In the year 2014, according to analysts at Gartner, the tech world can  look forward to Android devices passing 1 billion units shipped in a year -- the  first time any platform has reached that kind of volume.
Yet despite Android bounding by 74 percent in unit shipments from 2012  to 2013 and Apple climbing 25 percent in that same period as Windows fell by 5  percent, Gartner seems to see reasons for optimism about Microsoft's future. 
Gartner released its overall shipment projections for different device  types and operating system platforms on Tuesday. The release marked a change in  the way Gartner has reported the figures, or at least in the way it reveals  them broadly. In the past, Gartner discussed PC shipments, smartphone shipments  and tablet shipments separately. This year, the market research firm tallied  total shipments for an OS brand as one value. For example, Windows PC, Windows  tablet and Windows Phone shipments all count together in one lump sum for  Windows shipments.*
Android shipped an estimated 878 million units in 2013, and Gartner  expects the platform to hit 1.1 billion units in 2014.
Windows was second in total shipments for 2013 at 328 million units,  with a 10 percent increase forecast for 2014 to 360 million units. The numbers  for Apple's iOS and Mac OS platforms are 267 million units in 2013 and 344  million units in 2014.
By Gartner's calculations, most of the headroom in the mobile phone  market, where Android has been wildly successful, appears to be occupied.  Gartner projects growth of only 5 percent and 4 percent for that market overall  in 2014 and 2015, respectively.
While traditional desktop PCs and notebook PCs fell by 12 percent in  2013 and will keep falling  in 2014 and 2015, although somewhat more slowly,  Gartner expects the fastest growth of any category over the next two years to  come from tablets, hybrids and clamshells.
The Gartner estimates seem to be building on an assumption that the  hybrid and clamshell category, with their productivity focus, will be an area  of special strength for Microsoft.
* Unlike for Windows and iOS/Mac OS, Gartner reported figures for  Google Chrome separately from Google's Android environment. That's a good thing  since the progress of the Chrome platform is a hot topic and the new numbers  show a fast-growing category, although from a long way back that would have  disappeared as less than a rounding error in Android's overall volume. Chrome  devices exploded by 895 percent from 185,000 units in 2012 to 1.8 million units in  2013. Gartner anticipates 160 percent growth in 2014 to nearly 4.8 million  units and 67 percent growth in 2015 to 8 million units.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 08, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Continuum this week unveiled a multimillion-dollar investment in  upgrading its datacenter capacity to position the company for unspecified  future offerings for its managed service provider (MSP) partners, according to the  company's CEO.
"This was a pretty substantial investment that has to do with the  underlying infrastructure of our fundamental platform," said Michael  George, CEO of Continuum, in a telephone interview. Continuum's core products  for its 3,300 MSPs are the Continuum RMM and Continuum Vault, which are backup  and disaster recovery services built around an appliance manufactured by Datto.
The Software as a Service (SaaS) nature of Continuum's offerings is a key  product differentiator, making its datacenter infrastructure mission-critical. 
George stressed that the move from a West Coast service provider to new  facilities at the Markley Group datacenter near Continuum's headquarters in  downtown Boston was driven by aggressive growth plans, not by dissatisfaction  with previous facilities.
Continuum had kept the previous facility up to date with equipment  refreshes and always maintained capacity at 15 percent to 20 percent beyond  current demand, George said. The previous facility, he added, "was  substantial and significant enough to run our business today, but it wasn't  where we're leaning for the future. This is really about the next level."
When Rob Autor joined Continuum a year ago as senior vice president of  Global Services Delivery, a major part of his charter was to arrange the company's  next-generation datacenter, George said.
Markley Group describes its 920,000 square-foot facility at 1 Summer  Street as the largest datacenter and mission-critical telecommunications  facility in New England, and calls itself the only "carrier hotel" in  the region with connectivity to more than 75 domestic and international network  providers and a robust power grid. Among its tenants, Markley counts AT&T,  NTT, British Telecom, Tata Communications, the Boston Red Sox, Harvard, MIT,  the Boston Internet Peering Exchange (BOSIX) and The New York Times.
