Microsoft understands its volume-licensing will need to have an overhaul if and when its buyers and partners seriously begin heading gung-ho for for your cloud.Inside the provider;s fiscal 2011 (which runs from July 1, 2010, to June thirty, 2011), Microsoft will likely be performing the ground perform for an overhaul of its volume-licensing infrastructure and policies. But don;t anticipate any actual new programs throughout that time period, based on Joe Matz, the Corporate Vice President of Worldwide Licensing and Pricing.Matz spoke at a session at Microsoft;s Globally Companion Conference on July 13 concerning the provider;s Massive Account Reseller (LAR) program.“A lot is changing in volume licensing,
Microsoft Office 2010 Home And Student,” Matz told the overflow crowd at yesterday;s session. “We;re going massive with online services in volume licensing. We need to adapt volume licensing for online.”Microsoft is working on its back-end operations,
Office 2010 Pro Plus Key, systems and policies to enable this shift, he said. In addition to making licenses simpler and easier to manage, Microsoft understands it also needs to enable greater licensing flexibility, he said.Matz said his team;s second biggest priority in this fiscal year is to continue to modernize licensing.“Licensing is always going to be complex,
Microsoft Office Home And Business 2010,” Matz said, “but it needs to get simpler, more manageable, scalable and agile.”The team is working on ways to allow partners and consumers to attach new cloud technologies to existing licenses, rather than requiring buyers to buy and manage new licenses every time they add a new technology to their existing Microsoft mix, he said. Microsoft also needs to make it easier for clients to transition from on-premises software to services on the licensing front.He said to expect Microsoft to do more to integrate Microsoft financing with licensing in the coming year. Matz said more than 7,000 Microsoft customers in 15 countries spend billions per year with Microsoft to finance their technology purchases.“Credit prices last year had an impact on us,
Office Home And Business,” he admitted. “But we now have our model back online and getting back to growth in this space is a priority.”Matz didn;t mention the meltdown with Microsoft’s Volume Licensing Service Center (VLSC) earlier this year. Microsoft ended up having to roll out a “version 3.5″ of the site, incorporating new fixes and updates, because many customers and partners were unable for months to access their volume software licenses and products.In addition to discussing volume-licensing in the LAR session, Microsoft officials also shared a few interesting statistics in regards to the business;s companion hierarchy.Microsoft has 22,000 “major accounts,” 80 percent of which are covered by Enterprise Agreement (EA) licenses with the firm. The organization has another 92,000 “corporate accounts” that it targets, only 19 percent of which are currently covered by an EA. (This is the group of customers that are still running lots of Windows XP,
Office 2007 Enterprise Key, older versions of Office and no SQL Server, provider execs acknowledged.) There are 5.3 million small/midsize online business (SMB) Microsoft accounts customers out there, as well. (I didn;t catch how many the corporation is claiming are Microsoft accounts.)Across all categories, Microsoft still is seeing a lot of CIOs fear the unknown with the cloud, officials acknowledged, meaning there will still be “years ahead” of selling on-premises software for Microsoft;s partners.