Channelworld September 2012 Issue

Page 1

Fujitsu SPECIAL REPORT: Check out the profiles of 22 successful Citrix Schneider Electric SAP IBM Juniper Hitachi Data Avaya Systems EmersonDellRSANetApp channel heads from the biggest names in the IT arena. What is their Microsoft Polycom Oracle VMware Symantec Intel CiscoEMCD-Link mantra to make business tick? >>> PAGE 22 CA Technologies

ChannelWorld STRATEGIC INSIGHTS FOR SOLUTION PROVIDERS | COVER PRICE Rs.50

PRAVEEN SAHAI, VP, Channels, EMC India and SAARC, has big plans to empower his channel partners.

Inside SEPTEMBER 2012 VOL. 6, ISSUE 6

News Analysis A year later, Office 365 has moved forward, but only moderately. How will its future unfold? PAGE 10 On Record: Anil Batra, MD, Riverbed Technology, India, on the company’s hot new growth areas. PAGE 14

Opinion

CHANNEL

TITANS

There is no doubt that the personal computer has evolved over the years. But has this evolution been for better or for worse? PAGE 20

Focal Point Here’s how setting up social networks can help you drive innovation internally. PAGE 73

End Line BA’s new program will make travelers wary of booking. PAGE 76

THE 22 MEN WHO DRIVE THE CHANNEL

CHANNELWORLD.IN


WE ARE MORE THAN A NETWORKING COMPANY. WE ARE A RESPONSE. At Juniper Networks, we believe that new technology, mobility and the networked world are driving transformation at an unprecedented rate of speed. Countless new discoveries— business models, medical cures, technical solutions, inventions and ways of understanding the universe are happening every day. And the one thing that keeps all of that progress flowing is the network’s ability to meet the demand. Customers want an alternative to the old approach. That’s why, for us, the network is our sole focus and constant innovation is our mission. CHALLENGE THE STATUS QUO

We have introduced a bold set of breakthrough innovations to the three key areas of the network most in need of transformation:

From the beginning, Juniper set out to architect a different kind of network. The kind of network approach that enables customers to solve the world’s most complex problems and harness its most exciting opportunities. Our goal was never to be a smaller version of the competition, but rather an answer to the status quo.

In the data center. We have fundamentally changed the economics and performance of switching with QFabric.™ This entirely new approach to data center networks enables our customers to meet the exponential demand driven by the massive global adoption of cloud computing and the new mobile workforce. Learn more at juniper.net/qfabric

In keeping with that goal, a year ago we declared “It’s time for the new network.” We did this not as a marketing slogan, but to signal our laser focus and commitment to a fundamentally new approach to networking; answering the wave of incredible demand that we predicted then and that our ever more connected planet is experiencing now.

At the mobile edge. We have MobileNext,™ a unique software solution that enables more scale and capability than anything out there, by leaps and bounds. Learn more at juniper.net/ mobilenext

NETWORKING ISN’T A COMMODITY, IT’S A SCIENCE The world doesn’t order up networking by the pound or bet their infrastructure on unproven methods. As such, we are committed to research, development and partnerships with world-class testing facilities. In fact, in recent years no other public company has invested more percentage of total revenue in networking R&D than Juniper Networks. As a result we are ready with the kind of disruptive thinking and breakthrough products that will meet this exponential network growth long into the future.

In the core. We’ve created the Converged Supercore,™ a new architectural approach leveraging our purpose-built silicon to tackle the incredible demands happening now in the core of the network. This solution offers operators incredible flexibility, control and vision with unprecedented scale, simplicity and operational efficiency. Learn more at juniper.net/supercore

These innovations will drive incredible value, performance and opportunity for our customers for years to come.

OUR CUSTOMERS FUEL OUR PASSION We live in a time where innovation in every industry around the world will be the key to shape the economy of the 21st century. That truth is made clear to us every day by our customers. In fact, Juniper’s greatest partners in innovation are our customers themselves. Their vision into where their industry, new product ideas and consumers are going challenge us to push our own innovation and understanding of the networking industry forward. We thank our customers for their partnership and are proud to be part of their success. THE NEW NETWORK IS HERE

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9/12/2012 6:05:13 PM


n EDITOR’S NOTE

Vijay Ramachandran

Make the Leap

“If you think of [opportunity] in terms of the Gold Rush, then you’d be pretty depressed right now because the last nugget of gold would be gone. But the good thing is, with innovation, there isn’t a last nugget. Every new thing creates two new questions and two new opportunities.” —Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon.

I

N LAST month’s editorial, I wondered why solution

providers were still hesitant to offer mobility solutions. In the weeks since then I’ve met the heads of 82 solution provider organizations across the country and came across just two that had their hat in the mobility ring. Why did I bring up mobility? Because it represents a big, interesting and lucrative opportunity for your company? Yes, but more than that I believe it’s about preparing your organizations to ride the next wave, before your mature lines of business begin to ebb. All businesses, even the most successful ones, at a point will run out of room to grow. The options aren’t too many—reinvent the business periodically or simply stagnate and perish. But, committing to reinvention doesn’t come naturally to most companies, specially when the existing line of business is strong. The alternative is to make the leap to a new, growing business from an existing, slowing one before revenues from that core market have stalled. This is what will give organizations ways and means to stay ahead and not be complacent with present success.

Not by any means easy given how change doesn’t come easy. For it is in the nature of humans to resist transformation. While I’ve seen myriad organizations struggle to make this leap, a few distinctly stand out. My favorite has to be Japan’s Sumitomo Group. One of the largest of Japanese kieretsu, its roots lie in a 17th century book and medicine store in Kyoto founded by Masatomo Sumitomo. Over four centuries, the Group has thrived, getting into new markets and actively seeking new opportunities (copper smelting, trading in textiles, mining, forestry and

n Have you prepared your organization to ride the next wave, before your mature lines of business begin to ebb?

banking, to name just a few). Each time the Group has translated its dominance in one sector to growth in another, before the earlier cash cow ran dry, while staying true to its founder’s principles of not pursuing “easy gains”. Or take a more recent example, Apple. Seen from the outside, the Apple Innovation Juggernaught seems to be all about coming up with ubercool products. But did you know that one of its iconic products, the iPhone, began life more as a problem? From 2001 to 2005, Apple’s largest revenue generator was the amazingly successful iPod. If Apple were a typical corporate you’d have to wonder why this had them worried. Steve Jobs saw things differently and went on to warn the Apple board that as cellphones began to incorporate music players the iPod’s dominance was under threat. Thus began Apple’s

quest to develop a product line that would not only take on increased competiton but also its consequence—declining revenues from the iPod. Apple’s solution was to build a better cellphone that could also play music, before anyone else. The iPhone went on to cannibalize iPod sales, but, in turn gave the company a new, more lucrative product line. How many organizations I wonder would be willing to risk killing a solid line of business in order to build a potentially more profitable future? Would you? I truly believe that to sustain profitable growth in these challenging times you will have to identify value-added lines of business that have the growth potential to allow you to transition out of your current core areas. Focussing on pushing clear disruptors like mobility, collaboration, cloud and analytics to me are the only ways by which you can de-risk your business, even in the near term. Look upon them less as technologies and more as the levers that will allow you to change business direction and intent. To not do so is likely to be hazardous to the health of your business.n Vijay Ramachandran is the Editor-in-Chief of ChannelWorld. Contact him at vijay_ramachandran@ idgindia.com

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

1


Inside

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD n SEPTEMBER 2012

Cover Photograph by SRIVATSA SHANDILYA & Cover Design by UNNIKRISHNAN A.V

COVER STORY

CHANNEL

TITANS

Here are 22 channel heads who steer their company’s fortunes. What is the secret to their success? >>> Page 22



CHANNELWORLD n NEWS DIGEST

n ON RECORD

05 Storm Clouds Rising | Oracle has agreed to

pay a $2 million penalty to settle charges of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that it did not have proper controls to prevent employees at its Indian subsidiary from secretly setting aside funds from the company’s books.

