Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella issued a massive public memo this morning  outlining a refined vision for the company he took over five months ago.
The 3,000-plus-word memo, titled "Starting  FY15 -- Bold Ambition & Our Core," hones the redefinition of Microsoft  started by his predecessor Steve Ballmer, who in an Oct. 9, 2012 letter told shareholders that "we see ourselves -- as a devices and services  company." 
Nadella's memo communicates the new vision and organizing principle for  Microsoft as this: "At our core, Microsoft is the productivity and  platform company for the mobile-first and cloud-first world. We will reinvent  productivity to empower every person and every organization on the planet to do  more and achieve more."
The vision includes Nadella's common refrain since assuming the job  that Microsoft is a cloud-first and mobile-first company. But it takes the word  "devices," the first word in Ballmer's reframing of the company and  one that has confused investors, partners and customers ever since, and removes  it from the vision statement entirely.
Nadella called the devices and services company description "helpful  in starting our transformation," but said it was time for a new vision  statement that expressed what Microsoft can uniquely deliver.
 "Across Microsoft, we will obsess over reinventing productivity and platforms. We will relentlessly focus on and build great digital work and life experiences with specific focus on dual use."
"Across Microsoft, we will obsess over reinventing productivity and platforms. We will relentlessly focus on and build great digital work and life experiences with specific focus on dual use." 
Satya Nadella, 
CEO,  
Microsoft Corp.
 
He contends that the vision is large, touching nearly 3 billion people with  Internet-connected devices, which, although he doesn't say it, includes mostly  non-Microsoft devices. He also argues the vision represents a massive growth  opportunity because increasing digitization means technology spending will  increase as a percentage of GDP.
Nadella called on company employees to think of what Microsoft does  best for customers, rather than the specific tools it sells right now, and  build on those concepts.
"Microsoft has a unique ability to harmonize the world's devices,  apps, docs, data and social networks in digital work and life experiences so  that people are at the center and are empowered to do more and achieve more  with what is becoming an increasingly scarce commodity -- time!" he wrote. "Productivity  for us goes well beyond documents, spreadsheets and slides. We will reinvent  productivity for people who are swimming in a growing sea of devices, apps,  data and social networks. We will build the solutions that address the  productivity needs of groups and entire organizations as well as individuals by  putting them at the center of their computing experiences. We will shift the  meaning of productivity beyond solely producing something to include empowering  people with new insights. We will build tools to be more predictive, personal  and helpful. We will enable organizations to move from automated business  processes to intelligent business processes."
A key concept in the memo is the "dual user," someone who  uses technology for school or work and in their personal lives. 
"They strive to get stuff done with technology, demanding new  cloud-powered applications, extensively using time and calendar management,  advanced expression, collaboration, meeting, search and research services, all  with better security and privacy control. Microsoft will push into all corners  of the globe to empower every individual as a dual user," Nadella said. "Across  Microsoft, we will obsess over reinventing productivity and platforms. We will relentlessly  focus on and build great digital work and life experiences with specific focus  on dual use."
While demoting first-party devices from the mission statement, Nadella  also made it clear that none of them was going away -- not Surface, not Nokia phones  and not Xbox.
A graphical depiction included with the memo titled "Our Core,"  shows "Digital Work & Life Experiences" in the hole of a donut.  The top half of the donut reads "Cloud OS" and the bottom half reads "Device  OS & Hardware."
     
	
Nadella attempted to put Microsoft's billions in hardware investments  into the context of the company's overall strategy: "Our first-party  devices will light up digital work and life. Surface Pro 3 is a great example --  it is the world's best productivity tablet. In addition, we will build  first-party hardware to stimulate more demand for the entire Windows ecosystem.  That means at times we'll develop new categories like we did with Surface. It  also means we will responsibly make the market for Windows Phone, which is our  goal with the Nokia devices and services acquisition."
He acknowledged that Xbox wasn't at Microsoft's core but he called it a  business "in which we can have fundamental impact and success" and  promised continuing investments.
Moving away from specific devices, Nadella made clear that another type  of Microsoft hardware investment would continue apace. "We will continue  to grow our datacenter footprint globally," Nadella vowed.
He positioned Microsoft's datacenters as a fundamental asset powering  the company's strategy overall, but called them out as especially important for  the Cloud OS, itself especially important to Microsoft.
