Last week's "Future of SharePoint" event held by  Microsoft in San Francisco earned high praise from the SharePoint community. The  importance of SharePoint in the Microsoft ecosystem was reconfirmed, which  seemed to reignite energy in the SharePoint community. 
To help those of us who  don't live and breathe SharePoint understand the impact of the 2016 release on  partners, I spoke to Naomi Moneypenny, chief technology officer at ManyWorlds Inc. 
"From the visionary standpoint, SharePoint 2016 and  Office 365 will deliver the intelligent Internet, which surrounds employees  with the conversations, the content and the apps they need to get their work  done," said Moneypenny, an MVP for Office Servers and Services. "Intelligence  built into SharePoint is one of the building blocks that will really make a  difference for customers and service providers." 
For the two core groups  of SharePoint service providers, system integrators (SIs) and ISVs, Moneypenny  highlighted the top opportunities as she sees them.
Top Opportunities for  System Integrators 
Moneypenny sees the role of SI as "the  architect of change readiness." As partners have already experienced, the  cadence of releases -- from versions to feature packs -- is increasing. Updates with  new tools and new functionality will be coming out continuously. 
"As an  SI, you need to look at the framework you can deploy to help your clients'  internal IT teams manage that level of change," said Moneypenny. "It's  not just the SharePoint installation that we are all familiar with; the readiness  aspect has become critical."
A second major opportunity exists by helping those internal  IT teams look at the interconnected pieces of the corporate SharePoint  experience from a higher-level perspective. As enterprises implement across the  stack with Office 365, Azure Active Directory, SQL Server 2012 and SharePoint, they  need guidance to optimize their overall architecture and use of SharePoint.  
Search is another big opportunity opened in SharePoint 2016  through extended functionality. "One of the wonderful things with  SharePoint 2016 is the ability to search from a cloud or hybrid version and  extend it back into previous versions of SharePoint," explained  Moneypenny. "That allows you to treat your on-premises content the same as  the content contained in SharePoint 2016." 
Since clients won't need to  spend their budgets on massive migration projects, this ease of content  accessibility has the potential to free up funds for more productive service  projects.   
Next up is the governance opportunity emerging from the  announcement that many of the  security and compliance tools that are a part of Office 365 will now be  shared with SharePoint. "The whole area of governance -- helping clients  design their architecture to best support their security, compliance and  reporting requirements," noted Moneypenny. "And also the aspect of governance  inside of the organization -- defining who can do what through authoring  capabilities. The new functionality of SharePoint 2016 makes governance a big  opportunity from a consulting perspective." 
And finally, Moneypenny recommends that SI partners work  proactively with their clients to take full advantage of the enhanced  compatibility in the SharePoint 2016 development framework. "If you have  customers currently building Web parts for SharePoint 2013, looking at the  functional compatibility is important," she said. "You want to make  sure what you are building now for the customer will work now and port into the  future."  
Top Opportunities for  ISVs
For those partners building custom applications on  SharePoint, the new model framework supports a much wider range of development  tools. "With support of client-side object models, developers can  incorporate newer technologies into SharePoint 2016," said Moneypenny. "The  new framework supports more standard Web technology, so it opens up opportunity  for a lot of development folks."
While a separate product from SharePoint 2016, Moneypenny  sees Microsoft Flow as a game  changer. "Amazing potential is being unleashed with native support of Microsoft  Flow in SharePoint 2016," she said. "Microsoft Flow is sort of the enterprise  version equivalent of IFTTT [If This, Then  That], bringing disparate data streams together. For example, you could mine  data out of Dynamics and Twitter and put them together as a list in SharePoint.  Combining workflow with the data pulled through Microsoft Flow is powerful  stuff."  
Last, but not least, the graphing APIs available through Office Graph allows developers to  personalize applications for the user. "From the SharePoint perspective,  whether you are delivering content to specific employees or a team site, you  can mold the experience to the individual or group," said Moneypenny.
Given this huge challenge to pare a list down to the top  opportunities for partners, Moneypenny pointed out that there is much more that  she didn't cover that partners should consider. "In the end, there is huge  opportunity for every type of partner," she said. "SharePoint 2016 is  making the platform -- which we always said we had -- a reality for both delivering  data, as well as consuming data. That data can come from anywhere inside your  business or beyond."
Microsoft's Web site describes the current state of  SharePoint this way: "More than 200,000 organizations use SharePoint today and an  extraordinary community of more than 50,000 partners and 1 million developers  make up a $10 billion solutions ecosystem around SharePoint." With a  renewed sense of future, SharePoint partners will be doubling down, continuing to  build that ecosystem. The best may be yet to come. 
How are you going to capitalize on the SharePoint 2016 opportunities?  Add a comment below or drop me a note and let's share your story.
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on May 11, 20160 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The next Microsoft Envision  event is already scheduled to kick off on Feb. 27, 2017 in Los Angeles, Calif.  Hopefully, following the advice of partners, Microsoft has already begun planning, building on  the strengths and learning from mistakes of the first Envision held in New  Orleans earlier this month. 
One of the most common observations from both customers and partners  about the first Envision was confusion about who should attend the event.  Clarifying the roles, along with the corresponding value proposition for each, should  be a pretty straightforward exercise for Microsoft. This year's sessions were  aimed at business, finance, IT, marketing and sales leaders. 