14 Anil Batra, Managing Director, Riverbed

Technology, India, on the company’s hot

08 The Cloud is Now Within Your Grasp|

Two of the bigger names in cloud computing —VMware and Rackspace —have each released low-cost or free trial versions of their cloud offerings.

new growth areas, and how it’s beating back new wanna-be’s and old players.

n FOCAL POINT 73 Getting

It Started

SOCIAL NETWORKING | What it takes to make

a successful internal social network, they say, is

n NEWS ANALYSIS

n OPINION

01 Editorial: Vijay Ramachandran believes that organizations need to make the leap to a new, growing business from an existing, slowing one before revenues from the core market begin to stall. departments in the BYOD era have been exaggerated. But, if IT doesn’t accept its new role then it might be time to write the obituary. 20 Steven Vaughan Nichols: There is no doubt that the PC has evolved over the years. But has this evolution been for better or for worse?

Publisher, President & CEO Louis D’Mello Associate Publisher: Rupesh Sreedharan Editor-in-Chief Vijay Ramachandran Associate Editor Yogesh Gupta Deputy Editor Sunil Shah Assistant Editor Online Varsha Chidambaram Special Correspondents Radhika Nallayam, Shantheri Mallaya Principal Correspondents Aditya Kelekar, Gopal Kishore Correspondents Ankita Mitra, Aritra Sarkhel, Kartik Sharma, Shubra Rishi Senior Copy Editor Nanda Padmanabhan, Shreehari Paliath Copy Editor: Vinay Kumaar n DESIGN

Lead Designers Jinan K.V., Jithesh C., Suresh Nair Senior Designer Unnikrishnan A.V. Designers Amrita C. Roy, Lalita Ramakrishna, Sabrina Naresh n SALES

AND MARKETING

President Sales & Marketing: Sudhir Kamath VP Sales Parul Singh GM Marketing Siddharth Singh Manager Key Accounts: Sakhee Bagri, Varun Dev, Jaideep M. Manager-Sales Support Nadira Hyder Marketing Associates: Dinesh P., Anuradha Iyer, Benjamin Jeevanraj

10 In Search of Firm Ground | A year later, Office 365 seems to have moved forward, but only moderately. How will its future unfold?

18 Rob Enderle: Reports of the death of IT

CHANNELWORLD.IN

n EDITORIAL

06 Lenovo Close On the Heels of HP |

Chinese PC maker Lenovo said that its net profit in the fiscal first quarter ended June 30 grew by 30 percent YoY, as the company inched closer toward surpassing HP to become the top vendor.

Geetha Building, 49, 3rd Cross, Mission Road, Bangalore - 560 027, India

n CUSTOM SOLUTIONS & AUDIENCE DEVELOPMENT

strategic planning, careful follow-through and a willingness to change direction as your users show you how they want to use the tools you’re giving them. Here’s how setting up social networks can help innovation.

Senior Manager Projects: Chetan Acharya, Pooja Chhabra, Ajay Adhikari, Ajay Chakravarthy Manager Tharuna Paul Senior Executive Shwetha M. Project Co-ordinator Archana Ganapathy, Saurabh Patil, Rima Biswas

n ENDLINE

n FINANCE

76 Giving the Creeps | BA’s new program will make travelers wary of booking.

ADVERTISERS’ INDEX Dell India Pvt. Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13,15 & 17

Juniper Networks India Pvt.Ltd IFC, . . . . .34 & 35

Emerson Network Power India Pvt. Ltd . . . . . . . BC

Ricoh India Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 + flap on cover

Fujitsu India Pvt. Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

Schneider Electric India Pvt. Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9

HP- PSG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .IBC

Symantec Software Solutions Pvt.Ltd . . . . . . . . . 11

IBM India Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 This index is provided as an additional service. The publisher does not assume any liability for errors or omissions.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced by any means without prior written permission from the publisher. Address requests for customized reprints to IDG Media Private Limited, Geetha Building, 49, 3rd Cross, Mission Road, Bangalore - 560 027, India. IDG Media Private Limited is an IDG (International Data Group) company. Printed and Published by Louis D’Mello on behalf of IDG Media Private Limited, Geetha Building, 49, 3rd Cross, Mission Road, Bangalore - 560 027, India. Editor: Louis D’Mello, Printed At Manipal Press Ltd, Press Corner, Manipal-576104, Karnataka, India.

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Finance Controller: Sivaramakrishnan T.P. Sr. Manager Accounts: Sasi Kumar V. Sr. Accounts Executive: Poornima Manager Credit Control: Prachi Gupta Sr. Manager Products: Sreekanth Sastry Sr. Manager Production: T.K.Karunakaran Sr. Manager IT: Satish Apagundi n OFFICES

Bangalore IDG Media Pvt. Ltd. Geetha Building, 49, 3rd Cross, Mission Road, Bangalore 560 027, India. Tel: 080-30530300. Fax: 080-30586065 Delhi IDG Media Pvt. Ltd. DLF Corporate Park, Tower 4 B, 3rd Floor, Room 301, MG Road, DLF Phase 3, Gurgaon- 122001, Haryana Tel: 0124- 3881015 Mumbai IDG Media Pvt. Ltd. 201, Madhava, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai 400051. Tel: 022-30685000. Fax: 022-30685023


News

WHAT’S WITHIN

PAGE 06: Lenovo Close On the Heels of HP

PAGE 06: Telepresence is All Set For Big Growth PAGE 08: The Cloud is Now Within Your Grasp PAGE 10: In Search of Firm Ground

F I N D M O R E A R T I C L E S AT CHANNELWORLD.IN

LEGAL

Oracle: Storm Clouds Rising

O

RACLE HAS agreed to pay a $2 million (Rs 11 crore) penalty to settle charges of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that it did not have proper controls to prevent employees at its Indian subsidiary from secretly setting aside funds from the company’s books, SEC said. The funds were used to make unauthorized payments to phony vendors in the country, the agency said. Oracle has agreed to settle the SEC’s charges without admitting or denying the allegations. It was charged with violating the Foreign

Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), but the SEC has not explicitly alleged bribery of foreign officials, though it said the use of the funds to pay recipients who were not on Oracle’s approved local vendor list, and in some cases did not exist or were just storefronts “created a risk that they potentially could be used for illicit means, such as bribery or embezzlement.” In a complaint before a court in California, SEC alleged that from 2005 to 2007 certain employees of Oracle India secretly “parked” with distributors and kept off Oracle India’s books about

$2.2 million of the proceeds from certain sales to the Indian government. In the typical business model used by Oracle at the time, purchase orders were placed by customers on the distributor who in turn bought software licenses and services directly from Oracle for sale to the customer for a margin, according to the complaint. On about 14 occasions related to eight different government contracts, certain Oracle India employees created extra margins between the distributor and end user price, and directed the distributors to hold the extra margin in side funds. The distributor made payments at the direction of Oracle India employees from the side funds to third parties, purportedly for marketing and development expenses, according to SEC. Between 2005 and 2007, government customers are said to have paid Oracle India’s distributors at least $6.7 million (Rs 36.85 crore) on the sales, with Oracle receiving approximately $4.5 million in revenue, with the balance about $2.2 million parked with distributors. Oracle failed to implement or maintain a system of effective internal accounting controls to prevent improper side funds, the SEC added.