"Our cloud OS represents the largest opportunity given we are  working from a position of strength. With Azure, we are one  of very few cloud vendors that runs at hyper-scale. The combination of  Azure and Windows Server makes us the only company with a public, private and  hybrid cloud platform that can power modern business," Nadella said.
What Nadella's memo does, more than anything, is to try to better articulate  what Microsoft can be with the pieces that were largely put  in place during Ballmer's tenure -- massive investments in datacenter  build-outs, Web 2.0 companies, the Nokia phone business and Surface development.
"Devices" may not be the headline word anymore. But at least  for now, Microsoft won't be unwinding any acquisitions or selling off business  units or datacenters. Nadella will go into the next phase of the technology  wars with the company he has.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 10, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says major organizational and engineering  changes will be coming to Microsoft over the next month.
"Over the course of July, the Senior Leadership Team and I will  share more on the engineering and organization changes we believe are needed,"  Nadella wrote today in a massive open company memo titled "Starting  FY15 -- Bold Ambition & Our Core." 
The memo focuses primarily on Nadella's new articulation of the company's  core vision: "Microsoft is the productivity and platform company for the  mobile-first and cloud-first world." (For more, see the related article, "Nadella  Demotes 'Devices' in Microsoft Vision Statement.")
Nadella promised more detail on July 22 during Microsoft's next  earnings call about what Microsoft will do in its fiscal year 2015 to focus on  the core. That could be when senior Microsoft executives would discuss with financial  analysts whether the organizational changes would or would not involve layoffs  and would entail operating cost increases or decreases.
More detail would also emerge at upcoming company gatherings, he said. "At  MGX and //oneweek, we'll come together to build on all of this, learn from each  other and put our ideas into action," Nadella wrote.
Former CEO Steve Ballmer last set the top-level structure with a major "Devices  and Services" reorganization  in mid-July 2013 that put Nadella, Terry Myerson, Julie Larson-Green and Qi  Lu in executive vice president roles atop four engineering groups, and made Tony  Bates, Tami Reller and Eric Rudder executive vice presidents of other  functions.
Events quickly outpaced that restructuring, with Ballmer announcing a  month later that he'd retire. Nadella took over as CEO in February, bringing  Scott Guthrie up to take his former post. Meanwhile, when Stephen Elop returned  to Microsoft from Nokia, he stepped into Larson-Green's role and she moved over  to a position reporting to Lu. Also, Reller  and Bates both left the company, making room for Chris Capossela and Mark  Penn.
Whether Nadella shuffles those positions or keeps the structure, he  gave a stronger sense in the memo of his plans for middle management and for  making the engineering organization more nimble. He talked about a flatter  organization, leaner business processes, fewer people involved in decisions and  increased emphasis on accountability. He signaled investments were coming both  in using data for measuring effectiveness of products and predicting market  trends, and for evolving software engineering to eliminate breakpoints in the  development lifecycle.
He also promised more employee training and opportunities to test new  ideas and incubate new projects.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 10, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A full three months after Microsoft cut support for Windows XP, the  operating system remains the second most popular operating system throughout most  of the world.
If current trendlines continue, Windows XP will hold the No. 2 position  for a few more months and could remain a major presence on the Internet for years,  according to Internet browsing data kept by the two leading OS share tracking  outfits, StatCounter and Net Applications.
The Windows XP overhang looms largest in Net Applications' data, which  has more than a quarter of all browsing done in June from the OS (Figure 1). Windows XP had been  shedding a point of share or more per month since February, but plateaued from  May to June. Net Applications puts Windows 7 share at 50.55 percent and Windows  8 share at 12.54 percent. (Windows 8 figures in this post combine Windows 8 and  Windows 8.1, which both StatCounter and Net Applications track separately.)
 Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Data generated by StatCounter puts XP's global share much lower at 16  percent in June (Figure 2), but it's still good for second place. Windows 8 accounts for  more than 14 percent share and could edge Windows XP for the No. 2 spot in the  next few months.
 [Click on image for larger view.]
Figure 2.
[Click on image for larger view.]
Figure 2.
In the United States, Windows 8 already surpassed Windows XP back in  April and held that lead through June, when XP share was 14.13 percent and  Windows 8 share stood at 14.94 percent, according to StatCounter. However,  second place in the United States goes to Mac OS X, which accounts for nearly 16 percent  of browsing traffic.