"This is one of maybe eight or 10, at most, facilities of its  kind in the country," George said. Continuum's move to such high-quality  facilities was made possible by its backing from Summit Partners, the  investment partnership that funded the company's creation in September 2011 as  an RMM spinoff from Zenith Infotech.
"This is by great magnitude considerably more significant than  anything any of our competitors have," George said. "They just don't  have the wherewithal to lean ahead three years and make an investment on behalf  of their customers."
In 2011, Continuum's backing by a growth equity firm that now has raised  more than $15 billion in assets gave it an unusual position in the MSP market.  As the company prepares to expand its services for MSPs with the new datacenter capacity and a previously announced revamped network operations center  in Mumbai, India, the company is facing a competitive field with more  formidable financial resources than the founder-led competitors of the time. N-Able  Technologies, Level Platforms Inc. and Kaseya all sport new owners or  financial backing in 2013. With funding from Insight Venture Partners, Kaseya  has expanded into three new business  areas through rapid-fire acquisitions. N-Able was bought for $120 million  by Austin, Texas-based SolarWinds in May and Level Platforms went to Czech Republic-based  AVG Technologies in June.
George suggested that the "propwash" that every company, his  included, goes through with a change in ownership, and Continuum's ongoing  investments make his company a strong bet for MSPs in 2014.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 19, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Five months after acquiring Rover Apps, Kaseya has released a rebranded  version of Rover's bring-your-own-device (BYOD) management technology for  Kaseya's managed service provider and enterprise IT customers.
Kaseya bought Rover Apps in a burst of acquisition activity this  summer. Insight Venture Partners announced a significant investment in Kaseya  on June 24, bringing in new CEO Yogesh Gupta. A few weeks later on July 9,  Kaseya acquired cloud and network monitoring solution vendor Zyrion Inc., with  the Rover Apps acquisition coming July 16. 
In an interview, Kaseya Chief Marketing Officer Loren Jarrett said  those acquisitions, along with the Oct. 24 purchase of Office 365 Command, all  fit with Gupta's vision for Kaseya. "What Kaseya does is we manage across  everything that an IT department may be grappling with," Jarrett said.
The conversion of the Rover Apps BYOD solution addresses a relatively  recent major requirement -- handling personal devices that employees need to use  with corporate data.
"It's a challenge because employees don't want heavy-handed  corporate management over their device. They don't want the corporation to be  able to see what they're doing, read their data or control their device at all,"  she said. "At the same time, IT needs very strict controls over corporate  data. They need to have the highest levels of security around corporate data  and assets."
Kaseya rebranded and integrated the licensing of the Rover Apps  technology as the Kaseya BYOD Suite. Unlike many mobile device management  solutions, which require corporate control of an entire smartphone or tablet,  the Kaseya BYOD solution relies on what are called "containerized"  apps.
End users download three apps -- Browser, Docs and Mail -- on their iOS  or Android devices and connect to a Kaseya BYOD Gateway. Users only need to  follow corporate authentication requirements when accessing those apps, not  when accessing the device.
"We're essentially moving the locus of endpoint control,"  said Jonathan Foulkes, vice president of Mobile Product Management for Kaseya  and the former CEO and co-founder of Rover Apps. "We're moving the  endpoint to be the secure containers for those applications."
 [Click on image for larger view.]
Users of Kaseya BYOD Suite see three apps on their devices -- Mail, Docs and Browser. Signing in with corporate credentials is only required when launching the apps, not when using the device itself.
[Click on image for larger view.]
Users of Kaseya BYOD Suite see three apps on their devices -- Mail, Docs and Browser. Signing in with corporate credentials is only required when launching the apps, not when using the device itself.
According to Kaseya, security for the containerized apps includes AES  256 encryption atop SSL encryption and complies with privacy standards  including FINRA and FIPS 140-2.