SEPTEMBER 2012

—By John Ribeiro INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

5

PRINTERS

Dropping the Curtain Lexmark has exited the inkjet printer business and is laying off 1,700 people as part of a restructuring plan to improve profitability. Lexmark’s restructuring will result in job cuts mainly tied to the inkjet business, including 1,100 manufacturing positions, the company said in a statement. As part of the restructuring plan, the company is shutting down an inkjet supplies manufacturing facility in the Philippines by the end of 2015, and

eliminating other inkjet development assets by the end of 2013. Lexmark will now exit the consumer business and focus on enterprise products, including higher-margin products such as multifunction printers, managed print services, content management, said Marty Canning, Lexmark executive vice president and president of imaging solutions and services. By Agam Shah—


-

PERSONAL COMPUTING

Lenovo Close On the Heels of HP

C

HINESE PC maker

strong earnings as its Lenovo said that market share expanded its net profit in the to surpass Acer, and Dell fiscal first quarter last year. This comes ended June 30 grew by 30 despite a slowdown in percent year-over-year, as the PC market because the company inched closer of weakening economic toward surpassing HP to conditions, and tablets become the top vendor in cutting into the sales of the market. notebooks, according to Lenovo’s net experts. profit reached In this past $141 million (Rs quarter, 783 crore) in the Lenovo’s year-on-year revenue quarter, up from worldwide PC growth recorded by $108 million (Rs shipments grew Lenovo in Q1 of 2012 600 crore) in by 25 percent ( Source : IDC) the same period year-overa year ago. The year, while company’s revenue in the in contrast, shipments quarter was at $8 billion, a by both Dell and HP year-over-year increase of decreased both by about 35 percent. 12 percent, according At the end of this past to IDC. quarter, Lenovo had a A main driver of 14.9 percent share of the Lenovo’s business has PC market, putting the been its dominance of company second behind China’s PC market, which rival HP, which had a 15.5 has grown to become percent share, according the world’s largest. The to research firm IDC. company said in its The Chinese PC vendor earnings report China has consistently reported generated $3.5 billion

35%

(Rs 19, 435 crore) for the company in the quarter, accounting for 44 percent of the Lenovo’s total sales. The company has also been expanding into emerging markets, where its growth has been strong, with its shipments increasing in countries like India, Brazil and Russia. While Lenovo’s notebooks made up the majority of the company’s sales, at 54 percent, the company has been investing heavily in developing products outside the traditional PC space, including smartphones, tablets and smart TVs. In the quarter, Lenovo’s business unit dealing with mobile and smart TV products reported sales increasing by 173 percent year-over-year, reaching $587 million. These products made up 7 percent of the company’s revenue. In this past quarter, Lenovo’s market share in smartphones in China, reached about 10 percent, putting the company third behind Samsung and Chinese handset vendor ZTE, according to research firm Canalys.

Telepresence is All Set For Big Growth

6

attract several enterprises in the region looking forward. Video is now a huge part of the mainstream enterprise communications sector but high definition (HD) video does not provide an immersive environment to the end-users. “The interoperability with room-based video conferencing systems,

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

 McAfee, has announced

that Anand Prahlad, currently Vice President of Engineering for Endpoint Security, will assume the role of Managing Director of Operations, McAfee India. He will also maintain his current role as a VP in the Endpoint Security group.

 NetApp India announced

the appointment of Krithiwas Neelakantan as Director, Channel & Alliances, NetApp India. In his new role, Krithiwas will spearhead channel development and drive sales through joint go-tomarket with the NetApp partner ecosystem.

 RSA announced the appointment of Navin Sadhwani as Head of Channel and Commercial Business for India and SAARC. Sadhwani will also be responsible for formulating and executing the India channel and commercial strategy and work closely with RSA channel partners in the region.

— By Michael Kanw

TELEPRESENCE

The Asia Pacific telepresence market is set to reach $93 million (Rs 518 crore) in 2017, according to new analysis from Frost & Sullivan-Asia Pacific Telepresence Markets CY2010. The market earned revenues of $41.9 million (Rs 233 crore) in 2011 and is predicted a bright future as telepresence’s highly immersive experience will

Short Takes

BIG MONEY: Revenue in APAC is expected to rise by 2017.

executive video conferencing (VC) solutions, and desktop video solutions will trigger demand among Asian enterprises,” said Frost

& Sullivan senior industry analyst Jessie Yu. Increase in demand of telepresence solutions will encourage both global and local vendors to step into this lucrative market, and this will eventually lead to price wars. Although it will also lead to technology innovation, endusers may not quickly adopt this solution due to factors such as the product’s high upfront capital investment and operational costs, and bandwidth consumption. —By Anuradha Shukla



CLOUD COMPUTING

The Cloud is Now Within Your Grasp

T

WO OF the bigger names in cloud computing —VMware and Rackspace — have each released lowcost or free trial versions of their cloud offerings. This follows an announcement by Red Hat earlier that it too would offer a free version of its cloud computing platform. Red Hat’s and Rackspace’s offerings help users build private clouds based on the OpenStack software code, while VMware is offering a free trial version of its vCloud software, which allows access to public cloud resources. The moves signal an effort by cloud service providers to entice businesses that may have virtualized environments to expand to a public or private cloud, one analyst says. VMware officials say they are hoping to lower the adoption barrier for its customers who are interested in expanding from an on-premise virtualized environment powered by VMware to a public cloud service offered by one of the more than 150 VMware-certified public cloud vendors. Through the swipe of a credit card on the vCloud portal at VMware.com, customers can launch a vCloud Service Evaluation, public cloud instance of Linux virtual machines that are hosted by a vCloud service provider that the company does not disclose. VMware has not had this “instant gratification,” 8

says Gartner cloud analyst Lydia Leong, which has resulted in some VMware customers who want to experiment with public cloud services to do so at competitors such as Amazon Web Services and Rackspace. “This is a basic offering that doesn’t really have any bells and whistles, but is a reasonable way to get the ‘feel’ of a VMware cloud,” she says, noting that it’s not meant to be a formal proof-of-concept evaluation tool. Rumors have circulated in recent weeks that VMware will be releasing its own IaaS offering, as opposed to the vCloud

network of service providers the company currently works with. Andrews, the VMware spokesperson, says he couldn’t comment on speculation, but says VMware will “continue to invest in our service provider ecosystem,” noting that VMware is a “partner-led company.”

Rackspace, meanwhile, is doubling down on the company’s investment in OpenStack, including recently releasing a product fully powered by OpenStack, which is the largest OpenStack-powered public cloud deployment, Leong says.