In terms of content, attendees I spoke to approved of the direction of  sessions, which focused on industry trends and business challenges. "The key  is not to try to serve everyone. Stick to the formula that appeals to  executives, not all the bits and bytes of tech talk," said Nils Rasmussen,  CEO of Solver, a Silver Sponsor. "The  content should be a blend of ideas to be implemented today and tomorrow. Have  the vision that is exciting, but at the same time deliver the practical value  that they can take home to implement immediately." 
Several customers I spoke to agree with Rasmussen's perspective on the  importance of attendees bringing practical ideas in addition to visions for the  future. "Executives need to be able to justify their time and expense,"  said Rasmussen. "When attendees come back with specific ideas that bring  immediate value to the business, it defends the investment, builds momentum and  provides the reason to return."
Providing guidance on products that businesses  already own was another topic that was high on customers' lists. Several I  spoke to had come with the specific goal of seeing how other companies were  using solutions like  Dynamics CRM and Power BI. The popular customer  panels of Convergence events were missing -- probably the biggest single  weakness of Envision content.   
"I like where Envision is headed with decision  makers, but those people want specifics on how to leverage their existing  investment  in whatever products they have purchased," said Linda  Rose, CEO and president of RoseASP Inc.,  a hosting partner. "Sessions I went to were so general that I didn't leave  with anything tangible. I was really hoping for more content from people  outside of Microsoft, but with the late planning for this conference, I am sure  they ran out of time to seek such people out."  
Attracting more customers to next year's Envision is obviously good for  everyone involved. To achieve the full potential, Microsoft should actively  enlist partner help as it did for Convergence, putting marketing  materials -- from blog posts to e-mail invitation templates -- in the hands of  partners early to support a grass-roots attendance push.     
Many Dynamics partners invested heavily in promoting Convergence to  their customers and then "hosting" them during the event. Special  events and personalized experiences for attending customers deepened  relationships and drove significant service opportunities for those partners. In contrast, an Envision attendee who participated in a Microsoft  customer feedback session reported multiple customers complaining that their  partners were more of an impediment than a help in their relationship with  Microsoft. Those customers wanted to have a more direct relationship with  Microsoft. As disturbing as that perspective is, it's a good reminder that  Microsoft is continually challenged to find the right balance in its  relationships with partners and customers. 
Envision has the potential to provide the connection that business  decision makers would like to have with Microsoft. Partners can either be  threatened by that or use it to their advantage. With proactive engagement,  partners can build the value of Envision for customers and reap the rewards. 
For Microsoft and partners alike, planning for Envision 2017 should be  underway. The opportunity to meet face to face with customers, guide them in  their technology choices and be a part of their business planning is priceless.  It deserves our full attention.
How do you plan to use Envision to build customer connections? Add a  comment below or send  me a note and let's share the knowledge.     
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on April 13, 20160 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Fair or not, almost every conversation at the first Microsoft Envision  conference, which took place earlier this week in New Orleans, began with a comparison to Convergence, the discontinued Microsoft  Dynamics event. 
Loyalty to the Convergence legacy borders on fanatic, but the  event is a tough act to follow by any measure. The Convergence team had become  a well-oiled machine that consistently delivered great content and smooth  operations. 
The most puzzling part of the whole Envision experience is why Microsoft  seemed so set on reinventing the wheel instead of building on the strengths of  Convergence. Unfortunately, it made for a bumpy ride.
Beginning with its astonishingly late announcement in January, confusion was an underlying theme for Envision. Session lists weren't posted when the initial  announcement was made, so that ISVs and customers already registered couldn't  make an educated decision about whether or not they should attend. 
Even though a number of longtime Convergence exhibitors stayed away,  the expo hall still felt full of familiar ISVs. Molly Van Kampen, director of sales  for Greenshades, a tax and payroll  solutions ISV, agreed that the late notice was challenging. "We start  planning for next year's Convergence as soon this year's is over, so a change  of direction makes a big impact," Van Kampen said. 
Greenshades decided to continue with its  plans, bringing six employees to staff the booth. 
"We've done business  with Microsoft for 20 years," said Van Kampen. "We can understand why  they wanted to expand the focus from just Dynamics. Change is hard, but we want  to participate in this new direction. We see the event as an investment in the  community."
Another longtime Convergence exhibitor, Solver, chose to maintain its  Silver-level sponsorship after the switch to Envision. "Like most ISVs, I  was skeptical when they made the announcement," said Nils Rasmussen, CEO  of the business intelligence ISV. "Convergence has been our biggest  sources of leads. In the end, it will all come back to the ROI. While this year  may not match Convergence, we have had many good partner meetups and a fair  amount of traffic." 
Even if there weren't as many people visiting the booths as vendors  (and Microsoft) hoped for, exhibitors universally reported that they were  having high-quality conversations with attendees. Eric Jensen, account executive  with Cutwater, an inventory management  solution ISV, said, "We are seeing a high percentage of business decision  makers instead of IT folks. They are the right people for the conversations  that we want to have." 
Guessing the actual attendance was a favorite topic at the conference.  During the opening keynote, Chris Capossela, executive vice president and chief  marketing officer at Microsoft, declared that there were 6,000 attendees -- a  number that was viewed with a high degree of skepticism. 