To access either corporate mail or documents or to browse corporate  Web sites securely, users authenticate against the Active Directory with a  username and password. Foulkes said the frequency of that password  authentication is set by policy -- for example, once every 24 hours. After briefer  periods of inactivity, users can re-enter the app with a PIN.
Kaseya's Docs app connects with back-end data sources, such as Microsoft  SharePoint, and the app includes a third-party Office and PDF editor. "We  wanted to make sure that we had a full built-in Office editor suite in this  secure container. This allows organizations to be guaranteed that if their  employee is viewing or editing a document, it's all within the context of a  secure, managed application. That it's not, 'Boy, I hope they don't put it in  that crazy new editor they just downloaded from the Google Play Store,'"  Foulkes said.
The back-end of the Kaseya BYOD Suite consists of a cloud-based relayer  and a BYOD Gateway that is installed as a service on a PC or server in the  customers' network. In this first version as a Kaseya-branded product, the BYOD  Suite is integrated with Kaseya licensing, but management of the technology is  through the rebranded gateway software -- not through regular Kaseya dashboards.
"Our very next deliverable in 2014 will be a single pane of glass  where you'll be able to see and manage all of the mobility needs of an  organization," Foulkes said.
The need to administer the solution from the gateway also means MSPs  will need to monitor and manage their customers individually, rather than from  a multi-customer dashboard. Foulkes noted that very little subsequent  management is usually required after initial setup. For an administrator, he  said, "Most of the work is the initial configuration of what things am I  going to publish and what's my configuration. Once you complete these, you can  have 100 new users join the system and there's no activity that needs to happen  with the MSP."
Stephen Lawson, principal consultant with Bulletproof InfoTech, a  Calgary, Alberta-based MSP and Kaseya customer, is very interested in Kaseya's  new BYOD approach, although he hasn't tried it yet.
"Right now, with a lot of our BYODs, if they are uncompliant, they're  getting their phones purged by us. This would save us from those messy moments  where you just nuke the corporate data," Lawson said.
Of Bulletproof InfoTech's small and medium business customers, Lawson  said he expects the larger organizations to be more interested. "The small  businesses, they almost don't care. If they're only a 10-seat company, they  have a pretty close relationship between the owner and the person who has the  phone. Bigger customers are more concerned with unique processes and what  happens if they have to terminate an employee or if the phone gets lost,"  Lawson said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 16, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    In a move to build a channel presence behind its emerging "Cloud OS" strategy,  Microsoft on Thursday launched a consortium of about two dozen cloud service  providers worldwide that can provide and support hybrid clouds for customers.
Cloud OS is Microsoft's attempt to build a unified platform for  customers that allows them to move workloads and services among on-premise  facilities, Microsoft public cloud services and service provider-hosted clouds.  Microsoft formally launched what senior Microsoft executive Satya Nadella  called its "cloud operating system era" in September 2012 with the  availability of Windows Server 2012. 
The initial focus was on ensuring the ability to move virtualized  servers within on-premise servers and private clouds, as well as with Microsoft's  own cloud services, such as Windows Azure.
The new program, the Cloud OS Network, marks a maturity of Microsoft's  Cloud OS platform to include service providers, as well, said Eugene Saburi,  general manager of Cloud OS Marketing in Microsoft's Cloud and Enterprise  Division, which is driving the new partner program.
Microsoft is working closely with about 25 service providers who will  now be able to provide a "single-pane-of-glass" management experience  using Windows Server 2012 R2, System Center 2012 and the Windows Azure Pack.  The idea, Saburi said, is to "enable boundary-less datacenters."
Partners named to the Cloud OS Network on Thursday include Alog, Aruba  S.p.A., Capgemini, Capita IT Services, CGI, CSC, Dimension Data, DorukNet,  Fujitsu Finland Oy., Fujitsu Ltd., iWeb, Lenovo, NTTX, Outsourcery, OVH.com,  Revera, SingTel, Sogeti, TeleComputing, Tieto, Triple C Cloud Computing,  T-Systems, VTC Digilink and Wortmann AG. According to Microsoft documentation,  those service providers run more than 425 datacenters, manage more than 2.4  million servers and serve more than 3 million customers worldwide.