Globally, Mac OS X is much lower, with 8.5 percent of StatCounter share and  6.5 percent of Net Applications share. StatCounter tracks pageviews while Net  Applications uses unique visitors, among other differences in their approaches.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 07, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    One year after launching a partner program, cloud-based identity and  access management specialist Okta on Thursday is rolling out a more mature  program for systems integrators and resellers.
Okta, founded by a former Salesforce.com executive in 2011 and backed  by Andreessen Horowitz, Greylock Partners, Khosla Ventures and Sequoia Capital,  initially developed the Okta Solution Providers (OSP) Program to separate  systems integrators and resellers from ISVs. 
Those ISVs are a key pillar of Okta's single-sign-on platform and the  related Okta Technology Alliances Program provided a programmatic spot for the  thousands of applications supported by Okta.
In the interim, channel partners like Slalom Consulting, Trace3, Agosto  and SoftChoice were looking for more resources and a better-defined structure  within the Solution Providers Program, according to Okta.
The updated OSP goes  live Thursday with four tiers:
  - An entry-level Bronze tier requires a $100,000  annual revenue commitment and certifications for one consultant and one sales  representative. Benefits include resale and referral margins, discounted  product pricing for internal production use and escalated technical support via  e-mail.
 
 
- The Silver tier carries a $250,000 revenue  commitment and requires certification of two consultants on implementations and  a second sales rep. In addition to better margins, which increase with each  tier, Silver partners also get a dedicated regional partner manager, access to  beta programs and both phone and e-mail escalated technical support. Marketing  development funds begin to kick in at this tier.
 
 
- A Gold tier comes with $1 million in yearly  revenue commitments and training for four sales reps, two technical consultants  and two implementation consultants.
 
 
- The highest tier, Platinum, has a $2 million  revenue commitment and substantially higher employee certification  requirements, with 10 sales reps, five technical consultants and four  implementation consultants. Program benefits include a dedicated global partner  manager.
All tiers include basic benefits such as access to the Okta Partner  Community, sales and marketing tools, sales webinars, demo calls and a  dedicated Okta "sandbox" for testing and proof of concept.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 26, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    This is more of a consumer play than a business one, but these days the  two are intimately related. Microsoft on Monday unveiled plans to double the  free storage in the OneDrive cloud storage platform, to ratchet the OneDrive  storage for consumer versions of Office 365 by 50x, and to drastically cut the  price for purchasing additional storage for those who might need it.
By the numbers, OneDrive will come with 15GB of storage, more than  double the previous limit of 7GB. The thinking behind the new limit has to do  with Microsoft's consumer research. The new limit for Office 365 Home and  Office 365 Personal subscriptions, meanwhile, bounces way up to 1TB, from a  previous limit of 20GB. Buying additional storage will cost $1.99 for 100GB, a  73 percent price cut, and $3.99 for 200GB, a 65 percent price drop. 
Omar Shahine, group program manager for OneDrive.com at Microsoft,  shared the thinking on the base OneDrive increase in a blog post  announcing the changes. 
"Our data tells us that 3 out of 4 people have  less than 15 GB of files stored on their PC. Factoring in what they may also  have stored on other devices, we believe providing 15 GB for free right out of  the gate -- with no hoops to jump through -- will make it much easier for people  to have their documents, videos, and photos available in one place,"  Shahine wrote, suggesting the size increase is neither random nor determined by  Microsoft's current datacenter infrastructure configuration.
On the Office 365 side, the massive storage increase to 1TB greatly  improves the cost profile of the consumer subscriptions. The Personal edition at $6.99 a month (that's the subscription made famous by its Office for iPad  linkage) becomes a better deal. Meanwhile, the 1TB limit on the $9.99 a month  Home edition is per user. With up to five users allowed on a Home subscription,  that's up to 5TB of storage -- a nearly insane amount.
None of these pertain exactly to partner's businesses. The Home and  Personal versions of Office 365 aren't supposed to be used for work. Instead,  the business-focused news came back in April when Microsoft bumped the storage  limits for Office 365 ProPlus to 1TB. Nonetheless, Microsoft is establishing  itself as the gold standard in cloud storage.