In terms of content, both customers and partners seemed to feel  Microsoft was headed in the right direction. There was a clear focus on  changing the conversations from the functional to business outcomes. One  customer provided good reviews to a session that focused on controlling  business risk instead of simply addressing IT security.  
Partners and customers alike reported a mixed bag on the quality of sessions.  "State of the Industry" sessions featuring panels of experts were  widely praised. The number of presentations that included outside experts instead  of Microsoft employees was a promising development. On the other hand, there  were not nearly enough customers included in panels and presentations -- which may  simply be a reflection of the late planning of content. 
In addition, quality control on partner-led  sessions seemed to be lacking. Many were little more than a sales pitch without  any discernable educational content.
Multiple people reported errors in the schedule, including roadmap  sessions that most thought were canceled and weren't. The highly trained staff  of Convergence past may have set a high bar, but the Envision staffers were  woefully underprepared, providing consistent misdirection delivered with  a lackadaisical attitude.
To his credit, Capossela was a visible presence, attending events and  mingling with crowds -- clearly observing and listening. Hopefully, his  engagement will be reflected in a more consistent experience at next year's  Envision, already announced for Feb. 27 in Los Angeles.  
Overall, Envision wasn't the disaster that some expected but it wasn't  as good as it could have been. The session content was reasonably good, customers  had a full expo hall to seek out solutions, and vendors had conversations with  well-qualified prospects. The disappointment of Envision was that someone at  Microsoft apparently made a decision to create something new instead of  building on the longtime success of Convergence. That decision was a  disservice to every vendor and attendee.  
What was your Envision experience? Add a comment below or send me a note and let's  share your story. 
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on April 07, 20160 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft's Power BI Partner Showcase is a testament to the success of partners  helping their clients, from enterprises to SMBs, realize the potential of data  through analytics and visualization. For most SMB partners, however, experience  and resource challenges put building a Power BI practice beyond their  reach. 
But one of the showcase partners, RoseBud Technologies, has set its sights on taking Power BI to the SMB market -- and  helping other partners do the same. 
While RoseBud, a 10-person IT service provider based in Atlanta,  may seem an unlikely Power BI advocate, it has deep roots in data. "A large  part of the success of any partner is a result of the background their people  bring to the equation," said Joe Treanor, president of RoseBud. "I  spent time in banking when metrics and analytics were becoming the drivers in  the industry. It gave me an understanding of the importance of making data  useful." 
Beginning with the self-service analytics released with Excel  2010, Treanor was intrigued with the practical application for RoseBud clients,  predominantly small and midsize businesses. In 2013, RoseBud was an early adopter of Power BI, seeing the opportunity to  support business intelligence (BI) without big infrastructure investment.  
Since that time, Treanor has seen a reluctance in partners to pursue  the BI opportunity. "SMB partners face two major hurdles,"   Treanor explained. "The first is the experiential comfort with managing and  directing business intelligence work. The second is where to find the people  who can speak to clients and deliver the services."  
To solve the second challenge, RoseBud has established a relationship  with Kennesaw  State University's Coles  College of Business. The college has a strong program that focuses  on the practical business applications of quantitative analytics. KSU also  offers a master's degree in applied statistics and more recently launched  a Ph.D. program in Analytics and data science.
"Kennesaw is very much aligned with what we are doing," Treanor said. "They are training people who are comfortable holding a  conversation about business and data analysis. They are developing data  scientists for business, not just academia."
Just like most partners who are searching for their value-add in a  cloud world, Treanor sees BI as a specialty that RoseBud can build on for the  future. "It's a changing game. There is only so much business you can do  with migrations,"  Treanor said. "We looked at what we could do with  analytics. Microsoft is making very sophisticated enterprise-level capabilities  available to the smallest businesses through subscriptions and tools. So we  are helping our customers take advantage of Power BI, and we think it is just  the beginning of a very big wave."
With Microsoft's heavy promotion of Power BI, RoseBud is seeing more  proactive interest from customers. "There is more awareness through Office  365 and the infrastructure barriers are gone,"  Treanor said. "Many of  the clients we talk to, even small business owners, understand the value of predictive  and prescriptive analytics. They are looking beyond reporting to solving  specific business challenges by using data."
Additional potential -- helping other partners who don't have the  experience or resources to offer Power BI on their own -- is also developing for  RoseBud. "A single partner can't be a generalist anymore," said Greg  Treanor, vice president of RoseBud. "We're applying our experience and  resources, becoming a go-to partner for Power BI. Partners can focus on their  niche, work with us for Power BI and offer even more value to customers. They don't  have to build the practice for themselves." 
Microsoft's Power BI is clearly fertile ground for the service opportunity  attached to Office 365. For those partners who can overcome the knowledge and  resource barriers, the future of BI is very promising. And even for those  partners who don't want to jump in the deep end, partnering allows you to fill  the expectations of your customers. BI is finally going  mainstream to help every one of your clients realize the potential of their  data. 
How are you taking Power BI to your clients? Add a comment below or send me a note and let's  share your story.  
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on March 29, 20160 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The Women in Technology (WIT) community of the International  Association of Microsoft Channel Partners (IAMCP) has gained impressive momentum over  the past two years. Well-attended webinars, popular regional meetings and  standing-room-only Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) luncheons establish the value WIT brings to the channel.  
Taking another step forward, the IAMCP WIT is sponsoring the Entrepreneurs,  Executives and Excellence (E3) Program, an intensive entrepreneurship program  for women in the channel.  