Saburi said Microsoft will likely add more partners later.
Piers Linney, co-CEO of U.K.-based Outsourcery, said his cloud service  provider company expects to benefit from participation in Microsoft's new Cloud  OS Network immediately. While Outsourcery has been providing Cloud OS-based solutions to  customers that included Outsourcery-hosted components, Microsoft's recent  technological improvements will remove sales barriers.
"The more friction you've got in terms of moving these workloads  makes it a harder sell. The friction has been reduced. The ability to drag and  drop, effectively, across the three [platforms], makes it easier," Linney  said.
Outsourcery executives are not expecting leads or implementation  business from Microsoft through the program. Rather, they're expecting Microsoft's  validation of Outsourcery's expertise will help the cloud service provider's  own sales efforts.
"It's very important to us to be part of this group of Microsoft  partners in the network," Linney said. "It's very important that we  are seen as experts in the Cloud OS."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 12, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Nearly a third. That's how much of Yahoo Inc.'s revenue comes from its  Microsoft partnership.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has been pestering Yahoo  with inquiries on the matter dating back several months and finally got an  answer, the Reuters news service reported Tuesday. 
According to Reuters, Yahoo had previously stated that its 2009 search  agreement with Microsoft comprised more than 10 percent of sales. The new  filing indicates that the company received 31 percent of its revenue from the  deal in the latest quarter, Reuters reported. Going by Yahoo's $1.1 billion in  reported revenues for the quarter ended Sept. 30, that would amount to about  $350 million from Microsoft.
Yahoo's earnings have missed Wall Street expectations for several  quarters. The stock has rebounded substantially since Marissa Mayer came in as  CEO in July 2012, though -- a result frequently attributed to the company's pre-existing  large investment holdings in the Chinese company Alibaba and in Yahoo Japan, rather than to the strength of Yahoo's core business.
For more on the state of Microsoft's highest-profile dance partner (now  that Nokia's relevant businesses are being brought  in house), Vanity Fair recently  posted a thoroughly reported Bethany McLean profile of Mayer.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 11, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    In the final weeks of a year in which the inability of major U.S.-based  technology companies to protect their customers' data from U.S. government  snooping became apparent, those companies are making a public stand.
Microsoft and its peers launched an aggressive public relations  campaign on Monday with an open  letter to President Barack Obama and to the U.S. Congress. 
The short letter, signed by AOL, Apple, Facebook, Google, LinkedIn,  Microsoft, Twitter and Yahoo, reads:
Dear Mr. President and Members of Congress,
We understand that governments have a duty to protect their citizens.  But this summer's revelations highlighted the urgent need to reform government  surveillance practices worldwide. The balance in many countries has tipped too  far in favor of the state and away from the rights of the individual -- rights  that are enshrined in our Constitution. This undermines the freedoms we all  cherish. It's time for a change.
For our part, we are focused on keeping users' data secure -- deploying  the latest encryption technology to prevent unauthorized surveillance on our  networks and by pushing back on government requests to ensure that they are  legal and reasonable in scope.
We urge the U.S. to take the lead and make reforms that ensure that  government surveillance efforts are clearly restricted by law, proportionate to  the risks, transparent and subject to independent oversight. To see the full  set of principles we support, visit ReformGovernmentSurveillance.com.
The group recommends reforms through five principles:
    - Limiting governments' authority to collect users'  information.
- Oversight and accountability.
- Transparency about government demands.
- Respecting the free flow of information.
- Avoiding conflict among governments.
Revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden began emerging over  the summer and continue to trickle out (including an article Monday in The New  York Times about U.S. government infiltration of online gaming communities,  especially World of Warcraft and Second Life, but also including Xbox Live.)
U.S.-based tech companies have been doing the math and have become  increasingly vocal about concerns that any appearance of collusion (coerced or voluntary) with the  NSA will hurt their competitiveness in other countries. Already, some countries  are imposing restrictions on the use of U.S.-based cloud providers.
