LeapThought is leveraging the co-selling capabilities of Microsoft to fuel aggressive growth, innovation and expansion plans across Asia Pacific. The New Zealand-based services specialist has maximized the tech giant’s internal channel changes in the form of One Commercial Partner (OCP) to transition from a local player into an international provider. With key customers on-board such as Parkway - the world’s second largest healthcare provider - LeapThought is a Kiwi partner profiting through the vendor’s new-look go-to-market strategy through the channel. “LeapThought’s relationship with Microsoft is a strong and long-standing one,” said Ratnakar Garikipati, CEO at LeapThought.
“We have received support from Microsoft’s local and international enterprise and public sector account teams, industry specialists, digital advisory, product engineering and product business group teams working with them on a wide range of joint initiatives around the world.” When speaking to Reseller News, Garikipati said “speed to market” is an important factor for LeapThought when striking a vendor alliance, in a nod to Microsoft’s expanding portfolio of platforms and technologies. For example, the provider’s flagship products, Fulcrum and Excelens, are built on Microsoft Azure and Office 365. “Our partnership allows us to continue to capitalize on innovations from Microsoft before they are available in the market,” Garikipati added.
Specific to co-selling, Garikipati said LeapThought’s customers and partners have experienced “significant benefits” from greater access to innovation and expertise through Microsoft. “This has transformed the way they engage with their own customers, partners and suppliers, helping them achieve greater efficiencies, cost savings and be more transparent, compliant and consistent in the way they operate,” Garikipati explained. “We have been able to offer our solutions internationally through bundling our products with Microsoft offerings and continue to achieve great success with key customers in Singapore, New Zealand and other Southeast Asian countries in the utilities, transportation, healthcare and public sectors.”
As a result, LeapThought is bundling solutions with the vendor’s products, offering exposure to a wide-ranging customer base, alongside the ability to leverage turnkey integrated solutions via the cloud. “We receive support with marketing and PR activities and early insights and access into Microsoft products,” Garikipati said. “We were working together on similar projects even before Microsoft formalized their co-sell plans for their partners and we continue to take part in a number of industry events together, helping raise the profile of our solutions. We also collaborate on research and development [R&D]." As LeapThought’s partnership with Microsoft deepens, the provider continues to expand geographically in parallel, driven by the creation of a Southeast Asia regional hub in Singapore.
Furthermore, Garikipati has enlisted other Microsoft partners to co-sell products in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam. “We are now extending our co-sell relationship to North America which is our next priority,” Garikipati added. “We will continue to enlist the support of Microsoft’s network of system integrators, distributors and resellers within Southeast Asia, New Zealand and Australia, as we also aim to replicate our successful recipe in North America.” As a result, Garikipati said LeapThought intends to make a “significant investment” in boosting sales and marketing capabilities to support expansion plans, while continuing to invest in R&D. “We have an ambitious roadmap for the future, planning products and updates with some very exciting features and capabilities that will keep us on the cutting edge of modern technological trends,” Garikipati said.
Microsoft has generated more than 11,000 co-sell wins with partners during the past 12 months, equating to roughly US$5 billion in contract value through the channel. As reported by Reseller News, Azure accounted for US$2.8 billion of the overall contract wins, spanning the vendor’s entire cloud suite. The figures are the result of a shift in approach from the tech giant, with the new-look OCP roll-out designed to drive deeper collaboration between internal direct sellers and partners.
Specifically, the co-sell incentive results in Microsoft’s enterprise sellers now being paid 10 per cent of the partner’s annualized customer contract value. Billed as the “largest sales transformation” in decades, the internal revamp at Redmond allows partners to enter new markets and scale, through leveraging the customer relationships and technical expertise of the vendor’s enterprise sales team. “Microsoft has various partner benefits, such as free access to professional-level tools, cloud credits for test and development and being profiled on our partner site,” said Ryan Tarak, partner development manager at Microsoft New Zealand. “We also provide access to our marketing channels through AppSource or the Azure Marketplace so partners can list their solution and generate organic leads.”
Such marketing channels, according to Tarak, can help partners reach audiences globally, driving leads that can be managed, tracked and progressed in specific markets. “Microsoft also selects certain solutions to amplify as part of our marketing initiatives, including tweets and marketing emails to customers and featuring at events,” Tarak added. Delving deeper, Tarak said Microsoft provides a dedicated partner development manager (PDM) to work closely with partners, outlining how to capitalize on sales and ecosystem capabilities within the vendor’s network