Partners that have been slow to embrace the new Microsoft  Partner Network logos and branding on their Web sites are in good company.
		Even Microsoft's National System Integrators (NSIs), the  high-profile group of U.S.  partners, seem less than fully on board with the MPN logos and branding nearly  a year and a half after Microsoft released them. An RCP review of NSI Web sites this  month found that about a third of NSIs are still using outdated branding or messaging.
		In November 2010, Microsoft formally released the Microsoft  Partner Network logo for partners' use and began phasing in a new competency-based  certification system. Rather than certifying partners at the company level,  such as Microsoft Certified Partner and Microsoft Gold Certified Partner, as it  had done for many years, Microsoft began certifying partners as silver or gold  in specific competencies. Partners had a year to make the transition, and all references  to Microsoft Certified Partner or Microsoft Gold Certified Partner should have  been gone from partners' collateral and Web sites in November 2011.
		Microsoft surfaced the issue in February, when Eric Ligman,  the director or Partner Experience for Microsoft, wrote a blog  post warning partners they needed to get the old Certified logos off their  Web sites.
		Karl Noakes, general manager of Microsoft Worldwide Partner  Strategy and Programs, assured  RCP that there was no crackdown and that Microsoft didn't view the issue as  a particular problem.
		But the mini-flap highlights that the transition is  happening more slowly than Microsoft may have hoped.
		Noakes declined to estimate how many of Microsoft's tens of  thousands of formerly Certified or Gold Certified partners were still using old  logos. "There's no easy way to [quantify] that," he rightly noted.
		Still, a look at the NSIs gives a good indication. NSIs generally  have their own dedicated national Partner Account Manager, in many cases among  other regional PAMs, and frequent contact with Microsoft at many levels. In  other words, they are heavily engaged and have a lot of resources dedicated to  the Microsoft relationship. Whatever the percentage of NSIs still using old  logos, the percentage among the broader Microsoft population is likely much,  much higher.
		Of the 33 NSIs listed in RCP's  special report earlier this month, 12 were still sporting old logos or descriptions  dating from the old Microsoft Partner Program.
		We're not out to embarrass any particular partners; we're  just making a point about relative adoption of the logos and branding, so we  won't name names. Here's how the old logos and descriptions shook out.
		  -  Four of the companies had the old Microsoft Gold Certified  Partner logos splashed on their homepage.
 
 
-  Three NSIs used old Microsoft Gold Certified Partner logos  in a list of vendor partners or on another secondary Web page.
 
 
-  Another three companies had a mix of new logos with an old  logo tucked away somewhere on the page or with text describing the company's "Gold  Certified" status. One of those companies had the sticky situation of  having had a Partner of the Year badge built around the Microsoft Gold  Certified Partner branding, making it difficult to remove that logo without  de-emphasizing the accomplishment.
 
 
-  Two other NSIs had outdated descriptions and no Microsoft  logos at all.
On the flip side, 12 of the NSI partners embraced the new  logos on their Web sites, with several featuring the new logos prominently on  their homepages (three of those are also counted above among companies using a  mix of new and old logos). A few other NSIs took the logo styling and altered it  to fit the styles of their homepages -- for example, making the MPN logo  monochrome so as not to clash with the NSI's own color palette.
		The balance of the NSIs are either so focused on one  Microsoft product or another that they use those product logos rather than MPN  logos, or their sites appear aimed at establishing their own branding or broad  expertise to the extent that they don't use Microsoft branding at all.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on April 09, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		One of Microsoft's highest-profile Dynamics CRM partners is  looking to expand its business with an Apple iPad app to assist road warriors.
		
