One tech trend we've been hearing a lot about over the last few years  is the idea that the IT department's dominance of the technology purchasing  process is declining.
Nintex added some data points to the argument Wednesday in releasing  results of a survey of about 150 of its 1,500 channel partners. Nintex sells  business productivity software and cloud services that work with Microsoft Office  365, Microsoft SharePoint and Salesforce.com, among other platforms. 
Among the survey's findings:
  - 40 percent say the buyer in the sales process has changed over the last year.
 
 
- Line-of-business (LOB) leaders are present 37 percent of the time in the  sales process for software and technology purchases, with finance and procurement  present in nearly a quarter of the deals.
 
 
- The marketing department is playing an increasing role.
 
 
- 26 percent see fractured relationships between IT and other departments.
This infographic summarizes its other data:
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: Nintex
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: Nintex 
"As organizations continue their digital transformations, channel  partners must expand their engagement with customers to focus their effort with  LOB leaders and others outside of IT as these stakeholders have a much greater  impact and influence on buying decisions than ever before," said Nintex VP of  partner strategy and srograms Josh Waldo  in a statement. "There is a  significant and growing opportunity for the channel to act as the broker  between the Sales, Operations, Marketing, and IT departments within their  customers' organizations especially as these customers navigate through digital  change and work to make their businesses more autonomous rapidly."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 16, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    More Microsoft partners are including Azure in solutions they sell to  customers while fewer partners are selling the Windows client than they did a  year ago, according to a new survey of RCP readers.
The shifts align with Microsoft's changing emphasis from a PC operating  system-centric business to a cloud services company. 
Azure has been surging as a cloud platform over the last year, running  a fast second behind the market leader Amazon Web Services (AWS), according to market  researchers. Microsoft has released new Azure services on a near-weekly basis,  and also moved to expand the ways partners can offer Azure.
On the other hand, the last year has been an unprecedented trough for desktop  Windows as a partner opportunity. An ongoing, historic decline in PC sales, the  new free upgrade options to Windows 10 for consumer and low-end business  versions, and the usual corporate upgrade delay following a new release appear  to be taking a toll on partners' sales of the client OS in their solutions.
To be clear, far more partners are selling Windows than Azure. About  300 partner readers responded to the question, "What Microsoft products do  you commonly include in customer solutions?" in RCP's 2014 and 2015  surveys.
Azure climbed 10 percentage points, from 29 percent in 2014 to 39  percent in 2015. The Windows client dropped 8 percentage points, from 64 percent  in 2014 to 56 percent in 2015.
The most popular products for Microsoft partners to sell this year were  Windows Server (68 percent), the Office suite (65 percent), SQL Server (59  percent), the Windows client and Office 365 (56 percent each).
Included for the first time in the survey was the Microsoft Enterprise  Mobility Suite (EMS) -- a bundle of Azure Active Directory Premium,   Intune and Azure Rights Management -- which Microsoft has touted as its next $1  billion product. While it became available as part of Enterprise Agreements in  2014, it wasn't until the second calendar quarter of 2015 that it hit Open Licensing  and later in the year the Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) subscription model.  About 12 percent of survey respondents said they were including EMS in customer  solutions.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 09, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Ingram Micro is buying the Odin Service Automation platform from  Parallels Holdings Ltd. in a deal announced Wednesday that will shake up the  cloud services provider market.
Distribution giant Ingram Micro is one of the most important players in  the emerging cloud services provider market, including Microsoft's Cloud  Solution Provider (CSP) program. In Microsoft's strategic CSP model, Ingram is one of  the handful of 2-Tier distributors that serve as intermediaries for cloud  service subscriptions between Microsoft and thousands of Microsoft partner  resellers in each geographic market. 
