Aspect Software this month renewed its Microsoft Partner Network  membership with an impressive 13 competencies. Even for a Microsoft National  Systems Integrator, that's a lot of competencies.
		Aspect, a provider of customer contact and workforce optimization  solutions, is based in Chelmsford, Mass. and has 1,900 employees worldwide. Microsoft  made an equity investment in Aspect in 2008 to guarantee a global partner for  delivering contact-center solutions based on the Microsoft unified  communications platform. The platform at the time was Microsoft Office  Communications Server 2007, a product that has morphed into Microsoft Lync  Server 2013.
		In the interim, Aspect has greatly expanded its Microsoft practice  beyond the call center. A major expertise build-out occurred when Aspect  acquired Quilogy Inc., a Microsoft NSI, in January 2010. Aspect is continuing  to invest in Microsoft training and certification internally, as well.
		As of this month, Aspect has seven gold competencies in the Microsoft  Partner Network -- Communications, Collaboration and Content, Digital  Marketing, Mobility, Business Intelligence, Customer Relationship Management,  and OEM. The company's six silver competencies are Application Development,  Data Platform, Application Integration, Midmarket Solution Provider, Hosting,  and Learning.
		That's way up from last year, when Aspect renewed its MPN membership  with three gold competencies and nine silver competencies. The golds at that  time were Communications, Portals and Collaboration and CRM.
		Microsoft global channel chief Jon Roskill said in a statement that  having a single gold competency puts partners in the top 1 percent of Microsoft's  partner ecosystem. Having more than one gold competency is even rarer  territory. In a global review of Microsoft's Pinpoint directory of partners  last year, RCP found only about 50  companies worldwide had more than half a dozen gold competencies.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 21, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft business partners are at the center of U.S. government  investigations into bribery allegations in three countries -- China, Romania and  Italy.
		The Wall Street Journal revealed the preliminary investigations this  week in an article about the inquiries by the Justice Department and the  Securities and Exchange Commission. The article is based on unnamed sources the  paper says are "familiar with the probe." The investigations involve  the Foreign Corrupt  Practices Act, a 1977 law prohibiting bribes to foreign government by  employees or agents of U.S. companies.
		Microsoft confirmed the existence of the investigations in a blog entry posted Tuesday by John Frank, Microsoft vice president and deputy general  counsel.
		"Today, the Wall Street Journal reported that the U.S. government  is reviewing allegations that Microsoft business partners in three countries  may have engaged in illegal activity, and if they did, whether Microsoft played  any role in these alleged incidents," Frank wrote.
		Frank's blog noted the matters raised by the paper are "important"  and should be reviewed by Microsoft and the government, but cautioned, "It  is also important to remember that it is not unusual for such reviews to find  that an allegation was without merit." He suggested Microsoft would  cooperate with government investigators.
		The picture painted by the Journal's sources gives Microsoft a  controlling role in both the China and Italy cases, with business partners as  pawns.
		According to the paper's account, the Chinese case involved what  sounded like not a channel partner but a Microsoft contractor. "The  tipster, who worked to land potential new business, alleged that an executive  of Microsoft's China subsidiary instructed the tipster to offer kickbacks to  Chinese officials in return for signing off on software contracts," the  paper reported, quoting unnamed sources familiar with the matter. The tipster's  contract ended in 2008. According to the newspaper, Microsoft hired an outside  law firm to investigate that allegation. The 10-month internal investigation concluded  in 2010 and found no evidence of wrongdoing, according to the paper.
		In Italy, the case involves consultants specializing in customer  loyalty programs. The allegations that U.S. officials are investigating in  Italy involve consultants giving gifts and trips on behalf of Microsoft to  Italian officials to win government contracts, the Journal said.
		The newspaper's description of the Romanian allegations is more  ambiguous about Microsoft's possible role. According to the sources quoted by  the newspaper, resellers offered bribes to win software deals with Romania's  Ministry of Communications.
		No business partners are identified in the report.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 20, 20131 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		After reporting earlier this week that Microsoft is dropping OEM  licensing costs to goose Windows 8 sales, Digitimes today is quoting channel  retailers on the pricing sweet spot the move allows them to target.
		The magic number is $506, the publication reported that its  Taiwan-based channel retail sources say. That represents a price drop of about 10  percent.
		The publication earlier this week reported that  Microsoft will cut the OEM price for Windows 8 by $20 starting in April or May.  The price cut will apply to Windows 8 notebooks with touchscreens that are 11.6  inches or smaller, according to the report. Systems based on the new price  could start appearing in June.
		The Wall Street Journal is reporting similar price cuts this week.
		The price cut leaks, which Microsoft is not confirming, comes amid a  new round of gloomy  projections for the PC market in 2013.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 07, 20133 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Business continuity is a huge and mature opportunity for the channel.  Much of the selling process centers on technology questions and setup. Doing  that part right is critical, but the opposite end of the process often gets  overlooked.
		Time and again, it's lack of attention to three final steps that leads  to a data disaster when recovering from a physical disaster.
		