Being able to land 1TB of cloud storage that's portable to many device  types (not just Windows-based ones) and the Office suite makes Microsoft's an  easy deal to choose over the competition for personal devices. The more the  Microsoft platform is top of mind, the better for Microsoft partners.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 23, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft unveiled a mega-deal with the county of Los Angeles this week  that covers Office 365 seats for 100,000 employees of the most populous county in the United States.  Here are some key channel takeaways from this five-year deal worth $72 million.
MCS Out Front: Microsoft  Consulting Services (MCS) is a source of controversy for the channel. Partners who  represent Microsoft products in the enterprise often come up against MCS in  deals and sometimes complain that Microsoft swoops in on projects that its  partners could credibly deliver. While there is a partner on this deal, the  partner is on the licensing side. MCS will do the deployment. 
It's not surprising that MCS is out front on this deal, and it doesn't  mean by itself that MCS is going through one of its more aggressive phases.  Over the years, Microsoft has frequently talked about the framework it uses  when deciding whether MCS should be involved in a project. This deal seems to  fit two major criteria, either one of which would be enough for Microsoft to  justify putting its own people in the deal. One is if a project is what  Microsoft calls a "lighthouse" project. This clearly is, first for  its size but also for its sensitive security and privacy requirements for law  enforcement departments and for health-related departments. 
The other criterion  is whether the customer wants "skin in the game" from Microsoft.  Given the considerable public relations problems that attended the rollout of  Google Apps in the city of Los Angeles, there is every reason for county  officials to want only Microsoft throats around if someone needs to be choked  for quicker progress.
An LSP Win for En Pointe  Technologies: The named partner in this deal is En Pointe Technologies.  Although En Pointe does systems integration work, Microsoft's news release on  the deal is clear that it's the licensing solution provider (LSP) side that will be  involved here. "Microsoft Consulting Services will begin the migration to  Office 365 in July, and Microsoft partner En Pointe Technologies will manage  the agreement," the release stated. 
Even absent systems integration work,  it's a big win for En Pointe. The company was previously managing Microsoft  Enterprise Agreements (EAs) for several L.A. County departments. Now En Pointe  manages a consolidated EA for all 15 departments. It's not clear what LSPs may  have gotten boxed out in the consolidation. 
"Our relationship and credibility  with both Los Angeles County and Microsoft is cited as the reason such a large  deal was placed in our hands," En Pointe President Michael Rapp said in a  statement. (En Pointe did not immediately respond to a series of specific  questions about the deal.)
A Blow for Google Apps: When  Google won a contract in 2009 to move 30,000 employees of the city of Los Angeles  from  on-premises e-mail to its cloud services, it was a clear shot across Microsoft's  bow (even though most of the e-mail servers involved were GroupWise). There was  another big player in the cloud space with the ability to sell major customers  on its service. That deal ran into trouble when Google was unable to comply with FBI requirements for police department e-mail that meant the L.A. Police  Department (LAPD) couldn't move to Google Apps.
To be clear, the Google deal was the city, the Microsoft deal is the  county, so we're looking at different entities. Nonetheless, Microsoft's win  relates to Google's in three ways.
First, Microsoft makes a point of noting in the first sentence of its  release that the  Office 365 for Government deal includes "roughly  20,000 law enforcement personnel." Without mentioning Google by name,  Microsoft is going out of its way to highlight its ability to comply with the  Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) standard that posed a problem for  Google and the LAPD.
Second, part of the Google contract involved incentives if Google and  its partner Computer Sciences Corp. (CSC) could get L.A. County departments  onto the system, as well. Microsoft's ability to wrap up a deal for all county  departments suggests that crossover never occurred.
Third, Microsoft's deal with the county is much bigger than Google's  deal with the city -- covering 100,000 employees rather than the originally  announced 30,000. The deal literally surrounds and dwarfs Google's foothold in  the city of Los Angeles.
Reasons for the Win: Most of  the reasons Microsoft won the deal involve money, with the cloud driving  expenses out of IT. En Pointe's news release says the deal will save the county  $2.5 million annually after the first year. According to Microsoft, cost  savings will come from consolidating EAs, decreased collaboration costs across  departments due to a unified platform, the ability to pay only for services  used by existing employees and the avoidance of upfront capital expenditures.  
The county's CIO Richard Sanchez also says the move to Office 365 will help the  county's employees become more mobile. Microsoft also cited the CJIS and HIPAA  compliance as factors. 