Through  E3, 15 female entrepreneurs and executives will be selected to  participate in a four-month educational program. Virtual training, delivered by  subject-matter experts in finance, marketing, sales and corporate innovation,  will help the participants scale their businesses and develop skills to run  world-class companies. At completion of the program, participants will be able  to showcase their businesses at WPC 2016 in Toronto.
Through an intensive four-week  educational program, workshops and coaching, the E3 program will help  selected participants refine financial strategies and business plans to grow  their businesses. The program will be managed by Venture  Hive, a leading  entrepreneurship education company and Microsoft partner based in Miami.
"IAMCP WIT is thrilled to partner with Venture Hive to offer the  E3 Program -- Entrepreneurs, Executives and Excellence. We believe that  mentorship is a vital practice for women who want to elevate their businesses  to new heights of success," said Jennifer Didier, international IAMCP WIT  chair and CEO of Directions  Training. "Engaging in productive relationships with people who have  proven business skills and professional acumen can profoundly impact  entrepreneurs and executives by equipping them with the tools they need to  pursue fruitful careers, establish inspiring workplaces, and encourage the next  generation of business leaders." 
Didier has been the driving force behind WIT's latest initiative. After  learning about the entrepreneurial training that Venture Hive provides, she saw  the potential to make a real impact for  women in the channel. Didier's  pitch to fellow leaders in IAMCP WIT and the greater Microsoft ecosystem was  well-received, leading to the launch of the E3 program and WPC 2016 showcase   
According to the program  application form, preference will be given to women who are entrepreneurs,  CEOs or executives leading companies with between $1 million and $10 million in annual revenues. Participants in the 15-week E3 program  should expect five to seven contact hours per week, plus an additional 20 or more hours of  preparation and assignments. The program is open to international participants.   
Additional details on the program  are available at the E3 program site. To apply, access the application form here. The original  closing date of March 11, as stated on the Web site, has been extended. Applications  must be received by 11:59 p.m. EDT on Friday, March 18. 
The IAMCP WIT community is making a difference in the Microsoft partner  channel. Better-equipped business leaders who build strong technology companies  add value to the entire ecosystem. Young women who see opportunity to take  their place in a growing industry are more likely to join us as the next  generation of developers, salespeople, system architects, consultants, data  analysts, practice leads, product managers and CEOs. 
How are you supporting diversity in the channel? Add a comment below or send me a note and  let's share your story. 
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on March 09, 20160 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The results of a recently released survey of 1,000 SharePoint and  Office 365 developers provide an interesting look into the business  realities that Microsoft partners must balance.
 The study, titled "The State of SharePoint and Office 365  Development," was conducted by Rencore, a SharePoint and Office 365  ISV, and can be accessed here with registration. It revealed "that many organisations have a mixed up  approach to SharePoint and Office 365. Microsoft's vision of a cloud-first  world just has not materialised yet. In fact, organisations regularly use a  broad mix of Microsoft's most recent and legacy software." 
The primary objective of the research was to answer the question, "What is the real state of SharePoint and  Office 365 development in 2015?" 
The study's 1,000 respondents included  SharePoint and Office 365 architects, developers, IT professionals and project  managers. Participants represent 10 countries, with 37 percent from the United States. The  24-page survey analysis breaks down the demographics of the respondents, providing  some interesting insights from the start. Stand-outs include the gender gap,  with women representing only 11 percent of the respondents, and the international  representation of developers under age 30, with India way out front.
Rencore's analysis of the survey results focuses on four primary  findings, including:
  - Microsoft wants a "mobile-first, cloud-first"  world. This is currently far from the reality.
 
  - SharePoint customization is still a varied  discipline.
 
  - Governance and day-to-day management is  undervalued.
 
  - The Office 365 and SharePoint community is  thriving.
 
While developers are using the cloud, with 58 percent hosting infrastructure  service on Azure, 39 percent of respondents report that they are still entirely  on-prem. With almost half of the SharePoint deployments on-prem, the results  suggest the cloud adoption cycle has a long way to go. The report states, "Microsoft's vision of a cloud centred world  appears distant to many organisations, who continue to use 'legacy' platforms  for a variety of reasons."
An interview with Jeremy Thake, senior product marketing manager at  Microsoft, extends the commentary on customization trends for SharePoint and  Office 365. Microsoft has added more options for developers and shifted the  focus to add-ins, but based on the survey results, developers still rely  heavily on traditional methods.
Governance, which SharePoint professionals have long known plays a huge  role in adoption and usage, still is not a high priority for businesses.  Respondents revealed that well-documented and rigorous control processes are  still the exception rather than the rule.
The unique unity and dedication of the SharePoint community is  reflected in the survey results. Only 14 percent of the respondents said they were not  active in the community. Almost three-quarters of the respondents said they  participate in online forums, and over 60 percent attend conferences -- which is no  surprise to anyone who knows many SharePoint professionals. 
The report includes an interview with Tobias Zimmergren, Microsoft MVP and Rencore's Cloud  Offerings Product Owner, that provides deeper  interpretation of the results. Zimmergren closes with advice for those interested in  learning SharePoint and getting more involved in the community.
