  accounts," said Sekhar Sarukkai, chief scientist at Skyhigh Networks,  in  an interview.
What the attack does, according to Skyhigh's description, is  go after the system accounts that are commonly used to connect the Exchange  Online e-mail system with marketing and sales automation software. In cases  where the system accounts were compromised, KnockKnock exported data from the  inbox, created a new inbox rule and began a phishing attack from the account  against the rest of the organization.
Skyhigh picked up evidence of the botnet through its Cloud  Access Security Broker (CASB) Threat Protection engine when the company's  customers were attacked. Skyhigh says the traffic came from 63 networks and 83  IP addresses, with 90 percent of traffic coming from IP addresses in China. In  all, the attacks came from 16 countries.
The attacks averaged only five e-mail addresses per customer.  Additionally, the organizational targeting was extremely specific -- aimed at  infrastructure and Internet of Things (IoT) departments within the  manufacturing, financial services, health care and consumer products industries,  as well as U.S. public sector agencies.
"It just seems like it's orchestrated in a controlled  manner, rather than a free-for-all, get-what-you-can kind of campaign," he  said.
Sarukkai said that what is helping the effectiveness of the  attack is that non-human system accounts are less likely to be protected by  multi-factor authentication or security policies, such as recurring  password reset requirements. "Once these accounts have been provisioned,  they're really sort of forgotten," he said. "I think these actors  have a pretty good understanding of the weakest link in Office 365 and in  general the security infrastructure -- almost like the hidden weakness."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 12, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The number of U.S. partners participating in the Microsoft  Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) program is up by about a third over the last half year.
"We're just over 8,000 partners who are selling in the  program," said William Lewallen, who leads the Microsoft CSP program in the  United States,  in a podcast posted on Wednesday. 
The comments on the Vince Menzione podcast series, "The  Ultimate Guide to Partnering," are an update from Lewallen's  appearance on the same podcast about six months ago, when he said Microsoft had  6,000 U.S.-based CSPs. (See  RCP's coverage of that podcast here.)
CSP is Microsoft's sales program that allows partners to  resell cloud services -- such as Office 365, Azure, Dynamics 365, Enterprise  Mobility + Security (EMS) -- to customers, either directly or indirectly through  indirect provider partners like Ingram Micro, Tech Data, SherWeb or others.  Partners are encouraged to use the program to package the Microsoft services  with their own and third-party services to present a complete solution to  customers.
While still the U.S. lead for the program, Lewallen's position  has shifted within Microsoft. Amid the major partner and field reorganizations taking place this year, CSP has moved into the new One  Commercial Partner (OCP) organization, which is run in the United States by David  Willis. OCP is organized into three main teams covering different functions  of Microsoft interaction with partners -- build-with, sell-with and  go-to-market. CSP is now part of the go-to-market team.
Among other updates, Lewallen said month-over-month revenue  growth continues to advance at double-digit rates and mentioned that non-Office  365 products are gradually gaining share in the growing pie. In his previous  appearance, Lewallen said Office 365 accounted for over 80 percent of CSP  sales, which was down from nearly 100 percent the previous year. In Microsoft's  view that non-Office 365 component needs to grow as the company emphasizes  other products through the model.
"Our non-Office 365 products have continued to increase  their share of the total pie by a few points, which is good. And that's  primarily coming in the areas of Azure and Dynamics, and that's what we expect  for the course of the year, is to continue that growth of those other products  as a share of the total, obviously while continuing to grow the large Office  365 business as well," Lewallen said in the new podcast.
The 30-minute podcast, as well as a complete transcript, are  available here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 11, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Hoping to capitalize on an anticipated explosion of cloud  opportunities in Europe, channel-focused cloud management software provider  SkyKick is opening a European office Thursday in Amsterdam.
The move will double SkyKick's European headcount, although  the Seattle-based company did not provide precise employee numbers. SkyKick's  European operations were previously concentrated in the United Kingdom, where  the company will maintain a presence. 