				1. Scheduling a Full Disaster Rehearsal
				
Planning and installing a business continuity solution is  time-intensive and exhausting. Once the system appears to be up and running,  there's temptation on both the partner and customer sides of the deal to move  on. The revenues are booked, and backups look like they're occurring correctly.  This is no time to quit.
		
				
				Bringing business systems back online is a complex process. Servers  have startup dependencies that require other software to be loaded in the right  order. Scripting the sequence can be tricky. No matter how thorough the  planning, the customer may not realize a certain essential business database  isn't covered until after a restoration. Every plan must be tested as  completely as possible. Real-world disasters throw unique complexities into the  system. Getting as many of the regular complexities as possible ironed out of  the process beforehand frees partners and customers up to deal with only the  novel issues that a real disaster might present.
		Smart partners also know that getting a full business continuity system  in place is an iterative process. Listing and addressing the issues that  emerged in the disaster rehearsal is only part of the process. Running the  disaster test again and again until no issues emerge is the end of the process.
		
				2. Testing Fail-Back
				
If the test shows that the mission-critical application server fails  over successfully to the backup server, that's an essential element of the  business continuity solution. There's another critical piece that sometimes  falls through the testing cracks. Will the system fail back to the original  server gracefully without losing data the secondary system accumulated while it  was handling the workload? It's important to not only consider, but also to  test, how fail-back works. A key wrinkle is that the system might be returning to  a production server that's no longer identical to the one that originally ran  the system.
		