Rencore clearly dedicated considerable time and energy to collect and  present a research-based picture of the changes affecting SharePoint and Office  365 professionals. The report provides a valuable baseline to evaluate the pace  of cloud adoption over the coming years. With most customers using some form of  SharePoint or Office 365, Rencore's report should be of interest to most Microsoft partners.
What trends are you seeing in your SharePoint practice? Add a comment  below or send  me a note and let's share your story.
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on February 24, 20160 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    While not everyone in the channel is excited about Microsoft Envision,  the replacement for Microsoft's old Convergence event, could it be just the right content offered at just the right time?  
Billed by Microsoft as the flagship event for business  leaders, this year's Envision may be Version 1 of a well-timed bid to replace Salesforce.com's  mega-event, Dreamforce, as the destination for those seeking a strategic vision  of technology. 
    
According to an announcement in January by Chris Capossela, Microsoft's executive vice  president and chief marketing officer, Envision "is designed for  CxOs and their senior department and functional leaders who are driven to shape  their own future and position their organizations and business for success in a  mobile first, cloud first world." Attendance at this first Envision event, which will take place on April 4-6 in New Orleans, La., is reportedly expected to be around 8,000. 
A Dreamforce Competitor?
When Dreamforce launched in 2003, only 1,300 people attended. After steadily  building an audience over the years, Dreamforce is now the largest business  conference in the world, with 160,000 attendees in 2015. The event brings  together top thought leaders -- even Satya Nadella joined the keynote lineup last  year -- representing business, culture and politics. 
Dreamforce has become much  more than just a business conference -- which could be a huge opportunity for  Microsoft.
It's not hard to imagine that there are plenty of executives who would  prefer to bypass the hype and crowds to just focus on business-technology  strategy. With its success over the years, Dreamforce has demonstrated that  businesspeople are willing to leave their offices to seek insight into the  future of tech. An event devoted to those  who drive the decisions about  technology makes a lot of sense. 
Potential for Partners
For the partner channel, the reaction to Envision has been mixed. As  reported on MSDynamicsWorld.com,  a January conference call in which Microsoft explained event changes to the  Dynamics ISVs who have traditionally exhibited at Convergence turned "colorful."  Reportedly, many of those sponsors have downgraded or cancelled their  participation. 
Longtime Convergence attendees I have spoken to remain on  edge  about attending Envision. With no session list posted yet, it's hard for them  to know who to invite. That's a valid criticism and it seems that Microsoft could  have been better prepared. 
Wayne Morris, corporate vice president of business solutions  marketing  at Microsoft, wrote in a blog  post: "Microsoft Envision  provides an opportunity for attendees to hear from some of the most  forward-thinking minds in business and technology, with each day featuring  prominent industry visionaries and business experts who will share the latest  ideas, trends and innovations." With corporate-speak like that describing an  event less than two months away, it's not hard to understand why partners are  cautious. 
It is clear that for ISVs with functional add-ons for the Dynamics ERP  products, Envision is not the right place for them to connect with their  typical interest group of end users. But for ISVs across the Microsoft solution  set who provide a strategic advantage to businesses, Envision has the  potential to be a valuable venue to connect directly with a broad cross-section  of executives. 
For SIs, Dynamics VARs, MSPs and cloud partners, Envision has even greater  potential -- if Microsoft can deliver high-quality content. The event could help these partners identify customers who  recognize technology as an investment in the futures of their businesses. Partner  leaders, salespeople and business analysts could spend multiple days talking  about strategy with top customers.     
It takes a leap of faith to ask your customers to  attend an unproven event in its first year. It's not cheap for you or your customers to attend  Envision. But that very fact may help you determine which of your customers is  willing to invest in technology for strategic advantage. Those are the customers  that you want to spend time with. Sitting by their side while Nadella explains  Microsoft's vision for the future of business seems like a pretty smart place  to be. 
Could  Envision really take the place of Dreamforce? Maybe not  for the hordes of thought-leadership junkies. But for serious businesspeople dealing  with a very confusing and cluttered technology world, sensible guidance from a  trusted source may make  Envision just the right event at just the  right time.  
How are you going to take advantage of  Envision? Add a  comment below or send me a note and let's share your story. 
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on February 10, 20160 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    While many partners are making progress attracting and retaining women  in the Microsoft ecosystem, a visit to most any partner's leadership page  reveals a continuing challenge: Women are not proportionally represented in  leadership roles. 
Recognizing the problem, one partner moved beyond  rationalizations to look for specific ways to break down barriers and tap the  value of its entire workforce.
In a recent Inc.  article, Tribridge CEO Tony DiBenedetto described facing the realities of Tribridge's employment data. The pride in  achieving a 40 percent representation of women in Tribridge's workforce was tempered by the  absence of women represented at the leadership level.  DiBenedetto wrote, "The company I spent  years building may have failed some of our women team members. As CEO, I'm  holding myself accountable for the mistakes of the past and helping to drive  much-needed change."
Facing the realities of gender disparity in your own company is hard.  As Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella famously  illustrated last year,  the perceptions of advancement in the workplace are different  for men and women. Most CEOs undoubtedly think that they provide equal  opportunity. The hard data for most partner organizations do not support the  success of those good intentions. 
At Tribridge, a cloud and  Dynamics system integrator, uncovering the root causes of why women were not advancing  into leadership roles was the first step. "The conversations were  extremely uncomfortable for a long time," said Holly Grogan, vice  president, People Team at Tribridge. "We weren't sure how to talk to the  team about it. We weren't sure how to talk to each other about it. It was the  elephant in the room and it was uncomfortable."