For Microsoft, the open letter represents a second salvo in a week.  Late last week, Microsoft announced plans to beef up and expand encryption across all of its services, to reinforce  legal protections for customer data and to create new centers for governments  to evaluate Microsoft's source code.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 09, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft partners who haven't yet started retooling their businesses  for a future with fewer new PC deployments are getting more warnings from  industry analysts that it may be time.
Witness this week's recalibration by IDC of its PC sales estimate for  all of 2013. The Framingham, Mass.-based market research firm downgraded its  previous estimate of a 9.7 percent decline in worldwide PC shipments to a  forecast of a 10.1 percent drop, now that more data is in. 
While the change amounts to little more than a rounding error, it does  take the estimate into solid double-digit-drop territory. For the record, IDC  is slightly, but only slightly, more downbeat about 2013 than fellow  researchers at Gartner,  who recently forecast an 8 percent drop in the worldwide PC market.
There's a long-term pessimism coming out of IDC, as well. The firm is  calling for a further 3.8 percent drop in 2014, followed by "slightly  positive" growth that keeps shipments in the neighborhood of 300 million  units per year for the foreseeable future. According to IDC, by the time the  slide is over, the PC market will be just ahead of 2008 levels.
"Perhaps the chief concern for future PC demand is a lack of  reasons to replace an older system," said IDC analyst Jay Chou  in a  statement. "While IDC research finds that the PC still remains the primary  computing device -- for example, PCs are used more hours per day than tablets or  phones -- PC usage is nonetheless declining each year as more devices become  available. And despite industry efforts, PC usage has not moved significantly  beyond consumption and productivity tasks to differentiate PCs from other  devices. As a result, PC lifespans continue to increase, thereby limiting  market growth."
IDC notes that the commercial market is less bad than the consumer  market, and sees hope for a short-term shot in the arm when Windows XP support  expires next April and a long-term shot in the arm from two-in-one devices. The  firm's analysts have modest expectations for both boosts, though.
Taking up much of the slack is the tablet market. In another forecast released this week, IDC predicted that global tablet shipments would be 221  million this year, slightly less than the firm earlier expected but good for a  53 percent shipment increase over 2012. For now, IDC is predicting Windows  tablets could make up 10 percent of that market by 2017, when the firm's  analysts suspect tablet shipments will peak.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 05, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    In mid-November, Microsoft's new channel chief Phil Sorgen e-mailed partners with a surprise delay in many of the planned updates to the Microsoft  Partner Network (MPN). A host of changes to Microsoft's core partner program had been scheduled to go into effect in  January.
Now many of the changes are being delayed until February and more are  being held back until an unspecified date in the third calendar quarter of  2014. After Sorgen's e-mail, MPN General Manager Julie  Bennani revealed in a blog  post that Microsoft had rethought its plans to create cloud tracks for many  of the competencies. 
We put some questions to Microsoft about the MPN changes, and received  an e-mail response from Bennani. Here's the exchange:
Bekker: Are these moves a timing issue, allowing both Microsoft and  partners more time to make necessary adjustments, or is there some rethinking  going on about whether or not to do some of the changes that were announced in  July? Why delay the integration of cloud into competency tracks?
Bennani: This change is based on partner feedback to allow both adequate time  for preparing for the changes and improvements of the Microsoft Partner Network,  as well as a modified design approach. We believe partners will benefit greatly  from an improved partner portal experience and from more flexible ways to  manage benefits. This includes cloud integration into the competencies, which  is a simpler way for partners to secure benefits that does not involve creating  separate cloud and on-premises tracks, but instead enables all partners to  offer hybrid solutions.
On what date will Cloud Essentials sign-ups end? On what date will  all Cloud Essentials internal use rights (IUR) benefits expire?