Around

Sluggish PC Growth in 2012

Dell’s New Cloud Offering

TheWorld Brocade CEO Resigns

The CEO of Brocade Communications has announced plans to retire from the company, even as the storage networking vendor reported increased profits for the quarter just ended. Michael Klayko has been CEO since 2005. “Decisions like these are never easy, but I believe it is the right time,” Klayko was quoted as saying in a statement. The storage networking market has changed significantly in the seven years since he became CEO. Klayko will stay on as CEO until the company finds a replacement, Brocade said. — IDG News Service

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Growth in the PC market is expected to be slower than last year, after mid-year shipments slowed as consumers were hit by weak economic conditions, and also postponed purchases to evaluate Windows 8 and Ultrabook products while considering spending on media tablets and smartphones, IDC said. The PC market is expected to grow by only 0.9 percent this year, down from 1.7 percent last year, although growth may pick up to 6.5 percent in 2013. Global PC shipments during the year are forecast to be 367 million with portable PCs accounting for 214 million units. IDC now expects worldwide PC shipment growth will average 7.1 percent from 2013 to 2016, down from the 8.4 percent CAGR it had previously forecast. — John Ribeiro

— By Brandon Butler

Dell said that it will offer dedicated servers in its data centers and off-premises application and storage services for companies looking to establish private clouds. Dell’s Cloud Dedicated program intends to reduce the stress of companies hosting servers locally by moving workloads off-premises to Dell’s data centers. The program helps companies move applications into the cloud, and the service levels can meet security and compliance requirements, Dell said. — Agam Shah


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n NEWS ANALYSIS

In Search of Firm Ground

A year later, Office 365 seems to have moved forward, but only moderately. How will its future unfold? By Juan Carlos Perez

A

MIXTURE OF intense excitement and skepticism followed the launch a year ago of Office 365, as backers and critics debated whether the cloud collaboration, productivity and communication suite would succeed. Skeptics said Office 365 was arriving too late as a unifying and superior replacement to weaker and disjointed offerings like Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS), Office Live Small Business (OLSB) and Live@edu. Microsoft and its supporters countered that it was still early days in the cloud collaboration, productivity and communication market, and that Office 365 would tower over competitors like Google Apps.

THE PRESENT One year later, it’s hard to say whether Office 365 has been a success or a failure, 10

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

and Microsoft isn’t making the task easier. “We’re not breaking out customer, user, or revenue numbers at this time,” a spokeswoman for the company said via email, when asked for concrete metrics about Office 365’s sales and adoption. She reiterated the “momentum” statement Microsoft has made previously that Office 365 is “on track” to be one of the “fastest growing offers” ever for the company. One thing seems clear: Office 365 hasn’t blown competitors out of the water. “It hasn’t swept the market by storm,” said IDC analyst Melissa Webster. She expects Microsoft to release concrete data about Office 365 sales once the product makes significant revenue contributions. “They’ll give metrics when the metrics are meaningful, demonstrating scale and depth,” she said. Beyond its ability to dominate—or not—the market, Office 365’s success will also be measured against other criteria. For starters, Office 365, whose most common configuration includes online versions of Office, SharePoint, Lync and Exchange, must help Microsoft make inroads into the smallbusiness segment. There, most prospective customers have lacked the money and expertise to buy and install in their offices products like Exchange, SharePoint and Lync.

It was in this underserved segment where Google Apps found most of its customers the first three or four years after its launch in 2007, attracting them with a free suite that included email, calendar, IM, productivity applications, a website builder and, for $50 (Rs 2750) per- userper-year, additional features, including IT management and security features. Microsoft’s offering, the free Office Live Small Business (OLSB), which focused on website hosting and email, couldn’t hold back Google Apps, which currently is used by 5 million businesses, 66 of the largest 100 U.S. universities and government agencies in 45 of the 50 U.S. states. It seems in this respect, Office 365 has been effective. According to Microsoft, more than 90 percent of Office 365 customers are small businesses with 50 or fewer employees. “So many of these wins are new customers for Microsoft,” Webster said. Suites like Office 365 and Google Apps, which are either free or moderately priced on a monthly or annual subscription model, give many SMBs the opportunity to have better email and collaboration software than they’ve been able to afford, and because the applications are hosted and managed by vendors, with much less IT maintenance work, she said.

REALITY BITES However, it hasn’t all been rosy. Many OLSB customers, faced with a recent deadline to migrate to Office 365 or to another email hosting provider, complained that Microsoft could have made the transition smoother.



n NEWS ANALYSIS In discussion forums, blogs and other outlets, upset OLSB users said Microsoft should have automated and handled more of the work, and provided migration tools, especially to transfer websites. Similar complaints have been voiced by some Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) customers regarding their move to Office 365. BPOS was aimed at mid-sized and large companies, and included online versions of SharePoint, Exchange and Lync based on their 2007 editions. It also lacked Office Web Apps, the Office online version. By contrast, Office 365’s components are based on the newer 2010 editions of the products. “Yes, I heard from some smaller businesses I’ve talked to that Microsoft could have done more to automate the migration process,” said Michael Fauscette, an IDC analyst. “Microsoft could have made it easier.” With the recently launched Office 365 for Education—schools and universities that have been using Live@edu will have to engage in a similar transition over the next 18 months or so, so it remains to be seen whether these customers also raise objections to the process. “You’d hope that Microsoft has learned from the feedback it’s gotten about this now that the Live@edu migrations are starting,” Fauscette said. The statistic that more than 90 percent of Office 365 customers are small businesses also raises the question of whether Office 365 has been successful in a different but critical mission: protecting Microsoft’s vast installed based of Ex12

change/SharePoint/Lync/ Office on-premises customers as they move to a cloud model for email, productivity apps and collaboration. “Every CIO in the world is looking at a cloud strategy,” Webster said. “Microsoft needs to be able to answer ‘Yes’ when they ask if Microsoft can help them move to the cloud.” In January, Spanish bank Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA) announced its plan to roll out Google Apps to its 110,000 employees, a project that involves turning off various on-premises email systems, including Exchange, which was used by about 35,000 employees in the company’s headquarters.

landing its share of large Office 365 contracts. “Office 365 has been at least moderately successful in protecting Microsoft’s customer installed base,” said industry analyst Michael Osterman from Osterman Research. The executive branch of the Minnesota state government is an example of a customer that has followed an ideal path for Microsoft. It consolidated about 40 disparate email systems into a single on-premises Exchange 2007 platform and later moved its about 40,000 users to Office 365. In May, Microsoft announced that it had struck a deal with the Catholic International Education Office to roll out Office 365’s

of Microsoft products. Microsoft did well to design Office 365 with hybrid deployments in mind, Osterman said. Some companies are more comfortable keeping certain email and collaboration software on-premises, and it lets Microsoft build on its large installed base, he said. Industry analyst Rebecca Wettemann from Nucleus Research concurs. “Most businesses are used to Office and Outlook, and this hybrid approach lets them take advantage of the economies and flexibility of the cloud while working on the environment they’re comfortable with,” she said. Although Office 365 applications offer a subset

With its various options, Office 365 is certainly more complex to understand from a licensing perspective, but at the same time it offers customers more flexibility to mix and match versions to better suit different types of users. Unsurprisingly, Google trumpeted the win, saying that when completed, the implementation would be the largest to date for Google Apps. In May, the U.S. Department of the Interior announced its choice of Google Apps for about 90,000 users, a loss for Office 365, which was also considered, and for Exchange, which was one of the on-premises email systems replaced. That deal was not only a business win for Google but also a legal victory, because the company sued the agency in 2010, alleging that the contract requirements favored Microsoft unfairly.

FINDING THEIR FEET Simultaneously, Microsoft has also counter-punched,

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

education edition to about 4.5 million Catholic school students this year. Office 365 has also bumped Google Apps from some accounts. Brazilian clothing store chain Renner adopted Google Apps in 2009, but down the line got disenchanted with it and recently decided to replace it with Office 365. The Microsoft suite is better suited to Renner’s plan to link its cloud email and collaboration platform with a variety of third-party, on-premises transaction systems and enterprise applications, said CIO Leandro Balbinot. “At the end of last year, we realized Google Apps wasn’t complete enough for that evolution,” he said, adding that Renner historically hasn’t been a big user

of the functionality of the on-premises versions, that subset has been more than adequate, Wettemann said. “The core functionality is there,” she said. Office 365 has a variety of bundling options Microsoft offers, which some have suggested could be counterproductive and confusing to prospective clients. With its various options, Office 365 is certainly more complex to understand from a licensing perspective, but at the same time it offers customers more flexibility to mix and match versions to better suit different types of users, IDC’s Fauscette said. “The channel partners are really good about working with the customers and helping them decipher the details.” 