"But we didn't stop. We kept going and now we are really glad we  had the conversation,"  Grogan said. "We are seeing real benefits -- not just the women, but for the entire  organization."
Through confidential interviews, Grogan and her team uncovered communication  challenges and unintended barriers that women in Tribridge felt were holding  them back from advancement. Grogan noted that during the interviews, the women consistently  said that they did not want preferential or different treatment.  
Based on feedback and recommendations, Tribridge took action to  implement programs and cultural development to help every team member -- men and  women -- achieve their full potential. Communication training, paid  maternity/paternity leave and the Tribridge Women's  Network (TWN) are just some of the outcomes that are advancing balance within  Tribridge.
Tangible Benefits of Bridging  the Gender Gap
Grogan said that Tribridge is realizing significant benefits for all  team members through the initiatives. "One of our initial goals was to  make sure we had an easy way for women to develop their career path, finding  and applying for new positions," she said.  "What we have found is  that the changes we made have benefited everyone." 
Promoting recognition and respect for different communication styles, a  common concern exposed during the interviews, is another top priority. Grogan  said team members have seen a significant improvement in collaboration, sharing  knowledge and learning from one another more effectively. 
The TWN has been a particularly well-received program. With a  multi-pronged focus on recruitment, retention and development, the TWN is  supporting gender initiatives inside and outside the company. Working with the  Boys & Girls Club, Tribridge women are giving back to the community and helping  the next generation embrace technology.     
On the business side, Grogan said that Tribridge believes  diversity makes  its  workforce more creative. That creative energy is a competitive  advantage to differentiate Tribridge from the rest of the market. Many competitors   aren't yet tapping the full value of their workforce.
For partners trying to foster a more inclusive corporate culture,  Grogan suggested looking objectively at the data for your organization as a first  step. "Regardless [of] the size of your business, you have to be willing to own  your numbers and realistically set goals for improvement,"  Grogan said. "If  it's a general lack of women in the organization, then recruiting should be  your focus. If women are well-represented in the workforce but not in  leadership roles, look for barriers that may not be obvious to you." 
Above all, partners need to start the conversations, uncomfortable  though they may be, to understand how to promote a more inclusive corporate  culture. In  his article, DiBenedetto cited a study that found most employees don't think their CEOs make  gender diversity a priority. What would your team say?
How are you promoting diversity in your organization? Add a comment  below or send  me an e-mail and let's share your story.
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on December 09, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Vendor programs of the past were designed to make it easier for channel  partners to sell a set of solutions as one "package." While the  intent of Microsoft's Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) program shares that goal, this  time partners have to complete the package on their own. The CSP requires a new  mindset, where partners must clearly define the role they want to play in their  customers' future. 
For those partners used to a transactional rather than strategic relationship  with their customers, the CSP program represents a transformational business  model change. Microsoft's intent with the CSP program is to drive long-term consumption,  which means promoting user adoption and expanding workload footprint. Those  partners wishing to gain the attention of Microsoft need to develop their CSP  offerings with those objectives in mind. 
"CSP is the value model. You cannot view this as a transaction,  like you would through a traditional disti sale," observed Ric Opal, vice  president of Peters & Associates. "This  program is such that you buy the technology and you control the billing. You  create your special offering -- management, sensors, custom applications,  development change management, custom SharePoint...whatever -- and you sell the  whole value."
One of the factors that makes this transition so challenging for  partners is that there is no cookie-cutter way to proceed. The services that a  partner is likely to add on top of an Office 365 subscription can be as simple  as adding in a monthly fee that provides the classic managed services of user  support and backup/recovery. Or those add-on services can be as complex as  partner-created intellectual property (IP), SharePoint deployment or unified  communications. The options can be overwhelming.
"Managed services means something different to every partner based  on segment or vertical or capability,"  Opal said. "For me, managed  services means that I want to own IT operations. I want to participate in  strategy and drive them to a better value prop by taking my high-end, well-trained  talent and spreading them over my managed service clients. That gives my  customers access to strategic technology expertise that is relevant and current.  In turn, it gives me a highly utilized bench." 
With no template to follow, partners have to objectively evaluate their  strengths and resources and define the value add they can deliver to customers.  More than just a new offering, the CSP program requires partners to design the  business model that will take them into the future. 
"It's incumbent on partners to offer services that are relevant to  our customers,"  Opal said. "Figure out what your long-term value  proposition is. Then you can walk it back to determine if you have the right  people and processes to support that model."
With the addition of Azure and  Dynamics CRM to the CSP  program lineup, the options continue to expand. "With Azure, the sky is  the limit. From five seats to 5,000, and across industries,"  Opal said. "Customers  are looking for integration, mobility and security experience. These are high-value, high-margin services where customers need a partner to help them apply  technology that will give them competitive advantage." 
CSP is likely to be the most transformational program that Microsoft  has ever offered to partners. It requires an evolution in mindset -- from  vendor-driven solution packaging to partner-driven value solution packaging. A  unique opportunity for partners to plan their future on their own terms.
How are you driving value as a CSP? Add a comment below or send me an e-mail and let's share your story.