Net new enrollment into Cloud Essentials will stop with the February  2014 release. Cloud IUR rights for existing Cloud Essentials  partners will extend until June 30, 2014 -- at that time, all partners  must transition into either the new Microsoft Action Pack subscriptions (MAPs)  or a competency to continue to use our Cloud IUR.
On hosting, was there pushback to the changes from hosters -- and if  so, was it about the nature of the changes or was it about timing?
Retiring the Hosting competency and introducing solution-oriented  hosting tracks has been well received by hosting partners. Per hosting partner  feedback, the current Hosting competency does not effectively support their  needs. In order to better meet their needs -- as well as to give partners more  time to get ready -- we will offer unique hosting tracks within the following core  competencies: Datacenter, Messaging, Communications and Data Analytics. This  allows us to recognize hosters more precisely for the solution/service offered  while introducing requirements and benefits that are more relevant and  tailored.
Is Microsoft considering doing a Hosting Competency in parallel with  hosting tracks in other competencies, or will it be one or the other?
Hosting tracks will replace the Hosting competency in Q3 2014.
Is Microsoft still planning to take the six Resource Center approach  with the Microsoft Action Pack Subscription? 
Yes.
On the competency renamings and consolidations that are now delayed  from January, are they still in the plan or is Microsoft reconsidering those  changes?
The plan has not changed. We are delaying the implementation to give  partners more time to prepare for the changes.
Was the Small Business Specialist Community formally retired in  November as indicated in the July MPN disclosure document?
Yes.
Any updates on the new small business community detailed on p. 7 of  the disclosure guide, which read, "Plans are also being finalized to  provide a partner-to-partner community for small business focused partners in  January 2014"?
The Small & Medium Business Partner Area Leads (SMC PALs)  communities are in place and thriving, and we look forward to continued  engagement with this important group moving ahead.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 02, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft is  putting the brakes on a number of substantial changes to its partner program  that had been set to take effect early next year.
"Following  compelling partner feedback and a thorough review of our planned roadmap, we've  decided to prioritize the timing of certain program updates communicated at the  Worldwide Partner Conference in July 2013," wrote Phil Sorgen, corporate  vice president of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group, in an e-mail sent to  partners Thursday night. 
Sorgen took over about two months ago from former channel  chief Jon Roskill, who had announced the changes and their timing in July.  Microsoft had documented the changes in a July PDF called the "Microsoft  Partner Network Disclosure of upcoming program changes" and RCP analyzed  and clarified the changes in our MPN  Roadmap. The planned changes represented  the most substantial overhaul of the program since Microsoft launched the MPN  about three years ago.
According to Sorgen's e-mail and an addendum to the  disclosure guide titled "Important  Update to Previously Announced Microsoft Partner Network Program Changes,"  Microsoft is tinkering with most elements of its carefully laid-out MPN roadmap:
    - The  new Microsoft Action Pack Subscriptions, which will include Cloud Internal Use  Rights benefits, will now launch in February, a month later than originally  planned.
 
 
- An  Intelligent Systems Competency, designed to help partners capitalize on the "Internet  of Things," will launch in February rather than January.
 
 
- A  planned consolidation and renaming of several competencies is postponed  indefinitely. Those changes, which had been scheduled for January, included renaming  Business Intelligence to Data Analytics; merging the Server Platform,  Management and Virtualization, and Identity and Access Competencies; and retiring  the Mobility Competency.
 
 
- The  Hosting Competency was supposed to be retired and replaced with a number of  hosting tracks in other competencies. That change is being delayed, although  Microsoft documents indicate it remains the plan.
 
 
- The  integration of cloud tracks into a number of competencies is also delayed,  extending the life of several existing cloud programs. Cloud Accelerate, Cloud  Deployment and Azure Circle were all scheduled to be retired June 30, 2014. Now  they will continue into at least the third quarter of calendar 2014. Cloud  Essentials, the free-to-enroll program with five IURs for various Microsoft  cloud products, will still be fully retired June 30, 2014, as planned. Partners  will now have access to those program benefits only through the paid Action  Pack subscription or a paid competency.