ON RECORD n

Anil Batra,

MD, Riverbed Technology, India, on the company’s hot new growth areas, and how it’s beating back new wanna-be’s and old players.

By Radhika Nallayam

14

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Your recent acquisition of Zeus Technology and Aptimize puts you in direct competition with established vendors in the application delivery space like F5 and Citrix. How do you position Riverbed, given its traditional focus on WAN optimization? BATRA: It is true that we started out with a WAN optimization offering and it remains our flagship product. However, like any other company, we’ve gradually brought in adjacent technologies to create a platform. Our platform enables infrastructures to be optimized, drives applications to perform better, and delivers apps in the right manner. We also focus on application firewalls, web-content optimization, and application-aware network performance management

Riverbed is a performance platform company. Yes, we did begin with WAN optimization, but that was just a part of the performance enhancement portfolio. In our continuing conversation with the customer, it was very evident that there was a need to have a performance platform that would take care of a lot of other things. As a result, we looked at what we should have as a set of competencies, and obviously the virtual ADC is a growing area. If the appliance-based ADC market is growing at 15 percent, then the growth rate of the virtual ADC market is more than 40 percent. With the Zeus acquisition, we became the leader in the virtual ADC space. Aptimize, which is a webcontent optimization company, further enhances this portfolio. The companies that you mentioned are in different areas, but we encompass the whole platform. Besides, we are the only player that focuses on virtual ADCs. The market is, otherwise, appliancebased. According to industry reports, the virtual ADC market will grow at a fast rate, considering the current consolidation scenario in the datacenter. Do you already have customers in India for your virtual ADC? BATRA: We have a few customers for our application delivery offerings in India, and we see good prospects at this time. We are looking at customers of all sizes, across verticals. The WAN optimization market, a Riverbed



n ON RECORD | ANIL BATRA stronghold, is seeing new entrants like Silver Peak. Is your monopoly being threatened? BATRA: For the last four years we have been right at the top in this market. There are always going to be new companies, even as a few of the existing players exit the market. There is always that churn in this market. But we continue to maintain a 50-percent market share worldwide. We are focused on R&D and building new features into our products. We are innovating at a faster rate than anybody else in this market. And we believe that we are taking care of the customer’s needs better than anybody else.

$1.3

billion: Estimated size of the WAN application delivery market by the end of 2012. SOURCE: IDC

Players like Blue Coat, who now compete with you in the asymmetric WAN optimization space, talk extensively about integrating security features into WAN optimization and of security being a differentiator. What’s your security pitch? BATRA: When we bought

with an optimization strategy. What do you think? BATRA: Customers are very discerning, and they know what they want. They are very knowledgeable. Most of the technologies today are sold based on proof of concepts (PoC). When a customer does a PoC with us—and with some of our competitors— they definitely observe a difference. Customers make a decision based on what they see and not on what they are told. Do you see migration from competing brands? BATRA: Plenty. We do every day. We like to call it ‘boomerang’ because the

our technology authorization path (TAP), which allows partners to recognize their strengths and access training in that area. This makes a partner quite knowledgeable in an area they want to focus on. As a result, productivity increases and the partner is able talk to his customers more effectively. Since TAP calls for some investments from the partner’s side, we assure them of additional benefits in terms of better margins, incentives and rebates. Feedback from our VARs has been phenomenal so far. Do you see a clear trend towards opex, since you have partnerships with all

There’s always going to be new companies. But we are innovating faster than anybody else in this market. And we’re taking care of the customer better than anybody else. In general, the enterprise approach to WAN optimization still seems rather tactical. What’s the scene in India and how many organizations have taken a holistic approach? BATRA: I don’t think organizations have taken an ad hoc approach to WAN optimization. I think it’s well thought-out. But it could be implemented in phases. If an organization has 1,000 locations, for example, they may not implement WAN optimization at all locations in one go. The critical ones get priority, and then they expand further. Most of organizations that have a comprehensive IT infrastructure in place will have a thought-out approach to WAN optimization. 16

the company called Mazu Networks, which is now called Cascade (a Riverbed product), it was essentially a security product. We transformed it into an application-aware platform. The fact that we can go down to a particular computer and see what application has been used and which server is responding, are all things that we do because we have security features in our products. The other thing that we have is the application firewall, which is virtual and can thus be easily integrated with applications. It should be easy for Cisco, which dominates the core networking market, to break into most enterprises

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

customer comes back to us. The cloud definitely seems like a driver for your business. Tell us about your partnership with Akamai. BATRA: We, along with Akamai, built the Steelhead Cloud accelerator, to accelerate SaaS applications. The path optimization is done by Akamai, whereas we take care of the application acceleration part. We have not had any customers for this offering as of now, as this was lunched just a few months ago. You announced some changes to the Riverbed Partner Network (RPN) program recently. Can you tell us about it? BATRA: We introduced

the major telecom service providers apart from your traditional channel? BATRA: We have service provider partners who provide managed services to customers—Reliance Communications, Tata Communications, Airtel, AT&T, Orange and a few others. They cater to customers who opt for the opex model. However, there are a lot of customers who are still quite interested in capex, because they can depreciate it over time and reduce their opex. So I think both models will grow in the future, which is why we work very closely with our global and Tier-1 SIs and also with our growing network of VARs. n



n OPINION

ROB ENDERLE

Will BYOD Kill IT?

T

HE ANSWER to the question in the headline may Reports of the seem like an easy no. But, the BYOD sea change— death of IT and the broad trend to move technology decisions departments in closer to users and into line organizations—is makthe bring-youring IT services redundant. To avoid getting smaller own-device over the next few years, IT groups will have to adapt. era have been sense, line groups are customers. If cusAt the core of the BYOD and consumerexaggerated. tomers decide to either use a third-party ization trend is dissatisfaction with what But, if IT service or buy their own over something IT provides. If users and line managers vendor supplies, that is a lost customer. thought the services and hardware that doesn’t accept IT supplied were adequate, they wouldn’t any The line group’s funding will likely follow. If IT sits back in a BYOD world and be motivated to bring their own hardware its new role does the bare minimum to get employeeinto the shop. then it might sourced hardware to function, that will For example, IT is typically bypassed just hasten the discussion about whether in lieu of cloud services these days largely be time to the line organizations need IT at all. Evenbecause getting resources allocated is ofwrite the tually, the line organization will recognize ten wrought with paperwork, approvals, that it is doing much of the visible work and other hurdles. To avoid this, users inobituary.