SkyKick is looking to IDC projections that public cloud  services in Western Europe will grow at a compound annual rate greater than 25  percent through 2020. "The number of European companies that are moving  their business to the cloud continues to skyrocket," said SkyKick EMEA General  Manager Kathryn Saducas in a statement.
In an aptly named facility in Amsterdam called "The  Cloud," which also houses offices for Amazon and Uber, the new SkyKick  office will support partners in Europe with the first SkyKick Support Center  outside the United States, as well as providing a base for sales and operations  employees.
The new office follows SkyKick's recent addition of support  for cloud migrations and backup to Microsoft's German datacenters in Magdeburg  and Frankfurt.
SkyKick delivers tools that allow partners to migrate  customers from various platforms to Microsoft Office 365, back up customer data  to the cloud and manage customer environments.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 05, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    As the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) enforcement  date approaches, major IT vendors are continuing to spin up tools and resources  to help customers and partners ensure compliance and avoid potentially catastrophic  fines.
GDPR is a European Union regulation for protecting the data  and privacy of EU citizens. GDPR was approved by the EU Parliament in April  2016, and enforcement begins on May 25, 2018. It requires notifications within  72 hours of a breach, evidence of thorough efforts to protect customer data, and  clear consent policies to allow EU citizens to opt out of data collection or  have their data deleted. 
The regulation is important beyond the 28 member states of  the European Union because the EU will pursue fines beyond those borders for  any organization anywhere in the world that handles the data of EU subjects. Maximum  fines are up to 4 percent of a company's annual revenues or 20 million Euros,  whichever is greater.
"This has serious teeth to it," says Mike Puglia,  chief product officer at Kaseya and a veteran of many of the IT compliance  preparation efforts over the last few decades. "[The fines] would be a  material impact if not an operational-ending impact."
Kaseya on Thursday unveiled a GDPR Resource Center and  Compliance Pack for helping customers worldwide bring their operations into  compliance with GDPR. The core is the Compliance Pack, which is a free plug-in  to VSA, Kaseya's remote monitoring and management tool.
"There are a lot of things that our customers do with  our product that will help you comply: patching, anti-virus, anti-malware,  backup, what user accounts are on those systems, when they have been accessed,"  Puglia says. "We've taken all those things that we do, and brought them  together. I can feel confident that I am taking industry reasonable steps. The  product itself can mitigate or remediate any issues, and [it does] reporting  for evidence."
Kaseya's efforts this week at Kaseya Connect Europe in  Amsterdam follow a related tool unveiled by Microsoft during its Ignite  conference last week. That tool, the Compliance Manager, is planned to be a  part of the Microsoft 365 Enterprise edition, which is a subscription  combination of Office 365, Windows 10 and Enterprise Mobility + Security (EMS).
"Compliance Manager enables you to conduct real-time  risk assessment, providing one intelligent score that reflects your compliance  performance against data protection regulatory requirements when using  Microsoft cloud services," wrote Alym Rayani, director, Office 365 Security,   in a blog post about the tool.
A preview program of Compliance Manager is planned to start  in November. The scoring tool will join other GDPR readiness tools from  Microsoft, such as an online GDPR benchmark assessment tool and a GDPR  readiness assessment tool for Microsoft partners to use to help customers.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 05, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft is adding one more big developer event to its  calendar for 2017.
The company announced Thursday that it will hold Connect();  2017 from Nov. 15 to 17 in New York City and live stream portions of the event. 
Scott  Guthrie, executive vice president for the Microsoft Cloud and Enterprise  Group, will keynote and the three-day event will include 75 sessions and  hands-on training.
Details on a teaser Web page for the  conference are light, but an announcement blog stated that focus areas  would include cloud, data, artificial intelligence, Internet of Things and open  source technologies.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 05, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Tech Data is simplifying its brand.
The sprawling, multi-faceted IT supplier with $16.5 billion  in sales in the first half of this year announced on Wednesday a set of  branding moves, which primarily serve to fold the Technology Solutions business  acquired earlier this year from Avnet into a more cohesive Tech Data story. 