 
 
- A  new competency, User Experience Design Competency, has been killed before its  launch. Originally planned to go live in January, Microsoft has had a change of  heart. According to the addendum document: "While a dedicated competency  for design was to be introduced, it has since been determined that design must  be an integral part of application development. For this reason, development  partners will be offered design focused tools and training resources instead of  creating a new competency."
 
 
- The  Digital Marketing Competency is being renamed the Digital Advertising  Competency "to better reflect the opportunity and partners this is  designed for," the addendum says.
In his e-mail,  Sorgen promised more details to come. "In the near future, we will share  an updated program roadmap and launch dates," he wrote. RCP has a list of  questions out to Microsoft for clarifications and for information about the  thinking and causes for some of the changes. Check back here and at RCP's MPN Roadmap for updates.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 22, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Migration project automation startup SkyKick on Tuesday released an update of the SkyKick Automation Suite to bring support  for Microsoft Exchange Public Folder migrations into Office 365 and deliver a  more robust dashboard for partners.
Earlier this year, Microsoft expanded Office 365 to support migration  of Exchange Public Folders into its cloud productivity suite. 
Although SkyKick launched its migration automation tool slightly after Microsoft added Public Folder support,  SkyKick's initial version went through a two-year beta testing process and  focused on the core elements of an Office 365 migration that a partner needed  -- from selling, to planning, to provisioning, to migrating, to managing, to setting  up users. In all, one early-adopter partner  told RCP in April that the Seattle-based startup's solution cut the Office  365 migration process from about 40 hours of work and interaction with the  customer down to two or three hours spread over a week or two.
With the initial version out for half a year and used by hundreds of  partners and thousands of customers, SkyKick was ready to start adding some new  features, said Todd Schwartz, co-CEO of SkyKick. Public Folders were an obvious  Office 365 pain point for partners.
"It's so messy and tedious, a lot of MSPs wouldn't even offer  public folder migrations to their customers," Schwartz said. "An MSP  would have to go in manually, go through hundreds of folders, and, per public  folder, it could take as much as four hours. We've now automated public folder  migration within the SkyKick Application Suite."
The automation works much like the initial suite's automated discovery  of e-mail addresses. Using SkyKick, a partner selling the migration to a  customer only needs that employee's e-mail and password to begin the process of  discovering all the e-mail addresses on the server and to kick off the migration  process. The e-mail/password combo does not need to be an administrator  credential.
The latest version of the suite now does the same with Public Folders. "If  they're on an Exchange Server, we will discover their Public Folders,"  Schwartz said
Arterian, a managed services  provider in the Seattle area, has been using SkyKick for six months and helped  test the Public Folder migration automation, said Jamison West, CEO and founder  of the Seattle-based MSP.
West confirmed that Public Folder migrations have been a burden, and  that about half of customers Arterian has migrated from on-premises Exchange to  Office 365 need to bring Public Folders with them.
"There was really no way to see what the permissions were. We'd go  manually to public properties, pull up the permissions and export the public  folders. It was just a purely manual, look at what the settings are, export and  do the settings again. It was very labor-intensive," West said.
With the new capability, Public Folder migrations "go as smoothly  as the end user migrations," said West, adding that the availability of  the tool was critical in a recent migration project that involved a lot of  important Public Folders. "We would have lost it, or had to charge more. It  saved a significant project for us."
The other major enhancement in SkyKick's update is the Project  Management Application (PMA), which is part of a redesigned partner portal. The PMA gives  partners real-time alerts about the status of migrations, automates some  previously manual tasks and allows partners to manage parts of the migration  project.
One critical new feature of the PMA is the ability for partners to  modify a migration order, such as adding, removing or changing forwarding  settings on mailboxes, once the migration has been scheduled but as late as  four hours before the migration start time, SkyKick executives said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 19, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The executive most closely associated with Dell's current channel  approach is moving on.
Greg Davis was the public face of Dell's partner program, helping to  launch Dell PartnerDirect in December 2007, to sell the program to a skeptical  channel and to advocate for it for the ensuing six years. 