Rob Enderle is president and principal analyst of the Enderle Group. Enderle writes on emerging technology, security and Linux for a variety of publications and appears on news TV shows that include CNBC, FOX, Bloomberg and NPR. 18

stead go to online services, use their credit cards and submit an expense report—all of which bypasses IT until an audit or review catches this behavior and some IT or security executive has a minor coronary. CIOs may think that simply enabling the device a user brings addresses the problem—certainly the user-staffed groups put in place to provide PCs with IT support would tend to support this assumption. But CIOs need to think differently. By putting in place such a group, you’ve basically taken IT out of the support loop, except as an observer. If you could do that with PCs, why couldn’t you do it with, well, everything? Small companies don’t have IT departments, and they seem to do just fine—and off we go down the slippery slope, arguing whether IT is relevant. Think about it: If users were customers, they’d take their money elsewhere. Most IT groups have trouble grasping that they are essentially staff organizations. In that

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

itself and decide to insource IT functions. Granted, in doing so, the organization is likely to suddenly discover all of the unsung things the IT department had been doing. But, by then, it will be too late, as IT staff has been laid off, replaced by a hosting company, service or a line-staffed replacement function. Hope is not lost. Even in a BYOD world, the IT department can be relevant, though it might work a bit differently than before. n IT can help with device selection and the location of support resources. n IT can get volume discounts for staffers. n IT can warn users about security or services issues they may not be aware of, not to mention drafting a successful BYOD policy that protects the business. n Above all, IT can stay in touch with users, figure out what they need and actively work to both assure users that they are in fact relevant and remind users what IT is doing on their behalf. n



n OPINION

STEVEN J. VAUGHAN NICHOLS

For Old Times’ Sake There is no doubt that the personal computer has evolved over the years. But has this evolution been for better or for worse?

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols has been writing about technology and the business of technology since CP/M80 was cutting-edge and 300bps was a fast Internet connection—and we liked it! He can be reached at sjvn@vna1.com. 20

I

I GOT involved in computers just in time for the revolu-

tion. It was the 1970s, and we were moving from centrally managed computers to PCs. For the next 40 years, users had an unprecedented level of choice, which put the “personal” in “personal computing.” Today, that revolution is

being pushed back. I don’t want to overstate the case. In some organizations, users never moved from the terminal/server model, and even if you had a PC, there was always some vendor lock-in. If you bought a Mac, you used Apple’s operating system. You had more options with a Windows PC, but they were limited. Through all those years, though, no matter what sort of PC you bought, you could always modify it to meet your changing needs. All you needed were expansion slots and a bit of know-how. The first sign that things were changing came with the arrival of sealed-unit smartphones and, a bit later, tablets. Upgradability just doesn’t exist in the tablet world. With a tablet, what you see is what you get, and there’s no way to give yourself more down the road. The trend expanded in June, when Apple introduced the new MacBook Pro. You can’t open the case without voiding the warranty. You can’t upgrade the hard drive or RAM or change the battery. Some of these limitations have been true of the MacBook Air for a while, but the new MacBook Pro takes them to new levels. The problem with this is that your MacBook Pro will be obsolete when the day comes that you feel the need to move to a new version of the operating system or want to add applications that it can’t support. Your only choice will be to buy a new machine. Another area of flexibility in the PC era was choice of operating system. We never

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

had complete freedom, as noted above, but let’s say you bought a new PC back in 2009. It would have come with the infamous Windows Vista installed, but it was relatively easy to install the older Windows XP—or even Linux. Now, with Windows 8, Microsoft is making it really hard to boot Linux or older versions of Windows . You can still find a way, if your tech knowledge is above average and you’re persistent. But it’s worse with tablets. If you buy a Microsoft Surface or Windows RT tablet, you’re pretty much locked into Windows 8 forever. But, you say, what embodies freedom more than a cloud? It’s true that the cloud can eliminate some upgradability problems, since you can put not just your data but also your applications in the cloud. But more and more, the cloud has become a new road to vendor lock-in. Google apps work better with Chrome, Mac OS X and iOS are increasingly intertwined with iCloud, and Office 13 is on its way to being a Microsoft cloud-based application. It seems as if the push to lock us into a specific platform is growing stronger. I like being able to improve my computers, whether they’re on my desk or in my pocket. I like being able to choose my operating systems and programs. I loved the PC revolution. I don’t want to once again have no choice but to put my trust in black boxes and services under the control of corporations that might not have my best interests at heart . n



n COVER STORY

MEET THE

TITANS

Champions. Torch Bearers. The channel chiefs of tech companies are nothing less than titans, fighting in a fierce, competitive landscape. These ‘Channel Titans’ are an intrinsic part of the arsenal of an enterprise solution provider to win business deals.

By Team ChannelWorld The connection between the vendors and their partner ecosystem is a delicate and fragile one. The onus of maintaining the equation between the two parties invariably falls on the channel head of the vendor company. More often than not, he encounters multiple challenges in terms of understanding his partners, their conflicts, their need for newer markets, substantial margins and incentives. Surmounting these, and establishing harmony and growth for 22

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

the vendor company, as well as guiding the partner along the growth curve, makes the channel head the face of his organization. ChannelWorld explores 22 personalities who have become the voice of their respective companies. They walk a tight rope for their partners without compromising adversely on the interest of either party. This is a profile tribute to each of these individuals who wield power and influence in their channel bastions.


KERMAN RANA | 48 D-Link

AMITABH JACOB | 26 Symantec

KRITHIWAS NEELAKANTAN | 50 NetApp

ANKESH KUMAR | 28 Emerson

NAVIN SADHWANI | 52 RSA

ANOOP NAMBIAR | 30 IBM

NIRAJ KAUSHIK | 54 Oracle

ASHISH GUPTA | 32 Polycom

PRAVEEN SAHAI | 56 EMC

B RAGHAVENDRAN | 36 Cisco

R LAKSHMINARAYANAN | 58 Fujitsu

B SURYANARAYANAN | 38 Intel

SHRINIVAS CHEBBI | 60 Schneider Electric

GANESAN ARUMUGAM | 40 VMware

SUDHIR NAYAR | 62 Avaya

HRISHI PARTHASARATHY | 42 Microsoft

VIJAYANT RAI | 64 CA Technologies

JITENDRA GUPTA | 44 Juniper

VIVEK RAWAT | 66 SAP

KAUSHAL VELURI | 46 Citrix

YOGESH SAWANT | 68 Hitachi Data Systems SEPTEMBER 2012

Ph o t og rap h s by : S RI VATS A SH A N D I LYA , KA PI L S H RO FF, FOTOC ORP & SUJI T H

AJAY KAUL | 24 Dell

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

23


CHANNEL

TITANS

Ajay Kaul Director & General Manager Global Commercial Channel–India, DELL

My management philosophy. It’s important that we channelize the full potential of our channel partners, collaborate with them to ensure that we maximize their productivity, profit and minimize expenses by keeping a dynamic balance between both. Channel myth I’d like to bust. That it’s all about the numbers-if you consistently fret about the profit and loss statement, your channel partner sales are going to be low.

24

Biggest learning this year. We should continuously look for opportunities to increase our reach and be keen on working with partners who are willing to offer customized technology solutions. Technology that will take off in 2013. BYOD and desktop virtualization. Best advice I’ve ever got. Personal change is a reflection of our inner growth and empowerment.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Ajay Kaul cooks for his family on occasions. He makes Roganjosh and Damaloo during weekends. Although he enjoys this bit, his kids think that is that there is still enough room for improvement.


2005

ONE BIG INITIATIVE

DELL

Early last year Dell announced a new Global Commercial Channel (GCC) structure, with a single point of contact for partners, to generate higher productivity, improved time cycles, and enable more customized programs. This partner profitability, by bringing consistent pricing, offered the partners increased growth opportunities with solution-centric offerings.” have constantly bettered ourselves by exploring new horizons, and keeping that in mind there have further strengthened Dell’s position as an industry leading solutions provider with end-to-end technology solutions.

A business idea that should get more attention. Effort is important, result is what matters. What would you like to invent? A pill that could instantly inspire and motivate people. An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Micheal Dell believes that it is very important to constantly transform business around new areas and solutions with broader capabilities. We

A question you wish you had better answers to. How do I make people see what they are looking for? A habit you wish you could get rid of. Trying to solve all the problems when some only need to be managed.