				Sonoma Partners on Thursday unveiled the Mobile Sales Kit, which is billed as an "enterprise-grade  application for the Apple iPad" that will "replace the stacks of  collateral a salesperson would carry on a typical visit."
		The Mobile Sales Kit, which sports a "Metro"-style  interface on the iPad, synchronizes with Microsoft SharePoint to provide a  salesperson with access to documents and collateral while offline.
		The app includes intellectual property from Sonoma Partners,  a Chicago-based company that is a two-time winner of worldwide Microsoft CRM  Partner of the Year awards. (Redmond Channel Partner magazine also named Sonoma  Partners Principal Mike Snyder one of the Top  10 Microsoft Partner MVPs in 2011.)
		The Mobile Sales Kit also employs Google Analytics to allow users'  marketing departments to determine which parts of the app are getting the  heaviest use from the field.
		According to a statement about the app, Sonoma's plans for monetizing the kit include  deployment, customization and training.
		Sonoma Partners' swing to bring its Microsoft expertise to  the iPad shouldn't be read as an abandonment of the Windows platform, either.  The company is already building expertise in bringing the as-yet-unreleased  Windows 8 tablet into its solutions.
		Last month, Sonoma Partners announced it had developed the "Ultimate  Beer Ranger," a Windows 8 tablet app for the New Belgium Brewing Co. --  the Colorado-based maker of Fat Tire beer. The Ultimate Beer Ranger is designed  to bring Dynamics CRM information and capabilities to New Belgium's  tablet-using representatives.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on April 06, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		If this one slipped by you, it slipped by me as well. But apparently  a lot of people are thinking hard about using game-like achievements in a  corporate setting as rewards for employees and partners. One name for the  concept is "gamification."
		Microsoft is among the hard thinkers. On March 27, the  company updated  a "Visual Studio Achievements Extension," which brings Xbox-like  achievements to developers. (It had been released as a beta in January.) Developers  can unlock 32 achievement badges with funky names like "Close To The Metal,"  "Stubby" or "Interrupting Cow" that display on their Channel 9 profiles.
		
				
				Why does this matter to Microsoft partners, especially those  not immersed in the Visual Studio subculture? Larry Louisiana connected the  dots this week in a blog post for  Magenic, a Microsoft  National Systems Integrator partner based in Minneapolis.
		In the post, "Windows  8 Gamification Approach," Louisiana  writes:
		  "What makes this interesting to me is the leveraging of  the Microsoft LIVE account, so that achievements can be tracked and shared as  claims in a claims-based authorization/authentication approach."
		He continues:
		  "Claims-based authentication will allow you to pass  your achievements around your organization and/or partners if you so choose,  and across devices like smartphones, tablets, Xboxes and PCs. Displaying them,  deciding the metrics, and defining the goals are obviously up to you and your  organization, but the easiest way to go about it is to build from an  architectural pattern that facilitates these changes internally."
		Lots more nitty gritty in the Magenic post. Plus, Larry left  an Easter Egg at the end as a reward for reading the post -- your very own gamification  badge.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on April 05, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				Pariveda  Solutions, one of 33  Microsoft National Systems Integrator partners, is opening an office in Denver, solidifying an  already existing presence in the city.
		The Dallas-based company announced the move on Wednesday.  The formal move comes a month after Microsoft recognized Pariveda's work in Denver with a 2012  Technology Innovation Award for a global Microsoft Dynamics CRM system for Ball  Corp.
		
				
				"Our local Denver  team is extremely excited about our growth and having this new space will fuel  new connections in the community," said DJ Wardynski, vice president of the  Denver Office,  in a statement.
		Pariveda CEO Bruce Ballengee added that the location will  increase Pariveda's profile in the Denver  business network. According to the news release on the office opening, Pariveda  has eight offices around the country.
		Pariveda has gold competencies in the Microsoft Partner  Network in Business Intelligence, Content Management, CRM, Digital Marketing,  Portals and Collaboration, Software Development and Web Development. Microsoft  also named Pariveda to the Windows    Azure Circle in January.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on April 04, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		This year should be the year that "smart connected  devices," an IDC term for PCs, smartphones and media tablets, will pass 1  billion device shipments, the market research firm says.
		In a table released this week, IDC projected that unit  shipments for 2012 would hit 1.1 billion in 2012, including 660 million  smartphones, 371 million PCs and 106 million media tablets.
		
