Page 1 of 2
Ray Ozzie's new gig as Microsoft Chief Software Architect exemplifies the company's reset course in a Software-as-a-Service world.
Ozzie takes on the title from company co-founder and Chairman Bill Gates as part of a two-year transition that will give Gates more time for philanthropic work. Craig Mundie is now chief research and strategy officer. Both Ozzie and Mundie had been chief technology officers.
"My role will be changing and expanding," Ozzie told CRN last Thursday night.
But the software services effort, which Ozzie already leads, will continue full speed ahead. Ozzie is known as the father of Notes, a client/server collaboration tool now owned by IBM. "The services push will continue to be central because it touches most of the products and services around here," he said.
Solution providers that are flexible and adapt to change will flourish, even while facing the threat of disintermediation in a SaaS world.
"If the value that the partner is adding is purely infrastructural, you have to pay attention to what infrastructure changes are happening. In this particular case, Microsoft itself is being impacted by infrastructure changes in terms of moving things to services," Ozzie said.
The broad, horizontal nature of initial Windows Live and Office Live services will provide plenty of partner opportunity in value-added features, he added.
"Solution partners can use their SharePoint expertise and connection to customers to build solutions on our back-end infrastructure," he said.
Partners and vendors alike in the SaaS realm worry about losing account control, a point Ozzie acknowledged. "My simple rule of thumb, it goes back to Notes, is that the more a partner is bonded to the customer through domain expertise, the more it'll be a solid, sustainable relationship. Partners can offer customers new solutions whenever the technology changes."
Over time, Ozzie will take on more product reviews. "I already lead reviews on things in the area of services stuff, and Bill does a lot. As we move forward, Bill will still do some reviews alone in areas he cares about," he said.
"Some we'll do jointly. The reality, though, is by the end of two years, reviews will be done differently."
Asked to clarify, Ozzie said, "I tend to be deeper in product design than Bill. Because of our backgrounds, he has much broader average impact and we'll take advantage of this to restructure."
|
|
Symantec's Code Red: The Law Enforcement/Anonymous E-Mail Exchange Law enforcement officials negotiated via e-mail for more than two weeks with an Anonymous group member trying to extort $50,000 from Symantec to keep stolen product code off the Internet. |
|
|
How To Sell IT Security Services To Your Customers Cyberattacks can cost a business thousands, even millions, of dollars, and can deal a death blow to some. Here's how IT solution providers can help guard against malicious attacks. |
|
|
10 Challenges That HP Wants Partners To Tackle Right Now CRN speaks with HP's business unit chiefs to get a sense of where they'd like partners to focus in the coming year, as well as how CEO Meg Whitman is making a difference. |
- VARs: It Was Time For Gates To Step Down
- Ozzie Speaks On Microsoft Transition
- Gates Starts Slow Transition From Full-Time Microsoft Duties
- Heather Clancy's 'The Buzz' Blog: Bill Gates' Second Career
- Robert Faletra's On The Record: Gates' Departure Signals Industry Shift
- How To Help Customers Plan for Disaster
- Microsoft Shows Its Love In Valentine's Day Patch Release
- Insider Threats: The Next Frontier for Security Resellers and SMBs
- Grow Your MSP Business Easily and Affordably with Cisco OnPlus Network Assessment, Management and Advisory Services
- Complete Security and Your Bottom Line: Sophos, Value and the Channel
- Tough Threats, Tougher Security: How You Can Leverage New Solutions To Combat A “Targeted Attack” Landscape