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL I think it’s important for channels to focus on customized solutions. Efforts taken by Dell for strengthening the channel business have been constant and consistent. We currently have over 2300 channel partners in the Indian market. We are continuously looking for opportunities to increase our reach and will work with partners who offer customized solutions.

It is essential to hold training programs for channels with instructor-led classroom training programs and online courses to cover more relevant areas. Dell’s recent initiative called Elite Partner Program roped in 60 tier-2 partners. We train partners on the Dell solution-stack cutting across the enterprise solutions portfolio.

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

25

Kaul has been associated with Dell for the past seven years, executing various roles with success. At present, he is Director & General Manager Global Commercial Channel – India at Dell which includes managing the partner community with channel initiatives and partner empowerment across India. Kaul has also been Director –sales from April 2011 for the public, education and healthcare verticals. He was Regional Sales Manager (South & West) Public, Education & Healthcare for over two years from February 2009 to May 2011. He headed the south and west regions across central/state Govt., PSU, defense, education and healthcare vertical covering all products of Dell for revenue, margin and market share growth. As the Regional Enterprise Manager from 2007 to 2009, Kaul headed the pre-sales team and managed the servers and storage business in north and east region across large enterprises and government segment. Kaul’s first job with Dell was as Sales Manager-Global Accounts from May 2005 onwards. In this role which spanned nearly twenty one months, he managed select global accounts across the country to grow revenue and profitability covering all products.


CHANNEL

TITANS

Amitabh Jacob Channel Director, India & SAARC, SYMANTEC

IDN’T KNOW YOUAD BOUT ME

My management philosophy. Set direction and get a buy-in. Good people need direction, not push. Once you have a buy-in from your people, things will fall in place. Channel myth I’d like to bust. The myth that the channel is in the business only for money. There is a bigger gain in selling hightechnology products. The overall 26

experience, and making a difference is important. Biggest learning this year. This year will present a great opportunity to differentiate between the average, good and great in terms of strategies, people, processes and technologies. Technology that will take off in 2013. As Indian organizations increase their

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Amitabh Jacob is a tennis aficionado and is hugely passionate about the game. He has been playing actively for the past 11 years and continues to do so at a competitive level. Perhaps, it isn’t sheer coincidence that he shares his date of birth with Swiss tennis legend Roger Federer (albeit a few years apart!).


WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL Partners need to be encouraged to look beyond the low-hanging fruit and aim for larger deployments, constantly seek opportunities in new technologies and IT trends. Emerging trends like virtualization and cloud are continuously attracting customers. In such a scenario, the channel partner needs to be wellequipped, and trained to be an expert advisor.

It would be great if channel partners would proactively suggest their ideas on how to take their business into high-growth mode more often. Symantec expects partners with proven track record and business model to enhance available services to their value proposition. Partners must understand the need to drive incremental targets on specific portfolios.

familiarity with strategic IT trends, assisting them with building private clouds will be a huge opportunity. In addition, organizations will move forward from server virtualization, and embrace virtualization of businesscritical applications too. What would you like to invent? An industry-wide portal that grades and classifies the best talent available by skill, experience and compensation. Best advice I’ve ever got.

2012

SYMANTEC Jacob took over as Channel Head at the security vendor in June. He is responsible for planning and execution of channel capacity and competency for Symantec’s channels and distribution in India/ SAARC. The role covers enabling and working in tandem with the execution of go-to-market .

2010 RSA

As the head of channels and SMB sales for India and SAARC, he was responsible for taking enterprise channel to the next level at RSA. The other responsibility was to create commercial channel and distribution for the region. He worked with RSA for a little over two from February 2010.

Do not lose sight of your goals—even when the goal post is out of sight. A business idea that should get more attention. The concept of information protection in a holistic manner will gain traction among organizations of all sizes as they confront the cloud, virtualization, mobility and information explosion.

CAREER GRAPH

2008 SUN MICROSYSTEMS In January 2008, Jacob joined Sun Microsystems as General Manager - Partner Sales. His responsibility was to primarily engage and further manage the large system integrator relationships and enable partner business for Sun Microsystems.

A habit you wish you could get rid of Constantly checking mails on my Blackberry.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE I am extremely excited about working closely with partners for strengthening Symantec’s distribution network, tapping new markets and extending our reach across India. The channel community is our enabler in India. We are committed to providing them with best support and programs to drive profitability and improve partner experience.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

2000 IBM

He worked with IBM as Territory Manager, Mid Markets (India South) for eight years from March 2000 to January 2008. The major responsibility of Jacob was sales for IBM Products/Services at the mid- market across the southern region of India.

27


CHANNEL

TITANS

Ankesh Kumar Channel Products & Marketing-India, EMERSON NETWORK POWER

My management philosophy. I believe that there is no thumb rule for being a successful manager. My management philosophy in general is to be ethical, transparent and professional. Channel myth I’d like to bust. It is that ‘price decides the fate of market’ and that if you offer deep discounts your business will flourish. Technology that will take off in 2013. Mobility and anything to do with it.

28

Best advice I’ve ever got. Never underestimate anyone. Everyone has huge potential to do something beyond anyone can ever imagine. A business idea that should get more attention. I think that would be sustainability. Corporate profitability should be phased-out to make way for sustainability as this would translate automatically to longterm profitability.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Ankesh Kumar has a penchant for writing blogs, where he usually puts up movie reviews. Kumar is a movie buff and is a proud owner of a collection of more than 1200 movies. He takes some time-out of his busy schedule to watch the latest flicks, and write reviews.


2010

ONE BIG INITIATIVE

CAREER GRAPH EMERSON NETWORK POWER

We recently introduced solutions in the data center infrastructure management (DCIM) product family and product launches for these are underway. We have also introduced special partner programs to enhance partner wallet-share with Emerson products beyond our existing UPS range. Additionally, we have also rationalized the channel pricing strategy to provide transparency 2004 in pricing of all our products.”

In his present role, Kumar is the Director-Product Management Channel & Marketing at Emerson Network Power in India that requires him to spearhead the functions for breaking new avenues and driving brand visibility and growth in channel products which are Small/Micro UPS, DCIM Solutions, KVMs, PDUs, and RDUs .

EMERSON NETWORK POWER A habit you wish you could get rid of. I want to work on being more patient in everything I do. It’s a virtue I can’t wait to acquire. What would you like to invent? A machine which can take you anywhere in the world in the blink of an eye. Biggest learning this year. There are opportunities everywhere. Our endevour must be to see all

In 2004, prior to his present role, he was heading the marketing and communication functioning when he had joined the Emerson Network Power. In this role he was instrumental in launching several local and global marketing campaigns. He played a pivotal role in establishing the marketing communication function for Emerson in India was instrumental in positioning the Emerson Brand as the market leader in BusinessCritical Continuity for CIOs/ IT Managers. Apart from hiring specific agencies and managing the annual marketing budget he used to be directly involved in all facets of marketing - PR, Direct Marketing, Tradeshows/Seminars/Events/ Conference, Marketing Research, Website Management & Partners Development.

possibilities and explore available opportunities. An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Saving energy is just the first step to saving your business. A question you wish you had better answers to. How do I create everlasting processes to improve productivity at the bottom of the pyramid?

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL I would like to enable the channels to have a solution centric rather than boxpushing or product centric approach. We have always endeavoured to take care of our partners’ business needs in a manner that is most beneficial to their long-term growth and profitability. To stay relevant, they have to acquire skill-sets that will enable them to sell newer technology to customers.

Focus on innovation, efficiency and scaling-up the business rather than being price conscious. We regularly reward our partners through front-end and back-end schemes as a means of incentivizing them for pushing our products in the market. These tactical moves need to be supplemented with customer focused up-selling.