		
		
				
				
				
						Chart:        Worldwide Smart Connected Device Shipments,                                2010-2016 (Unit Millions)
						Description: This data comes from IDC's WW Quarterly PC Tracker, WW Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, and WW Quarterly Media Tablet and eReader Tracker.
						Tags: Tracker, mobile phones, tablets, forecast, PCs, devices, consumer, IDC ...
						Author: IDC
						
								charts powered by iCharts
						
				 
		 
		Overall shipments for 2011 were 916 million units, good for  $489 billion in revenues. IDC predicts compound annual growth of 15.4 percent  over the next five years to 1.84 billion units in 2016.
		
				
				While PCs are expected to continue their growth, media  tablets are expected to grow much faster. But IDC anticipates that smartphones  will dominate the shipment figures, with that category alone accounting for a  billion devices a year by 2015.
		The prospects for the Windows PC? Diminished.
		"The once-dominant Windows on x86 platform, consisting  of PCs running the Windows operating system on any x86-compatible CPU, [will  slip] from a leading 35.9% share in 2011 down to 25.1% in 2016," IDC said  in a statement.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 29, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Dell, in an effort to give its partners a way to  differentiate themselves on cloud, added a Cloud Services and Solutions  Certification today.
		The new PartnerDirect certification employs an interesting  taxonomy that encompasses the different roles that partners play with the  cloud. Called "pillars," the three different roles are Cloud Builder,  Cloud Provider and Cloud Service Enabler.
		
				
				The Cloud Builder pillar covers partners that offer services  to design and develop a cloud infrastructure for customers. Cloud Provider  partners operate a network operations center (NOC), which includes some Dell  technologies but can also include other technologies. A Cloud Service Enabler  is an aggregator and broker of cloud technologies and services.
		What's refreshing and realistic about the certification is  that Dell is acknowledging that partners will present customers with a full  portfolio of technologies from many vendors and that customers still may want  to see a certification from a major vendor to establish the partner's  credibility.
		The program is starting in North   America and will be available worldwide. Certification benefits  include preferred pricing, financing, co-marketing funds and account  management.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 29, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		All those who were pining for Microsoft's Courier can now  try an approximation of the interface on an Apple iPad.
		Courier was Microsoft's skunkworks tablet project that got  killed in favor of the all-out effort to bring the tablet computing style to  the whole Windows world in Windows 8.
		The Courier concept involved a tablet that looked like an  open notebook with two main parts to the screen and digital ink.
		When Microsoft decided to go another way, a few people took  notice and started a company, Taposé (a play on "touch" and "juxtapose") to bring  the concept to the iPad. (No digital ink support, though.)
		
				
						
								|   [Click on image for larger view.]
 | 
						    | Taposé app on the iPad. (Source: Taposé) | 
				
		
		If there were any doubt of the product's Courier origin, it's  dispelled on the company's About page:
		  "Team Taposé must first give credit to the once hyped  Courier project, as it provided the initial inspiration for what was to come.  Benjamin Monnig saw the Courier as a revolutionary idea and knew it still had a  place in the current tablet market, although Microsoft had killed the project  soon after the announcement of Apple's iPad."
		On Tuesday, Taposé blogged that it had finally won  approval to go on sale in the Apple App Store after "four months, three  rejections, one appeal win and then reversal of said appeal, management UI  review, and then one more final review for good measure."
		The app costs $2.99. Intriguing, but can anyone help me understand  how this would get past Microsoft's intellectual property lawyer army?
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 28, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		The Nokia Lumia 900, the Windows Phone that is shouldering  the smartphone market share dreams of both Microsoft and Nokia, will come to the  United States  on April 8.
		In blogging about the release date this morning, AT&T  added two twists: The device will be available in white and the price is  extremely aggressive at $99.99 with a two-year contract.
		