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on November 11, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    As the floodgates open and massive amounts of data move to Office 365,  the nature of e-mail migrations has changed forever. Instead of being the  primary force of migration projects, e-mail has become just a small piece of the  migration opportunity. The cloud, and specifically Office 365, is driving a  fundamental shift from data-centric to user-centric migrations.  
Historically, e-mail archive projects involved migrating one on-premises  legacy archive to a more efficient, space-saving archive solution. In the early  2000s, growth of archiving took off as compliance requirements meant that more  data had to be retained along with the e-mail. The high cost of storage created  a strong market for efficient archiving.  
"The market for on-premises legacy migrations was huge,"  explained Dan Clark, chief strategy officer at QUADROtech. "There were hundreds  of projects going on every year, each migrating well in excess of 8TB  of e-mail, which means hundreds of millions of e-mails."
When Office 365 was introduced, after being proven out through BPOS,  many businesses realized that they didn't need to use an enterprise archive  anymore. Office 365 delivered the same benefits and more than on-premises  archiving -- inexpensive storage and compliance  at a level that could support e-discovery, plus the elimination of  expensive-to-support hardware.
QUADROtech, a gold application development Microsoft partner, provides migration tools to the  Microsoft partner channel that have supported that dramatic shift to the cloud.  "We've seen a huge exodus of data moving to Office 365 as an archiving  solution,"  Clark said. "Customers are pushing hundreds of terabytes  to Office 365."
At the same time, Office 365 has allowed customers to take a more  strategic approach to migrations. While  they are centralizing data, businesses want to take the opportunity to improve  the accessibility of data and the corresponding productivity of workers.    
As companies migrate to Office 365, they no longer view e-mail as the  focus of migration. They want to migrate the user experience along with all the  data that they need. With data that supports workers' daily tasks spread out in  multiple places, from SharePoint to Shared Files to CRM, customers want a  user-centric migration. 
Clark sees this as a fundamental shift for partners. "Instead of  just migrating buckets of data, now it's about moving the functions and processes  that go with it," explained Clark. "To make the switch to a  user-focused migration process, partners need to understand the dependencies  between the systems and how users work. You're migrating more than one system,  so you need to understand how the users interact with each one."
With the opportunity to refresh processes, customers also often express  a desire to improve their data structure. The customer doesn't simply want an  exact copy of their data moved, they want to restructure to support more  efficient processes. To achieve that end, Clark recommends that partners use a  tool that allows the data to be restructured as it goes through the migration.
To successfully support these new customer expectations, Clark believes  that those partners who focus on active upfront engagement through project  pilots and trial migrations are the most successful. "Through trials, the partner gets a  better understanding of how the customer wants the data to be structured in the  Office 365 environment. The customer can see if what they think they want is  really what they want before a full migration,"  Clark said. 
One of the barriers to Office 365 migrations for enterprise  organizations has been the concern of data moving through potentially unsecure  cloud-based tools during the migration process. "QUADROtech has addressed  this concern by designing our migration tool as an 'exclusive' controller,"  explained Clark. "It controls the migration, but no data goes through our  platform. It all goes directly to Office 365." 
In today's market, QUADROtech sees well over 60 percent of migrations moving  data to Office 365. "There doesn't seem to be a slow-down; if anything, it's  going faster,"  Clark said. "In addition, there is the opportunity for  partners to go back to customers to migrate data to Dynamics and other  applications in the cloud."
The nature of e-mail migrations has changed and so has the opportunity  for partners. Businesses  want users to be at the center of the Office 365  experience, merging data with business processes to make work easier and more  productive. Partners can play a key role helping customers design user-centric  experiences, so that the Office 365 migration is just the beginning of the  conversation. 
How are you building relationships through migrations? Add a comment  below or send  me an e-mail and let's share your story. 
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on September 30, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    For technology providers, the cloud is changing the nature of service  delivery. Office 365 removes the application and infrastructure limitations,  allowing customers and partners to focus on business outcomes instead of technology  features. 
To deliver services in the cloud era, partners are taking a user-centered  approach to business analysis supported by a commitment to continuous learning. 
"A fundamental change that I have seen with Office 365 is that the  user moves to the center of the conversation," said Erica Toelle, West Coast  strategic account developer for Protiviti. "Instead  of talking about a feature of SharePoint, for example, you focus on how all of  the parts of Office 365, from Dynamics CRM to Power BI, can come together to  improve the user's daily work experience."
Since the real impact of productivity improvement comes at the user  level, the design and solution development process should start with making each  worker's experience easier. Technology features move to the background and  conversations focus on specific business outcomes. 
"We're moving away from the era where the products were competing  with each other. In the Satya [Nadella] era, it's more about having solutions that  complement one other," added Toelle, a regular presenter at SharePoint and  Office 365 events around the world. "The boundaries of the solutions are  not important, it's how they work together to make the best user experience for  each unique situation."
"As a foundation, you want to make the user experience as seamless  as possible,"  Toelle said. "Once a client's Office 365 system is  stabilized, with Azure Active Directory set up, single sign-on working and  information being exchanged with other systems, you can have the process  conversations."
The common projects that Office 365 clients want to start with include  automation of manual processes, simple document storage, enabling project management  or setting up a lightweight extranet. "The first step is helping the  company create an overall strategy and roadmap for the solutions that they want  to build,"  Toelle said. "Those are conversations that technology  providers are used to having, like the roadmap and project prioritization."