Gone is the word Corporation from the company's marketing  name -- it's now just Tech Data. Also jettisoned are smaller brands, such as  Tech Data Cloud or Tech Data Mobile Solutions. Now the company will refer to  Tech Data's cloud solutions, or Tech Data's mobile solutions. The rebrand also  incorporates minor changes to the logo color palette and design. 
"Our new global brand is centered on the proven  strength of the Tech Data name and provides a unified promise of integrity,  expertise and excellence," said  Bob Dutkowsky, chairman and CEO of Tech Data,  said in a statement. "Tech Data serves as a beacon in the IT  channel -- central to our customers' and vendors' success. Our teams have highly  specialized skills in next-generation technologies, extensive software and  services capabilities, and the best logistics engine in the industry, all  backed by a global IT system that can do anything from process the sale of a  laptop to configure the most complex multi-vendor solution."
Tech Data is now grouping its offerings into two major  portfolios, which encompass most of existing Tech Data products, as well as what  came to Tech Data with the $2.6 billion Technology Solutions acquisition. An  Endpoint Solutions portfolio will include PCs, mobile phones, printers,  peripherals, supplies, software and consumer electronics. An Advanced Solutions  portfolio will include servers, networking, storage, datacenter software,  converged/hyperconverged infrastructure, cloud, Internet of Things, mobility,  security and analytics.
A few specialized brands will persist, including Datech  Solutions, Maverick AV Solutions and Global Computing Components. A fourth  specialized brand, the European datacenter offering called Azlan, will be  gradually transitioned into the Advanced Solutions portfolio.
Remaining in place is the high-level executive team unveiled  in February with the close of the Technology Solutions business acquisition.
That structure had Dutkowsky's direct reports as Chuck  Dannewitz, executive vice president, chief financial officer; Rich Hume,  executive vice president, chief operating officer; Beth Simonetti, executive  vice president, chief human resources officer; John Tonnison, executive vice  president, chief information officer; and David Vetter, executive vice  president, chief legal officer.
Reporting to COO Hume were William Chu, president,  Asia-Pacific; Jaideep Malhotra, president of Global Computing Components; Joe  Quaglia, president, Americas; Patrick Zammit, president, Europe; Els Demeester,  corporate vice president of Integration; and Michael Urban, corporate vice  president of Strategy, Transformation and Global Vendor Management.
In Quaglia's Americas organization, Marty Bauerlein, senior  vice president of Commercial & Retail Solutions, will run the Endpoint  Solutions portfolio, and Jeff Bawol, senior vice president of Enterprise  Solutions, will run the Advanced Solutions portfolio. In Zammit's Europe  organization, Stephen Nolan is senior vice president of Endpoint Solutions and Graeme  Watt is senior vice president of Advanced Solutions.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 27, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft's subsidy program to attract partners to the five  strategic cloud competencies in the Microsoft Partner Network (MPN) will end later  this month.
The move will raise annual U.S. partner fees for gold cloud  competencies by $790 and silver cloud competencies by $140. 
"Starting October 1, 2017 the cloud competency fees  will be the same as all other competencies (US$1,670 for Silver and US$4,730  for Gold)," said Chinmayi Bhavanishankar, partner experience lead and  simplification expert on the Microsoft U.S. Partner Team,  in a blog  post this month.
The lower prices had applied to the five cloud competencies  -- Cloud Customer Relationship Management, Cloud Productivity, Cloud Platform,  Enterprise Mobility Management and Small Midmarket Cloud Solutions.
Bhavanishankar said the price change will apply to partners  at the time of their membership renewal. A different introductory benefit that  will continue is the Cloud  Enablement Desk, which is a free program for new cloud competency partners  to get guidance from a Cloud Program Specialist for up to six months.
The price change on cloud competencies arrives just as some  other major changes to the MPN competency structure fully take effect. In April  2016, Microsoft announced an 18-month plan for retiring 12 of the 29 competencies in the MPN. Those  competencies will be completely retired on Jan. 31, 2018.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 19, 20170 comments