With Odin, Parallels developed a cloud marketplace technology  infrastructure that provides APIs and storefronts to enable the provisioning,  billing and managing of hundreds of cloud products by individual distributors,  telcos and cloud services providers. In Microsoft's CSP ecosystem, Odin,  AppDirect and Ensim Corp. had emerged to fill this technology niche.
The move toward vertical integration by Ingram Micro raises the stakes  for other distributors, such as other U.S. Microsoft CSP 2-Tier distributors  AppRiver, Intermedia, SherWeb, Synnex Corp. and Tech Data.
Ingram Micro expects to retain about 500 Odin employees when the deal  closes later this month, assuming it meets closing conditions. Ingram Micro  plans to keep using the Odin brand and to run the business as its own division  led by executive vice president Nimesh Dave.
With the Odin business sold, Parallels will restructure itself as three  business units owned by Parallels Holdings Ltd -- Parallels, Plesk and  Virtuozzo. Parallels will be the name for the cross-platform solutions business  unit, Plesk is the business unit for Parallel's Web management solutions for  small businesses and hosters, and Virtuozzo will be the name for the unit for  the container virtualization technology.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 02, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    New Signature, the Microsoft U.S.  Partner of the Year for both 2014 and 2015, acquired yet another Microsoft  ecosystem player this month in its venture capital-fueled quest to be the  premier Microsoft partner in North America.
The acquisition of Atlanta-based Microsoft partner InfraScience this  week adds 55 employees, bringing Washington, D.C.-based New Signature to 250  employees. 
"Our aspiration is to be the go-to partner for Microsoft across  North America," said New Signature CEO Jeff Tench  in an interview.
Tench joined the company as CEO in April as part of a $35  million cash infusion from Alexandria, Va.-based Columbia Capital. New  Signature quickly took that capital to Toronto for a shopping spree, buying  professional services firm CMS Consulting and cloud specialist Infrastructure  Guardian in June, then snapping up application developer imason inc. last  month.
New Signature had built a strong geographic presence in the  Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast over its first dozen years. Tench said he and  New Signature Founder and President Christopher Hertz immediately started  looking to the Southeast as a logical adjacent territory for an acquisition.
"We talked to a lot of folks within the Microsoft ecosystem and  every time we had a conversation, folks would mention two or three companies,  and every time they talked about InfraScience and how great they were,"  Tench said.
For his part, InfraScience Co-Founder Jeff Meyer, who is now president,  Greater Southeast, for New Signature, knew New Signature by reputation. "InfraScience  is a company that's been in business about 12 years, almost exactly the same  timeframe as New Signature. We kind of grew up together in the Microsoft  ecosystem, and we knew of each other in the last few years, up on stages  accepting awards for various different districts and regions," Meyer said.  The companies started talking over the summer, closed the deal just before  Thanksgiving and announced it Monday.
With additional offices in Charlotte, N.C., Durham, N.C., and Tampa,  Fla., InfraScience completes the Eastern Seaboard puzzle for New Signature. "We  have a contiguous territory effectively up and down the East Coast, including  Eastern Canada," Tench said. He added that the company has employees in  over 25 states and several countries and will continue to pursue business  opportunities outside that territory when it makes sense.
With their deep focus on the Microsoft stack, both firms have a lot of  technological overlap, Hertz said. However, InfraScience brings deeper  expertise on identity and access management, said Hertz, adding, "Essentially,  identity rules everything when it comes to the cloud."
InfraScience also has a more developed health care practice than New  Signature did. "We've been working the health care industry for eight  years," Meyer said. "We've acquired a lot of health care clients and  specific expertise and some solutions that are unique to the market."
Meanwhile, New Signature has fully developed SharePoint, application  development and managed services practices that InfraScience didn't previously  offer that can now be extended to the acquired company's customer base.
While New Signature's management remains aggressive, Tench suggested  that the torrid pace of acquisitions may tail off a bit in 2016.
"We're carefully considering where we go next. But we've got an  awful lot to do within our existing markets and a lot more business to grow  there, as well," Tench said. "I would say it will be a bit more  balanced probably as we look at 2016 between organic versus inorganic  investment." 
  
