Partners to steer Microsoft towards $107bn ‘Intelligent’ Cloud market in India

Partners to steer Microsoft towards $107bn ‘Intelligent’ Cloud market in India

Gavriella Schuster

Gavriella Schuster

By Nishant Arora,

New Delhi : As more and more businesses strive to embrace Cloud in India, Microsoft, with its vast partner network, is in a unique place, offering a complete Cloud platform as well as productivity and business applications, a top global executive has stressed.

For Gavriella Schuster, Corporate Vice President, One Commercial Partner Worldwide, Microsoft Corporation, the ‘Intelligent Cloud’ and ‘Intelligent Edge’ opportunities in India are pegged at $107 billion.

“Cloud services form the backbone of digital services and Microsoft stands in a unique place as it offers both a complete cloud platform and productivity and business applications,” she told IANS.

Businesses and government across the world, including in India, are increasingly looking to transform their operations digitally.

“They are aiming to have efficiency in operations, empower employees, engage better with customers, and transform their products and services,” Schuster said.

Microsoft has always been a partner-led company and 95 per cent of its revenue comes from its partner network.

At present, the company has over 9,000 partners in India, adding more than 400 partners every month.

“Our partner organisations are taking our platform and using some of those applications to develop new high-value intellectual property to help organisations digitally transform themselves,” Schuster said.

In order to work closely with its partners, Microsoft has brought them under the “One Commercial Partner” organisation.

“The ‘One Commercial Partner’ organisation has unified our partner facing workforce and narrowed our focus to building solutions, taking these solutions to market and co-selling with our partners — working as a unified team,” the executive stressed.

For example, a Microsoft partner, “Precimetrix”, is providing Jaipur Municipal Corporation Internet of Things (IoT) and analytics solutions — to help them manage street lights from a single central location. The move, along with the use of LED bulbs, has led to 80 per cent savings in energy use.

“We also have partners like ‘Progressive Infotech’ which enables its customers to capitalise on Microsoft Azure and collaborate better. Since the collaboration, Progressive has grown multifold and has seen compound quarter growth rate (CQGR) of over 17 per cent over the last seven quarters, and an increase of over 900 per cent in its employee headcount,” Schuster told IANS.

In 2015, Microsoft launched Cloud services from three local data centres in India, bringing the power of Cloud to organisations, especially those that require local data residency.

“The effort was recognised by the government as we became one of the first global Cloud service providers to achieve full accreditation from the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY),” Schuster said.

Microsoft, along with its partners, is offering a variety of solutions that cater to all of their needs, servicing industries, including banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI), retail, healthcare, IT/ITeS and manufacturing — all built on its platform.

“At present, we have 70 of the 100 top Bombay Stock Exchange-listed companies across sectors as well as start-ups using our Cloud. Last year, we made our Cloud services available to over 5,000 start-ups in India,” Schuster noted.

As part of its new co-sell programme, Microsoft is investing additional resources to help bring solutions to the market and connecting with the right customers.

“We are taking the end-solution that a partner has built on our platform by bringing that partner in to sell with us to those business decision-makers,” the executive informed.

“The customer benefits because they get their solutions. The partner benefits as they get increased sales. Microsoft benefits through the adoption of our platform. So that, in a nutshell, is the concept of co-selling,” Schuster told IANS.

In India, Microsoft has some interesting partner and customer cases such as Talview, a leading talent assessment technology platform.

“Its collaboration with Microsoft has pushed frontiers in application of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) in recruitment. It harnesses advanced data science and ML algorithms to help clients expedite hiring and reduce turnaround time,” Schuster said.

ZingHR, a hire-to-retire HR platform, has built an application to ease HR processes for organisations offering services like digital lockers, attendance mapping and employee reimbursements, among others.

The app is hosted on Azure and can be accessed by employees of an organisation on their mobile phones.

(Nishant Arora can be contacted at nishant.a@ians.in )

—IANS

‘Microsoft India to nurture unicorn firms, start-up community in 2018’

‘Microsoft India to nurture unicorn firms, start-up community in 2018’

MicrosoftBy Nishant Arora,

Hyderabad : Armed with Intelligent Cloud and Edge capabilities, Microsoft will give a renewed thrust to nurturing unicorn firms and the start-up community in India next year, Anant Maheshwari, the companys India President, said here on Thursday.

“For us, the growth verticals will clearly be banking and finance, manufacturing and IT/ITeS sectors. But the next goal we have added to our focus areas for 2018 is to empower unicorn companies and the start-up community,” Maheshwari told IANS.

A Unicorn, a term coined in 2013 by venture capitalist Aileen Lee, is a start-up company valued at over $1 billion.

Microsoft currently caters to nearly 5,000 tech start-ups and over 200,000 large and small-and-medium businesses (SMBs) in India.

Microsoft “Accelerator” programme is helping start-ups help boost their enterprise readiness and go-to-market (GTM) activities.

“We have seen a fundamental change in India in the last 12 months when it comes to connectivity. So the focus in 2018 will also be on over 50 million SMBs who are increasingly using Cloud solutions, while adopting digital payments and GST,” Maheshwari emphasised.

Microsoft globally, including in India, has been uniquely positioned and has done a lot of work over the last 40 years to build a massive partner eco-system that is serving SMBs.

According to a recent ASSOCHAM-Deloitte joint study, adoption of advanced business digital technologies can lead to increase in revenues by up to 27 per cent, increase in employment by up to 84 per cent, and enhanced access to international markets by up to 65 per cent for SMBs in India.

According to the apex IT industry body Nasscom, India’s growing SMB segment is set to spend big to upgrade their digital infrastructure in the next few years.

For Microsoft India, the coming year will again be about skilling more people on disrupting technologies like Artificial Intelligence (AI) so that the country can have a talent pool to realise its Intelligent Cloud and Edge dreams.

India now offers a $100 billion opportunity if we can leverage Intelligent Cloud and Intelligent Edge solutions across industries.

“The largest Intelligent Edge market today is the mobility market. Cloud is now connected to Edge devices. There is not just one device that is smartphone but everything — from airplanes to cars — is now being connected in the age of Internet of Things (IoT),” the Microsoft India head told IANS.

For us, the word Intelligent is not an accident but a movement to take India from a mobile-first country to an Intelligent Edge-first country,” Maheshwari said.

“AI is getting democratised, becoming more inclusive from agriculture to healthcare. We look at AI not just as a product that you switch on but something that is embedded in whatever we do and develop,” added Maheshwari, who completed a year at Microsoft India in September.

Having set up India operations in 1990, Microsoft currently employs more than 8,000 people in the country.

With a modern workplace, business apps, the AI infrastructure and Cloud coming together, it becomes an end-to-end play for SMBs to become truly software firms of the future.

“Modern workplace is soon going to be all around us and Microsoft looks forward to enable enterprises own their New-Age workplaces by providing them Intelligent Cloud and Edge capabilities,” Maheshwari said.

(Nishant Arora is at Microsoft’s Hyderabad campus on an invitation. He can be contacted at nishant.a@ians.in)

—IANS