Workflows are a place to quickly build and ROI for clients. It's easy for  the customer to make a business case for replacing manual processes with  automation. "I think that's why companies tend to go with workflows first,"   Toelle said. 
As most IT service providers are finding, business analysts have become  an essential part of the delivery team. "You need a strong business  analyst or business process engineer to support workflow design,"   Toelle said. "It's not difficult to build the logic behind the process, like  the approvals. It's the exceptions that are important. Things like, 'What  happens when this person is on vacation or doesn't respond?' Asking the right  questions to uncover all those little exceptions is what makes the business  analyst role so important." 
As customers look to cloud service providers for process improvement,  partners need to be building depth in business consulting skills just as much  as technology skills. Traditional technology consultants and project managers  generally don't have the skill sets to define user-based experience activities.  That means hiring  people that have business skill sets, which is new territory for most  partners. 
Another fundamental change that Office 365 partners face is a learning  curve that never ends. "The continuous release model of cloud solutions, requires  continuous learning," explained Toelle. "Quarterly meetings just don't  hack it any more. Partners need to have a way to disseminate information across  the consulting team quickly, so consultants can share lessons learned as they  happen."  
Fortunately, the continuous learning model matches up well with the preferences  of the gen-Xers and millennials who make up a growing percentage of consulting  teams. Partners will find willing participants to use the social sharing tools  that older consultants were reticent to adopt. "Using Yammer or something  similar is key to setting your workforce up for success today,"   Toelle said.
Helping customers overcome the silos of information and cumbersome processes  caused by separate applications provided years of revenue generation for  technology service providers. With Office 365, the barriers are coming down  but opening a new set of opportunities for partners. To support that unified  platform, partner service models are changing to deliver user-centered business  analysis and a commitment to continuous learning.
How are your services changing to meet cloud customer expectations? Add  a comment below or send me  a note and let's share your story. 
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on August 27, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Taking an important step beyond anecdotal evidence, Microsoft's Worldwide  Partner Group (WPG) has created several cloud profitability tools based on substantive  partner research. An overdue investment in empirical research, the Microsoft  Cloud Profitability Scenarios and Financial Models provide insight into the real  world of partner experiences with cloud business models.
The Microsoft Cloud Profitability Scenarios project is an outgrowth of  partner interest in the Microsoft-sponsored IDC research released last year in  the "Successful  Cloud Partners 2.0" e-book. Jen Sieger, senior business strategy  analyst for WPG, said, "Last year's IDC  e-book had a lot of good insights on the business models but partners wanted to  know how they could pursue those models with Microsoft." 
The research supporting the Microsoft Cloud Profitability Scenarios was  conducted in two parts. "We surveyed 1,260 partners worldwide, speaking to  them about the scenarios and the service revenue they were attaining with those  scenarios,"  Sieger explained. "We augmented the survey by conducting  66 in-depth interviews with our top cloud partners."
The results of the research are presented in two decks, the "Microsoft  Cloud Profitability Scenarios Research Summary" and the "Microsoft  Cloud Profitability Scenarios." The Research Summary provides key  findings and presents tabulations of the results. The Scenarios deck takes the  research a step further, looking at the partner opportunity for 20 different service  offerings, ranging from Datacenter with Microsoft Azure to Business  Intelligence.
For each scenario, the 77-page deck includes descriptions of the types  of project services, managed services and packaged intellectual property (IP)  partners are currently offering based on the data gathered through the survey  and the in-depth conversations. Average revenue and margins realized by  partners for each level of service are also included.
One standout finding from the survey is that 48 percent of partners say they  are already combining project services, managed services and IP through "packaged  service" offerings. "I know that our partner ecosystem is evolving  quickly, but that level of transformation was surprising and encouraging,"   Sieger said. "The idea that partners are adding their own IP to the mix is  really good." 
Packaging IP to add to cloud-based services, which has been a  consistent theme from Microsoft, appears to be validated through the survey. "According  to our survey, partners applying that model are achieving 65 percent gross margin on  services,"  Sieger added. "There is a healthy ecosystem of partners who  are successfully transforming their business models."
Financial Models
In addition to the scenario research decks, Sieger's team developed  Excel-based Financial Models that partners can use to evaluate service options  for their own practices. There are four models available: 
"We have received a lot of good feedback on the financial models,"   Sieger said. "They help partners see how a new practice with Microsoft would  impact their business."
Quantifying cloud business models is particularly important in the  current channel environment, according to Sieger. "There is a lot of merger  and acquisition activity in the channel right now,"  Sieger said. "The  impact of recurring revenue on the valuation of a partner's business is  significant. The financial models will help them build out a business case." 
Sieger said that this year's findings and tools are just the starting  point. During fiscal year 2016, Microsoft will be building out a broader set of scenarios  to reflect the variety of ways partners are building on Microsoft online  services.
"Our hope is that these resources will provide partners with more  insight into the opportunities across the Microsoft online stack,"   Sieger added. "In the cloud, it's all about customers for life -- all the ways that  partners can serve their customers and increase profitability. These resources  allow partners to learn from one another." For more on Sieger's  perspective, see  her blog post on the profitability modeling models. 
How are you building profitability with new business models? Add a  comment below or send  me an e-mail and let's share your story.  
 
	Posted by Barb Levisay on July 30, 20150 comments