A Busy 2015 for New Signature  
  
    | Date | Event | Company Type | HQ | 
  
    | April 22 | Gets $35 million investment from Columbia Capital | Venture capital | Alexandria, Va. | 
  
    | June 1 | Acquires CMS Consulting | Professional services | Toronto | 
  
    | June 1 | Acquires Infrastructure Guardian | Cloud governance and operations | Toronto | 
  
    | Nov. 2 | Acquires imason inc. | Application development | Toronto | 
  
    | Dec. 1 | Acquires InfraScience | Regional solution provider | Atlanta, Ga. | 
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 02, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The top-tier SKU of Office 365, which Microsoft executives have  estimated will open up tens of billions of dollars in greenfield opportunities,  will cost $420 per user per year when it goes on sale Dec. 1.
Microsoft released pricing Monday on Office 365 E5, which replaces E4  as the top suite, with significantly more capability and a price tag nearly 60  percent higher than E4 (see the chart below). The new E5 suite also costs 75 percent more than the  Office 365 suite's workhorse enterprise SKU, E3. On a per-user per-month basis,  E5 costs $35, E4 is $22 and E3 is $20. E4 will continue to be available until  the end of Microsoft's fiscal year in June 2016. 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: Microsoft
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: Microsoft 
With the Dec. 1 availability, Microsoft squeaks by on a promise to  offer E5 in calendar year 2015. Unveiled at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner  Conference in July, E5 adds cloud-based calling and conferencing, business analytics  and advanced security capabilities to Office 365.
"We think what that does is more than double the available market  for Office 365," said John Case, corporate vice president of Office Marketing  for Microsoft,  in an interview at WPC. "The number that I put on the slide [in a WPC keynote] was a $56  billion addressable market. We think we're less than half that today with  services like e-mail and the Office client."
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella also used a $50-billion-plus figure in a call  with financial analysts in describing the E5 opportunity a week later.
Case at the time promised E5's pricing would be aggressive relative to  individual components. He cited Power BI as a $10 per user per month product, while  arguing that Advanced Threat Protection, Lockbox and Web conferencing will  compete with products that other vendors charge a lot of money for.
"When you add all that up, we'll be able to give a significant  advantage to those that buy from one vendor for something like E5," Case  said in the interview.
Exclusive to E5 among the Office 365 subscriptions are Equivio  Analytics for eDiscovery, secure attachments and URLs, access control, Power BI  Pro, Delve Analytics, and, via Skype for Business, both Cloud PBX and PSTN  Conferencing.
A new feature set that E5 and E3 now share is archiving, rights  management, data loss prevention and encryption. Meanwhile, E1, E3 and E5 all  now have several new social and collaborative features, including Skype Meeting  Broadcast, which allows virtual meetings via browsers and devices for up to  10,000 attendees.
Microsoft is also now offering PSTN calling as an enterprise plan  add-on for $12 per user per month for domestic-only calling plans or $24 per  user per month for domestic plus international calling.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 30, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    All that consumer activity around free upgrades will prime the pump for  Windows 10 to become the most widely installed version of Windows ever,  according to analysts at Gartner.
"In the consumer market, a free upgrade coupled with broad legacy  device support and automatic over-the-air upgrades ensures that there will be  tens of millions of users familiar with the operating system (OS) before the  end of 2015," said Steve Kleynhans, research vice president at Gartner, in  a statement Monday. "For  enterprises, we expect that implementation will be significantly more rapid  than that seen with Windows 7 six years ago." 
Gartner's current prediction is that many enterprises will begin pilots  in the first half of 2016 and half of enterprises will start their Windows 10  deployments by January 2017, with a goal of completing migrations in 2019, just  ahead of the January 2020 end of extended support for Windows 7.
In a separate endpoint prediction, Gartner said touch will become much  more price-competitive in the second half of 2016, and touchscreens will ship on  a third of all notebooks by 2018.
Platform tracker StatCounter's Global Stats in September reported that in  its first full month on the market Windows 10 had jumped out to a much faster  start than Windows 8 had and a slightly faster start than Windows 7 had.
  