It was not clear whether Google or anyone else was  competing for the contract, and clearly Microsoft's deep presence due to the  existing 15 EAs played a role.
Crazy Q4 Office 365 Deals: Microsoft always pushes hard to close business in its fourth quarter, which  ends this month. Partners are seeing a lot of extra incentives on Office 365  right now. Some sort of extreme discounting, beyond the usual deal size  discounts, was probably a factor here. In any case, it's a good time for  partners to be closing Office 365 deals across the board.
Don't Mess It Up! This week  the L.A. County deal counts as a victory for Microsoft. One or two missteps and  it will be an embarrassment (see Google and the city of Los Angeles). You can  bet there will be Google and CSC reps eagerly waiting to pounce on any delays  or problems. There will also be officials who got into trouble over the Google  problems and politicians looking to score points keeping a close eye on  Microsoft's progress. The stakes are very high in a politically-fraught  environment. Yet another reason for Microsoft to keep this deal in house with  MCS (see above).
Related: 
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 19, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Asigra Inc. is seeking to cut expensive, proprietary secondary storage  arrays from the backup-and-recovery equation.
At the backup and recovery specialist's partner conference this week,  the company introduced Asigra Software-Defined Data Protection, defined as an  architecture to turn commodity infrastructure into scalable cloud backup  storage. 
Asigra compiled its code onto FreeBSD and provides it for free to  service provider partners as an ISO image. "It's the first Software-Defined  Data Protection platform," said Eran Farajun, executive vice president at  Asigra. "It's the entire stack. It's not just the backup software, it's  also the file system and the monitoring. We disintermediated the software that  comes with these expensive storage arrays from HP, EMC and NetApp."
Asigra will support the stack, but doesn't plan to make money from it  directly. "Our strategy is to help our partners free up dollars to  generate more demand and win in the marketplace," Farajun said.
It's not the first time Toronto-based Asigra has tried to rock the boat  in order to build market share. A year ago, Asigra decoupled backup pricing  from recovery pricing -- offering very low prices for backing up data and  charging considerably more for recovery. The company's bet was that the current  pricing models are unsustainable given the exponential growth in data storage.
Farajun admits that Asigra expected to take a revenue hit at first from  effectively lowering prices by 40 percent or more, but he said the company was  pleasantly surprised: "Our revenues grew out of volume. We picked up new  customers and our existing customers [increased] their existing licenses."
According to Farajun, some partners are turning that pricing model into  additional business. "This is performance-based backup because the less  recovery you do, the cheaper it is. The analytics about the recoveries is given  to the customer and the partner can then help the customer improve their IT  infrastructure," Farajun said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 18, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Days after its professional services automation rival Autotask  announced its acquisition by a private equity firm, ConnectWise came out swinging with a statement to the  market that it intends to remain a significant player.
The big question is whether privately held ConnectWise will be able to  keep up. The investment by Vista Equity Partners in Autotask is aimed,  according to Autotask CEO Mark Cattini, at investing in innovation and growth.  Serious money has also recently been flowing into the adjacent remote  monitoring and management market -- with new owners promising or demonstrating  investments in product development at Kaseya, Continuum, N-Able Technologies  and Level Platforms Inc. 
ConnectWise had been picking up the pace already, with an investment in  December in BizDox, a tool for documenting business IT systems, and a quicker  release cycle announced in March. Last week, however, ConnectWise seemed to  feel the need to respond more directly.
In a statement with the headline, "ConnectWise Reaches 90,000  Users, Continues Innovation," CEO Arnie Bellini of Tampa, Fla.-based  ConnectWise declared, "While many other companies are exiting the market,  ConnectWise is more committed to the technology solution provider space than  ever before."
We caught up with Bellini by e-mail with some follow-up questions.
Is ConnectWise looking for investors of its own?  
  ConnectWise is debt-free and has no venture capital. Because we  remain focused on the technology provider space, we have grown organically,  consistently and significantly over the past several years. We are extremely profitable and want to  control our own destiny, focus on the market we love: technology and IT  solution providers. In fact we continue looking for investment opportunities,  such as our recent investment in BizDox. 
Many of the longtime vendors in the MSP industry have taken  infusions of cash via private equity investments or through acquisitions by  larger tech companies. They say they are using it to invest in their platforms.  Will ConnectWise be able to keep up as the industry's R&D pockets get  deeper?  