With Dell now officially a private company, Davis on Monday sent out an  e-mail to partners that he is shifting to a new role as vice president for Software  and Peripherals at Dell. Filling in for Davis is Cheryl Cook, who becomes vice  president of Global Channels and Alliances for Dell.
Cook is an internal hire with external channel experience. Until this  week, she was vice president of Enterprise Solutions at Dell, but she  previously spent time at Sun Microsystems as senior vice president of Americas Sales,  a role that included responsibility for Sun's channel.
The role Cook will fill is slightly different from Davis'.
In the e-mail to partners, Davis explained one way the scope of Cook's  job will be narrowed. "Our regional channel leaders will continue in their  present roles, but will now report to regional Dell sales leadership. This  means they will be able to integrate more closely with our sales and product  teams, which will allow for faster feedback between partners and business unit  leaders," Davis wrote.
Specifically, that means channel executives Frank Vitagliano and Jim  DeFoe will report to North America sales leadership; Laurent Binetti, to  Europe/Middle East/Africa; and Richard Lee, to Asia/Pacific/Japan.
In another way, Cook's portfolio will be broader. "This team will  have responsibility for defining and delivering innovative programs, training  and certification and global marketing programs for our partners to grow,  differentiate, and flourish with Dell. Her organization will ensure a  consistent and coordinated approach to our Channel, Alliances, strategic ISV,  and OEM partners," Davis wrote.
Dell spokesperson Laura Thomas said that Davis had not had  responsibility for alliance partners and strategic ISVs.
Davis sought to assure partners that Dell's focus on the channel of the  last few years would continue. "Our channel strategy and the global nature  of our PartnerDirect program will stay the same. We will continue to focus on:  winning in the data center, investing in training, being easy to do business  with, and being your long-term partner. And PartnerDirect will continue to  enable the sale of end-to-end and point solutions through one simple,  consistent program," Davis wrote.
Davis leaves behind a much more robust partner program than the  unofficial program he started with. When Michael Dell unveiled his intentions  to turn his direct-sales empire into more of a channel company in mid-2007,  Dell already had about 30,000 partners.
Through nearly six years of constant effort, Dell has built its channel  into about 143,000 partners worldwide, and the company says that more than a  third of global commercial revenue flows through the channel now.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 19, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Steve Ballmer granted a series of interviews to The Wall Street Journal that resulted in an article over the weekend on how he decided to retire.
Ballmer's story,  corroborated for the WSJ's  Monica Langley by Microsoft board member John  Thompson, is that he came to a realization on a London street in May that Microsoft  might undergo its necessary transformations without him and all the old-guard  Microsoft baggage he carries. 
It's an interesting and very readable story. It's also corporate  board-level spin orchestrated by one of the cagiest and savviest companies in  the world. Count me as highly skeptical that it approaches the truth of what  happened.
That aside, I read this piece as Microsoft trying to communicate two  things to the world.
One message is that nothing was forced upon Microsoft's board by  outside investors, and that Ballmer's ouster, the executive shocker of the  summer, was just a logical outcome of orderly processes at mature company.
The other message is that nobody should expect Microsoft to abandon the  "devices and services" strategy that Ballmer put in place over the  last few years. (See my column, "34  Billion Reasons Microsoft's Next CEO Will Stay the Course," from last  week for more on this theme.)
Here's the key portion on devices and services from the WSJ's account:
Mr. Ballmer and his board have been in agreement: Microsoft, while  maintaining its strong software business, must shake up its management  structure and refocus on mobile devices and online services if it is to find  future profit growth and reduce its dependence on the fading PC market.
The board's beef was speed. The directors "didn't push Steve to  step down," says Mr. Thompson, a longtime technology executive who heads  the board's CEO-search committee, "but we were pushing him damn hard to go  faster."
Not only is devices and services what the board of directors wants for  Microsoft's future, it's something they will want faster from the next CEO.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 18, 20130 comments