  
    | 
      
      
        |  | Windows 10 | Windows 8 | Windows 7 |  
        | Worldwide | 4.88% | 1% | 4.05% |  
        | United States | 5.64% | 1.16% | 4.3% |  
        | United Kingdom | 8.45% | 1.17% | 4.34% |  Internet usage share for first calendar month since launch. (Source: StatCounter) | 
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 23, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft CFO Amy Hood is not worried about "cannon balling"  into the high-end laptop market. In fact, she's concerned about the reverse -- of  not having enough supply.
Hood, executive vice president and chief financial officer, was  responding to a question from Brent Thill, managing director at UBS, during the  UBS Global Technology Conference in San Francisco. Thill wanted to know how  Microsoft would avoid cannon balling into the market and instead go in  gradually enough. 
"Most of the feedback I'm getting now is, 'Where is the supply?'  So it's funny that you ask about cannon balling anywhere. Currently the  feedback is, 'I'd love to see the Surface Book terabyte in stock for holiday,  or I'd love to see the i7,'" Hood said, according to a transcript of the  conversation posted on Microsoft's Web site.
The Surface Book is Microsoft's inaugural first-party laptop, featuring  a unique hinge and a detachable screen that becomes a "clipboard" --  a tablet with a pen for input.
The Surface Book entered general availability in Microsoft Stores and  online on Oct. 26. However, limited quantities are shipping to the stores.  According to the online store, none are currently available for immediate  shipment. Three models are supposed to ship on Dec. 4 -- the Intel Core i5 with  128GB of storage and 8GB of RAM, the i5/256GB/8GB and the i7/512GB/16GB, which  has a discrete GPU (dGPU) built into the keyboard. Models not shipping until  Dec. 18, according to the online store, are the i5/256GB/8GB and the  i7/256GB/8GB, both with dGPUs. The heavy hitter of the Surface Book line, both  in price at $3,199 and in capability at i7/1TB/16GB with a dGPU, isn't listed  to ship until Jan. 22.
While Hood essentially laughed off the "cannon ball"  question, the question is a legitimate one for Thill to put to Microsoft, which  is still getting its bearings in the computer hardware manufacturing market.  Early oversupply issues with the first-generation Surface tablets led to fire  sales of the devices at Microsoft conferences and a write-down of nearly $1  billion.
Hood did say Microsoft is working to improve the efficiency of its  supply chain, which it has been honing now through four generations of the related  Surface and Surface Pro tablets.
"You make progress to get more funding. You don't make progress,  there's no need to have more funding," she said.
Hood also addressed the point of Microsoft developing the Surface Book,  which competes more squarely with OEM partners than did the Surface and Surface  Pro. Those business tablets were more of a category-creating device that other  vendors have begun to follow. "We've got a lot of demand for high-end  Windows machines from creatives and it's a good product to do it," she  said of the Surface Book.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 18, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The free upgrade approach Microsoft took with Windows 10 may not be  doing much for OEM partners in the way of PC sales yet, but Microsoft is trying  to point the rest of the channel toward new opportunities with the OS.
In a blog  post Sunday, Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group General Manager Gavriella  Schuster used the occasion of the code-named "Threshold  2" update to Windows 10 to highlight opportunities created by the new  Windows business model, which involves no cost for updating many versions of  Windows 7/8/8.1 and involves regular updates for years to come. 
Schuster highlighted three opportunities for partners to help customers  with the transition to the Windows as a Service delivery model:
  Ensure they have the infrastructure in place to handle these updates  across all of their employees, devices, and circumstances. ...
  Help your customers decide how a particular update could impact their  business, which critical apps will need to be tested, and how updates will be  deployed among departments. ...
  For every app and device that walks in the door, you can help your  customers create a plan for how it will be updated and when it gets retired.
Threshold 2, which began rolling out on Thursday, is the first major  update of Windows 10. For that reason, it's the first opportunity partners have  to get involved with customers' ongoing Windows 10 update cycle.
Also known as the November Update, Threshold 2 includes performance  improvements, usability improvements and enhancements to Cortana and the Edge  browser, among other features.
For business-focused partners, Schuster emphasized elements such as  Windows Update for Business, Windows Store for Business, mobile device  management, and updates to Azure Active Directory.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 16, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The new Microsoft Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) program is a complex piece  of machinery, as we detailed in our feature about the ecosystem last month.