  As I stated above, we have enough capital to continue to be the  investor [emphasis Bellini's] in the channel, building or acquiring  solutions that benefit our partners. We are consistent in that. We like to say  we continue on a 20-mile march (see Great  by Choice by Jim Collins), which means keep your head down and continue on the  path you have established, be aware of what's happening but don't get  distracted, either. In other words, we don't want to continuously pivot or  change our plan -- that's not a path to long-term success. We invest, we  innovate and we always focus on our partners' success -- and that's the big  difference in our business philosophy.
Does ConnectWise see any downsides for the competition, especially  Autotask, as they take on private equity?
If I were the Autotask CEO, I would be concerned about losing control  and losing focus on my customers, all while trying to hold on to my key  employees. At ConnectWise we enable technology providers to make the most of  their investment through peer networking, education, consulting and a ton of  other best-practice tools, including our events, which bring together more than  5,000 business owners annually. Our model of bringing partners together is  atypical of what you learn in business school which is really where private  equity comes from. That would be my concern.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 16, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Cloud-to-cloud backup of major SaaS services will soon be available to  a broader base of MSPs due to the acquisition this week of Swedish startup  Cloudfinder by Atlanta-based eFolder.
Founded in 2012, Cloudfinder identifies itself among only a handful of  companies working on the problem of backing up data from online SaaS platforms  like Google Apps, making it possible for customers to restore their data if  something happens to it, either at the provider level or through inadvertent  problems like users accidentally deleting e-mail. Beyond backup and restoration,  Cloudfinder allows full-text search and includes reporting functionality. 
The product now joins eFolder's business continuity products and the  business-grade cloud file synch services eFolder got nine months ago with the  acquisition of Anchor Box LLC. Terms of the Cloudfinder deal weren't disclosed,  but the entire seven-person Cloudfinder team, including CEO Marcus Nyman, is  joining eFolder, which now has about 120 employees. 
Nyman said in an interview that his company's technology stands out due  to its platform-agnostic approach. The company launched in 2012 with a beta  product focused on Google Apps, then added support for Salesforce.com and most  recently Office 365.
His team suspected going platform-agnostic was a good approach, but  even they were taken aback by how quickly the decision proved out. "Microsoft  is really biting into that market faster than we had expected. In certain  segments, already last year, we saw how Google Apps resellers started looking  really pained. We were super happy that we had built Cloudfinder as a  SaaS-agnostic platform rather than specifically for Google Apps or 365,"  Nyman said.
Nor does Nyman believe the market is stabilizing. "When the third  and fourth service may enter into the battle, we'll be there, as well. It's  hugely important to us and for customers and partners to avoid vendor lock-in,"  he said.
With that in mind, eFolder's Cloudfinder unit has a roadmap to start  backing up other SaaS solutions. "We're coming for Dropbox, Box and Evernote  before the end of the year, plus an additional number of services that we haven't  disclosed yet," Nyman said.
While Cloudfinder brings new capabilities to eFolder, the company gets  a lot of benefits from joining the eFolder organization.
On the technical side, the plan is to move Cloudfinder's backup from an  Amazon Web Services back end into eFolder's petabyte-scale cloud. On the  business side, Cloudfinder, which has been focused on technology rather than  sales and marketing, will plug into eFolder's much more mature channel-focused  sales engine.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 12, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Autotask Corp., one of the most significant vendors for managed  services providers, is being acquired by a private equity firm.
Vista Equity Partners is buying Autotask for an undisclosed sum. Vista's  $11.5-billion portfolio includes Aptean, Websense and at least 20 vertically  focused technology companies. The announcement came Monday during Autotask's  Community Live! show in Miami. 
Mark Cattini, president and CEO of Autotask, says the investment will  allow the company to more aggressively improve Autotask's solutions for  customers. "We are devoted to our clients' ongoing success and are  confident that our partnership with Vista will drive innovation and growth and  delivery dynamic solutions as the traditional IT landscape evolves,"  Cattini said in a statement.
The statement seems to leave room for Autotask to branch out from its  origins in professional services automation (PSA) to a potentially broader mission  as management of IT solutions increasingly moves to the cloud and other  boundary lines blur.
At the same time, the firm's new private equity ownership indicated  that Autotask's focus on IT service providers as core customers would continue.  Alan Cline, principal at Vista Equity Partners, vowed in a statement to "work  with the Autotask team to expand and enhance the company's solutions to help IT  service providers more efficiently and effectively meet their clients' changing  needs."