      |  | 
      | Nokia Lumia 900 | 
		"Nokia Lumia 900 won the Best of CES award for smartphones  and is more than just a killer phone at a killer pricepoint," wrote Jonathan Church, AT&T director of product marketing management.  Michael Stroh, Microsoft's main Windows Phone blogger, also took  up the pricing talking point, calling the phone "an astounding deal."
		The Lumia 900 will be the third of Nokia's Windows Phones to  be released as the Finnish company relaunches its smartphone line around the  Windows Phone-first strategy, as opposed to the homegrown smartphone operating  systems the company had previously ridden to first place in the worldwide smartphone  market. The decisions have caused the phonemaker to get hammered by investors,  although it's still far too early to call the strategy either a success or  failure.
		The previous flagship, the Lumia 800, was available only  outside the United States.  The Nokia  Lumia 710 came to the United    States via T-Mobile in January. While  inexpensive at $49.99, the Lumia 710 (like the Lumia 800) had no front-facing  camera, an odd design choice given  Microsoft's emphasis on Microsoft Lync and its acquisition of Skype.
		The Lumia 900 does have the front-facing camera, along with  an 8-megapixel rear-facing camera with a Carl Zeiss wide-angle lens. The device  will also support Nokia's new Lumia-specific app, Creative  Studio, which applies and displays photo effects to the viewfinder prior to  taking a picture. Other features of the Lumia 900 include 4G LTE support, a  4.3-inch AMOLED ClearBlack Display and a 1.4 GHz Snapdragon processor. The  device comes with 16 GB of memory, a limitation compared to the industry  standard iPhone 4S, which is available with 16, 32 or 64 GB.
		Pre-orders for the Lumia 900 will be available to qualified  business customers with wireless service discounts starting  March 30. The  cyan and black versions of the Lumia 900 will be available in AT&T stores  on April 8, and the white model will be available on April 22.
		Also on April 8, AT&T will begin selling the massive HTC  Titan II, the second generation of the 4.7-inch Windows Phone. The new  version features a 16-megapixel camera and is priced at $199.99 with a two-year  contract.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 26, 20125 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		The Microsoft Office 365 full-court press is on. About nine  months after launching the rebranded and upgraded online business productivity  suite, Microsoft is finally giving the product the advertising air cover it  needs to succeed.
		It seems like nearly every consumer or general business  Web site I visit these days has a Microsoft Office 365 advertisement. (Why this  didn't start last July, I have no idea.)
		That said, I was curious to see how prominently partners  figure into the sales mix once a customer clicks through one of these ads. A  quick click on one suggests that Microsoft views the partner role at that stage  of the sales process as fairly minimal.
		Looking at the landing page, I found a lot of information  about the different plans and was also immediately invited to a direct sales  chat session for more information.
		Partner references on that landing page? Zero.
		If a customer happens to know they're looking for partner  help, they can find partners by clicking on the "Support" button in  the horizontal navbar and scrolling down to "Find a partner" and "Partner  deployment support."
		A FAQ section also starts referencing partners about halfway  down the page as the scenarios become more complicated. Microsoft is  specifically recommending partner involvement for enterprise customers  migrating from BPOS, for deployment services, for migration services and for  custom development projects. The FAQ provides several contextual links to  Microsoft Pinpoint.
		What's your take? Is Office 365 the Microsoft channel's  direct sales nightmare or is Microsoft putting an appropriate amount of  emphasis on partners in this one stage of the sales and marketing process? And  is a rising tide of attention from the ads in the last few weeks leading to  more customer interest in your services as a partner? Let me know in the  comments below or at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 22, 20123 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft used the kick-off of its Convergence conference  today to update the Dynamics roadmap. The upshot: Cloud is still key but Redmond intends to keep  using the hybrid cloud/on-premise story as a differentiator.
		In a keynote, Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner  reiterated Microsoft's bullish view on the cloud market by extrapolating on  some Forrester Research projections.
		"Forrester [said cloud is] going to go from a $40  billion industry to a $240 billion industry just by 2020. We actually think  that number is light, maybe even by two, at the speed that we're seeing the  cloud take hold," Turner said.
		