One of the most important elements of that ecosystem is the 2-Tier  distributors, a.k.a. cloud distis. In most cases, Microsoft partners will be working  through those 2-Tier distributors rather than directly with Microsoft to sell  and support Office 365 and Microsoft's other cloud products through CSP. 
We started an online  directory of the 2-Tier distributors in the United States last month to  accompany our print magazine package  about CSP. Included were Q&As with the first five cloud distis --  AppRiver, Ingram Micro, Intermedia, SYNNEX Corp. and Tech Data Corp.
About mid-October, SherWeb, which was already a 2-Tier distributor in Canada,  got accepted into the U.S. program, as well. We covered the news here.
Jason Brown, director of product management for SherWeb, just got back  to us on our Q&A with details about the program, such as costs, white-label options, additional  services and differentiators. 
Check out the full  directory to compare your CSP options.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 12, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    AVG Technologies is restructuring its managed service provider-centric  SMB business division and laying off 35 employees as the unit struggles to meet  the company's overall growth goals.
"As we discussed in the last earnings call, our expectation of the  uptake of our cloud-based services was not where we wanted it to be as a result  of our existing customers' commitment to our traditional on-premise product,"  said Gary Kovacs, CEO and managing director, according to a Seeking  Alpha transcript of AVG's third-quarter earnings call Wednesday. 
"To fix this, we have taken specific actions to improve our go-to-market strategy, including a significant restructuring and streamlining of the  business and further simplification of our products to make it even easier for  our resellers to go out with our products to serve their end customers' needs.  These restructuring and leadership changes, we believe, will put us in the right  position to capitalize on a large and growing opportunity," he said.
CFO John Little explained the restructuring would include "releasing  approximately 35 employees," outsourcing a portion of the help desk and  restructuring the management of the division. Little said the moves would save  about $3 million over the next 12 months.
The SMB segment contributed $16.6 million of AVG's $108 million in revenues  in the quarter, an increase of 13 percent for the SMB side. Part of the  pressure for faster performance from the SMB unit comes from AVG's strategic  exit from the third-party search business, which is dramatically reducing the  company's revenues.
Despite the cuts, Kovacs said SMB remains a key focus area and pointed  to the September release of AVG Business Managed Workplace Version 9.2 as  evidence of AVG's ongoing efforts. "We believe strongly in this market,  and we'll continue to invest as we have been in anticipation of accelerated  growth in the future," Kovacs said.
AVG made a big move in the MSP market in 2013 with the acquisition of  Level Platforms and made a major effort to expand the opportunity for those partners and its existing base of partners  selling its cloud-based security solutions in the last year. However, the last  two earnings cycles have revealed the company's challenges in the SMB market.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 05, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    One of the great challenges of the cloud transition for Microsoft  partners is turning businesses that have been focused on server upgrade projects  into recurring revenue-focused selling machines. Would it be possible to bundle  that process into an in-a-box solution?
BitTitan is trying with a pair of Microsoft-focused offerings released  this month called MSPComplete and a specialized version called CSPComplete,  which is for the elite new group of Microsoft Cloud Service Provider (CSP)  1-Tier resellers. 
"We provide the end-to-end solution to take someone from a systems  integrator to a managed service provider," said Geeman Yip, CEO of  BitTitan.
To date, BitTitan has been known for its Office 365 migration  automation tools, which many Microsoft partners use to move customers from  on-premises servers or from competing cloud services to the Microsoft cloud.  Those tools, like MigrationWiz and DesktopWiz, are a part of the new MSPComplete  offering.
Arguably more important in the partner transition to cloud than  technical tools is the business process-related side, and Yip believes there's  a role for BitTitan there, as well.
"I think there are people who will give you education around each  one of these things, but education, as we know, over the last five years is not  enough. We feel we can automate a good amount of this lifecycle so you only  need to put in human intervention when necessary," he said.
Now BitTitan is putting its existing tools in an "onboard"  pillar of MSPComplete and surrounding that pillar with two new sets of  offerings -- one grouped in a "sell" pillar and another in a "service"  pillar.
On the sell side, BitTitan has an internally developed SalesAutomation  platform that consists of leads and scripts and an Estimator tool for  up-selling/cross-selling, quotes, statements of work, and incentives and  promotions.