				3. Scheduling the Next Test
				
The initial set of full-recovery rehearsals are absolutely critical.  But they can't be the last rehearsals. In addition to ensuring that backups  occur on schedule, it's important to develop a schedule to retest recovery  scenarios at regular intervals. Things change fast in business. Server hardware  gets replaced, business critical applications and databases get upgraded,  important applications move in or out of the cloud. The business-continuity  solution has to be retested to make sure it's still capturing the full current  environment
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 05, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Through an agreement with Verizon Wireless, Tech Data Corp. partners  will now be able to activate 3G and 4G mobile services on Apple iPads and other  tablets.
		The activations come through Tech Data's year-old TDMobility unit, a  joint venture with Brightstar. Charles Kriete, executive vice president of  TDMobility, said in an interview that about 700 partners are fully authorized through  TDMobility to sell solutions, but that participation is open to Tech Data's  entire 60,000 partner ecosystem. He said TDMobility has been adding between 50  and 100 partners a month in North America.
		With Verizon on board, TDMobility now works with all the biggest  carriers in the United States. TDMobility was already working with AT&T, Sprint  and T-Mobile. However, Verizon is a big deal for TDMobility and its partners because  of the size of its network and customer base, its large corporate presence and  the ability to activate iPads. AT&T, the other major corporate account  carrier, does not currently permit iPad activation through TDMobility. Sprint  does allow iPad activation through TDMobility's infrastructure.
		"Verizon has really stepped up in the channel, enabling the  activation of a complete portfolio of mobile tablet solutions, including the  iPad, on the largest LTE network for the VAR community," Kriete said.
		The Verizon capabilities add a new type of business for TDMobility  partners with higher margin, Kriete said. "Currently, we're doing around  70,000 tablet sales per month. Approximately 20,000 of those are embedded with  3G/4G, so they're capable of activation," he said. Any 3G/4G activations  will be new business, he said. "We'd be coming from zero as far as the  activating opportunity."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 04, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		When it comes to Windows Small Business Server, there are few  independent observers as authoritative as Harry Brelsford, founder of SMB  Nation.
And when Harry starts posting comparisons of where Office 365 stands  now on a maturity scale relative to historical releases of Small Business  Server, it's worth paying attention.
In Harry's estimation, the latest version of Office 365 is comparable  to SBS 2000, just when SBS was, in his words, "starting to rock."
Check out Harry's full chart treatment on the topic at his blog. It's an interesting perspective on the upside for partners who position  themselves to take advantage of Office 365's opportunities.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 04, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				The Register sent Andrew Orlowski to Mobile World Congress 2013 in  Barcelona, where he filed a report on Windows Phone called, "So much noise on WinMob, but Microsoft's silent  on lovely WinPhone."
		Orlowski brings history, market context and familiarity with the senior  Microsoft executives involved to draw a nuanced portrait of the state of  Windows Phone 8 and the marketing efforts surrounding it.
		The upshot is that he's surprised at how little effort Microsoft seems  to be putting into the everyday work of marketing a mobile platform, such as  having a conspicuous presence at major shows like MWC and being  hyper-responsive to carriers' every complaint. (He does acknowledge in passing  Microsoft's massive primetime ad campaigns in a way that discounts their  importance.)
		He throws off several interesting asides in the article, as well. For one  example, Nokia seems to be a very happy partner. For another, I've argued on  several occasions that Microsoft is playing a long game, both with Windows  Phone and the Microsoft  Surface. Orlowski goes a little Occam's Razor on that idea:
		  "Now either Microsoft is playing a very long  game, or perhaps it really doesn't care too much about winning here -- a  muddling success is good enough for all the managers involved. This kind of  attitude is common in bureaucracies -- keep your head down -- it's a form of risk  aversion. But when the product is really good,  it's baffling. Perhaps your career might actually (radical idea coming up) benefit from success?"
		This piece doesn't shake my sense that a long  game is a good framework to consider Microsoft's market moves in mobile. But  Orlowski does raise a number of very valid questions about Microsoft's ability  to follow through.
		If you're interested in Windows Phone 8's prospects and the state of  its marketing, this article is worth a read.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 28, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		In the fight for cloud share, Microsoft is finally unlimbering one of  its best weapons: a uniquely huge channel with unrivaled SMB reach.
		Since Microsoft first joined the cloud productivity suite market with  the Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) in mid-2008, the overall deal  with partners has been that Microsoft would bill the customers, while partners  would get advisor fees and the opportunity to sell add-on services around the  edges.
		And since the beginning, partners have been saying, in effect, "We're  interested, but with the nature of the cloud, we'd be far more interested if we  controlled the billing."
		BPOS and its successor, Office 365 launched in June 2011, have been on  the market for five years. To take the last 12 months as an example, Microsoft  says 22,000 partners have sold Microsoft public cloud services, and the  ecosystem for Office 365 -- when you add in training and supplemental services  partners -- is about 50,000 partners. Impressive numbers, sure, but nowhere near  leveraging Microsoft's frequently-cited partner base of 600,000 companies  worldwide.