The private equity move on the PSA side comes after a wave of investment  and consolidation in the adjacent market space of remote monitoring and  management (RMM). Changes on that side got rolling with a growth equity firm  backing the 2011 spinoff of what eventually became Continuum from Zenith Infotech,  followed by 2013's private equity-funded acquisition and internal development  spree at Kaseya, along with new owners for N-Able Technologies (SolarWinds) and Level Platforms Inc. (AVG Technologies).
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 09, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Kaseya launched the 7.0 version of its IT management software portfolio  this week, with an emphasis on faster and more reliable remote control.
The version 7.0 products -- Virtual System Administrator, Traverse,  Enterprise Mobility Management and 365 Command -- became available May 31,  although Kaseya formally announced them on Tuesday. The end-of-May availability  met Kaseya's previous release promise and fits with the company's newly  predictable cadence of releases every four months. 
In a telephone interview, Tom Hayes, vice president of product  marketing at Kaseya, said a key design goal of the new release was to improve  the core capabilities, particularly speed. The company's MSP customers require  quick connections to clients via the Remote Control module. "We use a  persistent connection between the Kaseya server and the client, and we parallel  process a lot of the activities in setting up the connection," Hayes said.
Kaseya's Remote Control was completely redesigned under the codename "Project  Palantir" in a nod to the seeing stones of The Lord of the Rings. Design  goals for the 7.0 release included connections in under six seconds, 99 percent  reliability, performance over high-latency connections and support for copy and  paste between admin and remote sessions, among other features.
Other features of the 7.0 suite release are the addition of SharePoint  Online management and administration via 365 Command, the cloud application  management solution Kaseya acquired last summer; improvements in enterprise  mobile device management; and tighter integration with the most recent release  of Intuit QuickBooks.
Kaseya's roadmap for the September 2014 and January 2015 releases are  available here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 05, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Earlier in Microsoft's history, a well-known internal issue was the "strategy  tax." The idea, as I understand it as an outside observer, was that if a  product or idea didn't advance the Windows-first, Windows-everywhere agenda,  forces inside Microsoft would kill it.
The phenomenon is sometimes credited with Microsoft's failure to  innovate in the 2000s as it missed first the smartphone boom and then the  tablet boom. 
Recently, I think Microsoft has also hobbled itself with what I'll call  a "tactical tax." What I mean  is that Microsoft would fail to  acknowledge or adequately support competitors' products, not because they directly  competed with Windows-everywhere. Instead, the opposition came because Microsoft  had a minor product or was even thinking of possibly launching a product in the  competitor's space someday.
Examples include the iPhone, which Microsoft pooh-poohed and then  mostly ignored as it prepared the release of Windows Phone. Another example is  the iPad, whose customers would have benefited years ago from a version of  Office (see the monstrous recent sales of Office on iPad within days of its  release). Microsoft presumably dithered in order to see if it could launch its  own tablet ecosystem, and its own device, that could challenge the iPad for  tablet platform dominance. So far, the "pretend it doesn't exist then  launch your own" strategy hasn't worked for either tablets or phones.
Both of those cases, though, have elements of "strategy tax"  involved. Putting Office on iPad and iPhone and developing other software for  the devices presumably could have solidified Apple's lead and ended the game  before Microsoft had a Windows-based product on the field.
The clearest example of a "tactical tax" is Dynamics CRM  Online. Despite improvement after improvement with each version, and a loyal  partner base, the product failed to make notable progress against Salesforce.com's  cloud CRM platform. Meanwhile, it's always been an open question as to how the  Dynamics business of ERP and CRM products fit into Microsoft's overall  strategy. Trying to protect Dynamics CRM Online by failing to acknowledge other  opportunities to make revenues from a Salesforce.com partnership involving  Office and Windows was a clear case of protecting a tactical product at the  expense of strategic ones.
Now, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff  have put the years of their companies trading insults behind them and declared  a deep technical partnership.
Nadella and other Microsoft executives in no way closed the door on  Microsoft's continued efforts in the CRM cloud space. But the tactical product  will have to earn its way in the future against a market leader that also will  benefit from partnership-enhanced integration with Microsoft's strategic  productivity tools.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 30, 20140 comments