On the service side, BitTitan is creating a HealthCheck tool with  up-sell/cross-sell opportunities and is rolling out complementary products,  such as e-mail archiving, data encryption and cloud management.
For the sales leads, BitTitan is using Microsoft's Azure Machine  Learning to build out customer lists. "It's basically internal data mining,"   Yip said. "We crawl the Internet. We mine people's Web sites, we mine  records, everything that's accessible from the Internet. We try to gather  information from social media, et cetera, build a business profile about [a  customer]. Discover what services that you advertise on the Internet."
Early efforts, both in scripts and in customer leads, are focused on the  Microsoft Exchange migration opportunity. "The initial lowest hanging  fruit is going to be around e-mail," Yip said. "We're currently  working with Microsoft to load in scripts around CRM and Lync...and on  OneDrive, competing with Box and Dropbox."
BitTitan's Estimator tool will pull in data from the Microsoft's  incentives system to allow the partner sales team to give customers the best  available offers and prices.
Jeffrey Tinnea, a technical program manager at BitTitan, said  automatically pulling incentives will help many more partners use them. Tinnea,  a former Microsoft employee, says many partners currently fail to take  advantage of incentives. "It's not because partners don't qualify; it's  because they don't know."
One of BitTitan's early MSPComplete partner/customers is ZAG  Technical Services, a multi-competency Microsoft partner headquartered in San  Jose, Calif. In an e-mail interview, Joe Foos, director of sales and marketing  at ZAG, said, "The new MSPComplete enablement platform offers experienced  Microsoft Office 365 migration service providers the opportunity to shorten the  sales cycle significantly. It also works to accelerate the on-boarding,  migration and Microsoft license usage activities that help customers start  seeing real value from their investment right away."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 28, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft partners with competencies or Action Pack subscriptions have  access to a new internal use rights (IUR) benefit that allows free access to a  third-party cloud backup solution.
SkyKick, the Seattle-based cloud migration and management company  specializing in Microsoft Office 365 tools for partners, will provide its Cloud  Backup application on a free trial basis through the IUR benefit of the Microsoft  Partner Network (MPN). 
Generally, IURs apply to Microsoft's own products that fully registered  partners get to use on a not-for-resale basis in order to run their businesses  and simultaneously get more familiar with the products those partners are helping  sell to customers. Earlier this year, Microsoft entered an unusual  relationship with SkyKick when it added the third-party SkyKick Migration  Suite to the IUR program.
The addition of the SkyKick Cloud Backup product expands that  relationship with another product that is thoroughly enmeshed in the Microsoft  cloud stack. SkyKick Cloud Backup is designed to back up Office 365 data from  Exchange, SharePoint and OneDrive for Business to the Microsoft Azure cloud.
"Backing up data can be a slow, clumsy, and risky process, so many  organizations choose not to perform back-ups as often as they know they should.  This offer provides you with a great opportunity to back up your Exchange,  SharePoint, or OneDrive for Business data and increase familiarity with  Microsoft Azure, the simple, trusted, and reliable cloud platform,"  wrote Gavriella Schuster, general manager of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group,   in a blog  post to partners this week. "SkyKick's Cloud Backup is an exciting  cloud service that utilizes Azure that you can use to enhance your support offerings  and increase profitability."
As well as being a free benefit to partners, the IUR inclusion is a  boost for SkyKick for what amounts to a new product in the crowded online  backup realm. It is now immediately available to Microsoft's tens of thousands  of partners in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New  Zealand.
"Thousands of partners around the world have used SkyKick's  Migration Suites to move their customers to Office 365," said SkyKick Co-CEO  Evan Richman  in a statement Wednesday. "The Azure IUR Cloud Backup  offer is our next step forward in delivering innovative products which enable  Microsoft partners to build a more profitable, efficient and risk-free cloud  business all on one unified platform."
The previous SkyKick promotion was clouded in uncertainty for partners  because that migration offer was announced in March 2015 and expired at the end  of Microsoft's fiscal year just three months later. Announced much earlier in Microsoft's  fiscal year and running through June 2016, this offer has a much longer runway  to allow partners sufficient time after setting it up to test the software.
The companies also disclosed that the SkyKick Migration Suite is  available as part of the MPN IURs once again, also through June 2016.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 28, 20150 comments