		Jon Roskill stepped into the role of global channel chief for Microsoft  in late June 2010 at the height of Microsoft's "all in" cloud mania.  He immediately faced insistent questions (from RCP as well as many partners)  about when Microsoft would let partners handle customer billing, and if not,  why?
		      |  | 
      | Jon Roskill | 
		After getting his bearings in the job, Roskill let out a hint in a Town  Hall meeting in November 2010 that Microsoft was thinking seriously about making direct billing  possible. Today, two-and-a-quarter years later, partners can bill customers  directly with the availability of Office 365 Open and Full Packaged Product.  Microsoft told partners at its Worldwide Partner Conference in July that Office  365 Open was coming, but it's taken seven months to arrive.
		In general, Microsoft is now enabling partners to own the billing  process, capture top-line revenue and margin on the resale, sell and service  customers in ways that make sense for cloud business models, and earn rebates  and co-op funding. The Open Licensing option is in addition to the existing  advisor model, which will continue, along with a syndication option for about  100 partners worldwide and specialty programs for government and education  partners.
		In a telephone interview Tuesday, Roskill said, "It's something  that has been a bit of time coming, but something that we're really excited  about because we think it's really going to open up the whole next wave of  Microsoft partners to get in and start selling our cloud offering."
		Between mid-2010 and this July, Roskill contended that Microsoft  recognized two main things as an organization.
		"We've noticed since early on that deals that have a partner  involved wind up with a larger deal size. They wind up getting deployed more  quickly and we wind up with higher customer satisfaction. So everyone is very  aligned that having partners involved in these deals is a good thing for  everybody," Roskill said.
		The other realization involves the importance of small and midsize  businesses for cloud suites. "If you look now at the data on Office 365  customers, what we see is that over 90 percent of them are from businesses with  50 or fewer employees. Small business is at the core of this product customer  base, and the fact that we're talking 50 or smaller, it really does show the  partner opportunity is huge," Roskill said.
		As for critics who say Microsoft was too late last July, let alone now,  in delivering direct billing to meet demand for cloud suites, Roskill strongly  disagrees: "Although we're selling a lot of [Office 365], the penetration  is still in low single digits. So there's a great opportunity for us and  partners to make a lot of money here."
		The more specific delay between the WPC announcement and today's  delivery involved internal engineering and process changes. "The licensing  keys, the commerce platform and the product itself all need to basically come  together," Roskill said. "The old world of channel and product being  able to be separate is no more. Core changes had to be made in the product by  the development team to be able to accommodate this, and we had to make some  changes in our commerce platform."
		Roskill is setting an aggressive goal for partner participation in the  next five months. From the baseline of 20,000 partners selling Office 365 in  the last year, Roskill said, "My expectation is that we'll double that  reach by the time we get to WPC."
		That projection is based on a very specific, and strategic set of  partners -- partners who handle Open License transactions for other products  such as Office, Windows Server and Exchange. Microsoft has about 4,000 of those  partners in managed relationships, mostly through telePAMs, and 100,000 Open  partners who work exclusively through distributors.
		"I think the big deal here is getting that 100,000-plus Open  transaction partners into the cloud game. They're sitting there on the  sidelines right now. We want them in the cloud game on our side," Roskill  said.
		Some of those partners provided statements of support to Microsoft for  the Wednesday announcement that were more revealing than the usual fodder -- a  testament to how big a deal this is for the Microsoft channel.
		Christopher Pyle, president and CEO of Champion Solutions Group,  emphasized how Microsoft always talks about choice but is now actually  delivering it in the cloud.
		"The biggest thing for our company -- and the channel overall -- is  that Office 365 Open gives us the power of choice," Pyle said. "We  can choose how we want to work with Microsoft and how we want to work with our  customers. If we want to provide value-added services on top of Office 365 all  on one bill, we can do that. On the other hand, if you don't want everything on  one bill, you can stick with the Partner of Record model."
		Others praised Microsoft for responding to five years' worth of partner  requests.
		"Office 365 Open proves to us that Microsoft is listening to its  partners and sees value in partners delivering total solutions to their  customers," said Andy Vabulas, CEO of I.B.I.S. Inc.
		On the SMB side, an Ingram Micro executive in the Netherlands related  Office 365 Open to the hole left in the Microsoft portfolio by the sunsetting  of Windows Small Business Server. "In the Netherlands, Windows Small  Business Server is/was very popular," Storm Rohnstrom said in his  statement. "Given that SBS will no longer be available in Open License, we  see a huge possibility for end users who formerly would buy SBS server. Now  Office 365 not only 'ties' them to their reseller, but partners can also give  service."
		Even before any potential bump in the number of Microsoft partners  reselling Office 365 because of the direct billing option, Microsoft argues it  has the biggest cloud partner ecosystem by far.
		"We believe [Office 365]'s ecosystem is more than 10 times the next  biggest competitor. More than 10 times Google, more than 10 times Salesforce, more than  10 times Amazon. If we can double this in the next five months, obviously that makes  us more than 20 times. I think this is a really important milestone in our  establishing the channel cloud leadership that we're going after," Roskill  said. "The way that we're going to get to [cloud leadership] is through  the way we always have from a Microsoft perspective, which is driving partner  scale."
		