				
				Against that backdrop, Microsoft Business Solutions President  Kirill Tatarinov said the broad plans Microsoft laid out at Convergence a year  ago to deliver cloud solutions with robust on-premise options are still in  place.
		"We made some significant statements at Convergence  last year, and this year we're essentially telling you how we're continuing to  deliver in Microsoft Dynamics on a cloud-based approach," Tatarinov said  in his keynote.
		"The world of business solutions as it relates to cloud  is notoriously complex. And as we've worked with many hundreds and thousands of  customers around the world to understand what their needs are that are related  to the cloud, we're finding that most people really want to see mixed  scenarios, and mixed workloads," he said. "And that is  precisely where we're uniquely positioned, and enable people to deliver mixed  workloads, some of which are running into the cloud."
		Specifically, Microsoft provided five Dynamics roadmap  updates:
		  -  Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 R2 will be available worldwide  in the fourth quarter of 2012. Planned enhancements include multichannel retail  capabilities with Web storefronts and "RoleTailored, in-context business  intelligence" based on SQL Server technologies.
 
 
-  Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013 and Microsoft Dynamics GP 2013  will be generally available in the fourth quarter of 2012. Both products will  be cloud-enabled for Windows Azure and optimized for small and midsize  businesses.
 
 
-  A beta release of Dynamics NAV 2013 is planned for May.
 
 
-  The next Microsoft Dynamics CRM service update will come  in the fourth quarter.
The company also provided some new Dynamics CRM momentum  numbers. The product is up to 33,000 customers and 2.25 million users.  Microsoft did not break out online versus on-premises customers or users.
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 19, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Tribridge, which became one of the three Microsoft Master VARs late last year, signed up a Sales Affiliate  this month.
		Tampa, Fla.-based Tribridge announced last week that 360 Consulting LLC had agreed to join its program.
		Master VARs are able to create their own  Microsoft-sanctioned networks of smaller Dynamics partners, called Sales  Affiliates, throughout the United    States. The smaller companies leverage the  Master VAR's centralized marketing, support, operations and training. In  addition to Tribridge, the other Master VARs are SBS  Group and Socius.
		
				
				This is the first sales affiliate that Tribridge has  announced for its network. 360 Consulting provides Microsoft Dynamics GP and  Microsoft custom application services for small and midsize organizations in Oklahoma, Texas, Wyoming and Arkansas,  according to the release.
		"This new relationship is an opportunity for Tribridge  to extend our geographic reach in the Central Region and provide customers with  the high-quality service and additional industry expertise 360 Consulting  brings to the table," said Jeff Lynn, director of business integration for  Tribridge,  in a statement.
		Tony Prelesnick, senior partner for 360 Consulting, said in the  statement that his company is looking to boost sales by leveraging Tribridge's  national brand and selling Tribridge's broader suite of services.
		In an interview in December, Tribridge Chairman and CEO Tony  DiBenedetto suggested his 400-employee company's goals for adding Sales  Affiliates were modest in 2012.
		"Our initial review of the partners would say we're not  going to have hundreds of Sales Affiliates. We do think there will be tens of  them," DiBenedetto said. "I don't think we necessarily have a goal  because it's so early in the program. If we could get another 40 people in the  mix [by adding Sales Affiliates], that's 10 percent growth for us."
		
				
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 18, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Dell's top channel executive Greg Davis is rolling out the  welcome mat for SonicWALL Inc. partners.
		Davis  wrote a blog entry for the channel late Wednesday, following news Tuesday that Dell would  buy privately held SonicWALL, a network security and data protection vendor.  Terms of the deal weren't disclosed, but The  New York Times reported its value at $1.25 billion.
		
				
				SonicWALL's channel program consists of about 15,000  resellers, while the Dell PartnerDirect program includes 100,000 resellers.
		Davis  promised there would be new opportunities for both groups of partners as the  channel programs are combined.
		"We intend to make SonicWALL products available to  customers via Dell and through existing SonicWALL and Dell strategic channel  partner relationships," Davis  wrote. "A benefit to SonicWALL's channel members is that they will now  have access to all Dell products, which we expect will open up new opportunities.  And, Dell's existing PartnerDirect channel partners will have access to sell  SonicWALL products. This will enable all partners to grow their business in new  directions."
		Davis  also sought to put off any SonicWALL partner concerns about Dell's reputation  for not playing well with partners. "Over the past four years we have  worked hard to alleviate member concerns and earn their trust," Davis wrote, citing the  deal registration process, rules of engagement and neutralized sales  compensation that gives direct account teams full credit for working with the  channel.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 15, 20120 comments