				
						Related:
				
		
		
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 27, 20132 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I've been using Windows 8 almost daily for about three months, but it  turns out this old dog can still learn some new tricks.
		The March issue of our sister publication, Redmond, has a cover story with 20 tips for Windows 8. It's written  by tech pundit and New York Times columnist David Pogue.
		Pogue spotlighted a number of great features in the piece. I got the  most out of his suggestions for type-searching (No. 4), ignoring the three  control panels (No. 7), charms bar keystrokes (No. 11) and flipping ahead in  Internet Explorer (No. 14).
		Those who dislike the look and feel of Windows 8 would like Pogue's  entries on putting the Start menu back (No. 1), skipping the lock screen (No.  2) and skipping the Start screen (No. 3).
		The tips aren't all business either. Check out No. 12 on the camera  self-timer, No. 13 on free custom magazines and No. 15 on panorama photos.
		If you've played with Windows 8 or support customers who run it, I'd  wager you'll find something new in the article, too.
		P.S. While I'm plugging a great magazine, I should point out two other  items in Redmond in March. Windows  Insider columnist Greg Shields has an interesting piece about monitors in the  Windows 8 era, while back-page columnist Mary Jo Foley looks at what it might  take for Surface to sell.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 27, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Do you think Jon Roskill is getting tired of critics hating on the  Houston-in-July choice for the 2013 Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference?
		"Everyone asks me, 'Houston in July, is it really hot?'"  Roskill, corporate vice president of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group,  said during an MPN [Microsoft Partner Network] Live webcast for partners  Tuesday.
		"We have got the Minute Maid stadium. We can close it and air  condition it, so don't worry," Roskill joked. Minute Maid Park is the home  of the Houston Astros and features a 242-foot-high retractable roof over its natural-turf  field.
		Microsoft's WPC takes place  July 7-11 in Houston. Although  Microsoft regularly holds the mid-summer conference in more northern cities  with cooler average weather, including Toronto, Boston, Denver and Minneapolis,  2013 won't mark WPC's first visit to Houston. Microsoft held it there in 2008.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 26, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Apps are a key to selling customers on Windows 8, according to a panel  of partners gathered by Microsoft.
		Danny Burlage, CTO at Wortell; Scott Gosling, Microsoft practice  manager at Data#3; and Carl Mazzanti, CEO of eMazzanti Technologies joined  Microsoft executives on Tuesday for a webcast session of MPN [Microsoft Partner  Network] Live about Windows 8 sales.
		Mazzanti said his Hoboken, N.J.-based company had just closed a major  deal involving Windows 8 seats at an architectural firm. Key to the sale was a  killer Windows 8 app.
		"They're going to be able to take their tablet into a building and  move [the device] around to see what the building looks like for 3-D rendering,"  Mazzanti said. The right apps, leveraging portability of the new form factors  and touch, can lead to "lightbulbs going on" for customers, Mazzanti  said.
		For Netherlands-based Wortell, Burlage said a program investment by  Microsoft to support partner app development is extremely helpful.
		Microsoft calls the program Windows Accelerate. In addition to  proof-of-concept and production pilots for Windows 8 deployments, the program  includes help for designing and piloting custom apps.
		"We're engaged in about 20 of those projects," Burlage said. "Building  an app really accelerates the customer going into Windows 8 at all. We built an  app for a municipality and they right now decided to move over to Windows 8."
		An added advantage, Burlage said, is owning the intellectual property  of the app at the end of the process, enabling reuse of the code to support  apps for other customers with similar needs. Burlage also said some of Wortell's  apps are driving additional Azure and Office 365 business by using those cloud platforms  on the back end.
		Data#3 in Australia is seeing a fairly robust business in Windows 8,  including a massive education deployment currently underway, Gosling said.  While apps help attract new deployment customers, Gosling noted two other ways  that partners are using apps in Windows 8. One is to use the Microsoft Store to  take a partner's IP public and make additional money on some good code. The  other is to use the Sideloading capabilities in Windows 8 to distribute custom  apps to customer devices.
		Erwin Visser, general manager of Windows Commercial Marketing for  Microsoft, said partners who are achieving the best results with Windows 8 are  sending their sales reps to meetings ready to "show customers Windows 8,  Windows 8 devices and a prototype app."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 26, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Nokia is taking its global portfolio of Lumia phones, and the  underlying Windows Phone 8 platform, to more countries.
		Nokia on Monday announced two new lower-priced Nokia Lumia phones. Rolled  out at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain, were the Lumia 720 and the  Lumia 520. In a recent research report, IDC estimated that Nokia accounts for  about three-quarters of Windows Phone sales.
		      |  | 
      | The Lumia 720 | 
		The 720 is billed as a midrange phone and will be available this  quarter in Hong Kong, Vietnam and Singapore and next quarter in Europe, Africa,  China, India and other Asian countries. Nokia describes the 520 as its "most  affordable Windows Phone 8 smartphone" and plans to make it available this  quarter in Hong Kong and Vietnam and next quarter in Europe, China, India,  Latin America and Africa.
		      |  | 
      | The Lumia 520 | 
		Nokia also is working with T-Mobile to roll out the Lumia 520 with  T-Mobile in the United States.
		Both phones come in five colors. In Euros, the Lumia 720 will have a  base price of 249 and the Lumia 520 will cost 139. Neither price includes taxes  or subsidies.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 25, 20131 comments