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

2002 TIMES OF INDIA TIMES OF INDIA Prior to joining Emerson India, Kumar worked for The Times of India, Pune and managed BTL activities and events in Pune and the Ahmednagar Region. 29


CHANNEL

TITANS

Anoop Nambiar Director, Business Partner and CSI, IBM ISA

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Anoop Nambiar is a sports-lover and follows different games. He is greatly interested in badminton, and takes time out to play the sport regularly.

My management philosophy. Recruit the best resources in your team and empower them to deliver while constantly coaching them for success. Channel myth I’d like to bust. I would like to bust the myth that elephants can’t dance. Biggest learning this year in IBM. Growth and opportunity exist even in challenging times. Technology that will take off in 2013. Integrated systems will do well the next year. Best advice I’ve ever got. Circle of concern and circle of influence: It basically propagates that one should not spend too much time, energy and effort on things that are outside your line of control or influence and rather look into areas where we can make a difference. A habit you wish you could get rid of. Avoid personal participation in various seminars and industry forums. 30

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012


2007

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. “Our commitment is unwavering. I want you to know how much I value, personally, our partnerships. We work hard—very hard—to be unique to you because I know you have choices.” What would you like to invent? A collaborative tool that lets business partners work more closely with vendors and ensures real-time learning. A business idea that should get more attention.

IBM

Broaden their portfolio into selling software and services: Business partners must invest in the right skill-set and time to broaden their offerings for customers. They can no more be selling any one specific software or services and position it as their core area of expertise. Instead, they must expand their bouquet of offerings, encompassing varied needs of customers.

It is important for business partners to show the adaptability of storage and server boxes to varied work environments. By that, they must highlight how this hardware can function across varied business verticals offering multiple varieties of solutions rather than just position it a stand-alone box. This is popularly known as solution-in-abox play.

Anoop Nambiar, rejoined IBM in 2007 and was appointed the Country Manager for Business Partners ISA Region in December 2007. His responsibilities include developing all IBM business—hardware, software and services, performed through business partners across India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

2004 LENOVO

Nambiar moved to Lenovo in 2004, when IBM sold its PC business and continued to work for the PC vendor for three years, before rejoing IBM. At Lenovo, he spent over two years in roles including, strategy and IT transformation, new business model implementation and also as the Sales Head for Relationship business.

‘Smarter Planet’ as a concept. This is driven largely by IBM’s thought leadership. It is important for all concerned stakeholders to realize the impact it has on our day-today lives. A question I wish I had better answers to. How can we offer seamless access to citizens for all services through a tightly woven infrastructure and software at the back-end? This should benefit everyone involved.

1997 IBM

Nambiar had earlier worked in IBM in 1997 and held various management positions in sales, channels and brand, in the personal computing division, including SAARC countries. He also spent two years in Singapore as the ASEAN Region Channel head and later as Program Manager in Asia Pacific Region.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE Initiating services channel through partners; through various programs and enablement sessions, we demonstrated how channels can go beyond just selling boxes. These programs resulted in better margins for them, including elevating some of them to roles of strategic consultants across customers groups.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

1992 WIPRO Before IBM, he worked across multiple verticals like FMCG, consumer durables and IT peripherals in different roles . Nambiar worked with Wipro Consumer Products and Lighting during 1992 - 95 as a Product Manager and then moved to Wipro Infotech during1995 – 97, and served again as a Product Manager. 31


CHANNEL

TITANS

Ashish Gupta Head Channels and Service Business, POLYCOM

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW My management philosophy. Today, being an effective business leader requires knowledge and expertise that goes beyond an understanding of traditional functional areas of business. Successful business leaders need to have a sophisticated understanding of non-business subjects too.

economics of customers are being understood and driven for meeting business needs.

Biggest learning this year. The 3 E’s – ego, emotion and

Best advice I’ve ever got. India is a key player in the modern

32

Technology that will take off in 2013. Video technology is the current wave collaborating with other applications to meet business needs, and we are seeing increased adoption.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Gupta’s work profile necessitates a lot of traveling, and he enjoys every bit of it. Four years back he was introduced to the world of trekking by one of his close friends. Then on, he has used every opportunity to go on treks. It provides him an opportunity to move away from his busy schedule and admire nature’s bounty.


2007

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL

POLYCOM

Polycom and its large partners have service practice to complement our large projects. If we are able to work towards partners by building service capabilities along with product/ solution capabilities, together we can succeed. This mutual process would further enhance our relationship with our partners, and strengthen business.

Lot of partners are focused on productselling rather than positioning endto-end solutions. They would need to enable themselves to the satisfaction of customers to become trusted advisors for long term avenues. This should provide greater opportunities for growth and consolidation of business.

global economy and tapping its growing potential should be one of my priorities. This would ensure the complete ecosystem involved, to succeed together. A habit you wish you could get rid of. Getting up at 6:00 AM and reaching for my cell-phone to run through the mails and calendar for the day. What would you like to invent? A partner’s loyalty is the key to our business. We would like to streamline

As Head Channels and Service Business, India & SAARC, he is responsible for programmatic engagement and continuing technical and sales development of channel ecosystem. His journey with Polycom started more than five years ago in which he lead the service business for India and SAARC. It involved both, indirect and direct business with partners and customers respectively. He took up the initiative of streamlining the process for India and had service competencies being built up with large SI’s and distributors. Last October, he was bestowed with the responsibility of leading channels in the region while continue fulfilling the role of Service Business Manager.

the process for engaging with channels. An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. We do whatever it takes to make our customers successful and ensure this success with our commitment and passion.

CAREER GRAPH

2006 TECH MAHINDRA

A question you wish you had better answers to. How do I enable my team to take risks without being fearful?

Gupta’s stay as a Business Development Manager with Tech Mahindra for their client British Telecom, UK, was short. The role was transformational and led to greater insights.This was his first assignment abroad. His family obligations led to his return to India.

2002

ONE BIG INITIATIVE

RELIANCE

Gupta, as Head-Fixed Access, Operations was associated with Reliance Communication since 2002. During his term with the organization, he had the opportunity of working with leaders while heading large IT infrastructure, network deployment projects, designing of business and network NOC processes, including operations. His last assignment was leading the operations planning team for Fixed Access Network for all telecom circles.

We have a strong presence of partners in metros and tier-1 cities and continue to strengthen our service capabilities through them to achieve customer satisfaction. We have rolled out programs to recruit partners in the SAARC countries, starting this year.Recruiting and investing in partner competency has been our key initiative.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

33


HOTLINE of trust in the security of their mobile devices and services. Sixty-three per cent do not know if they should trust that their mobile experiences are secure.The question around trust is certainly warranted. What is the main trigger for all this? The mobile value chain and whole ecosystem are increasingly complex, diverse and expanding, giving criminals more opportunities to exploit vulnerabilities. Individuals are using mobile devices for more tasks, applications and services, and are not as knowledgeable about mobile security as they perhaps are about PC security.

Mr. Ravi Chauhan, Managing Director-India, Juniper Networks

VIEW FROM THE TOP

Juniper Will Open New Avenues With ‘New Network’

changing customer behaviors and expectations, while dramatically improving total costs and revenue returns.

How has 2012 been for Juniper Networks so far and what are the hot trends that you see now, and in the future? 2012 has been an exciting year for us as we witness the gradual adoption of the “New Network” leading to increased consumption and burgeoning subscriber base driving the IPv6 migration. We also see disruptive technologies and emerging dynamics making a forefront in the form of fabric computing, SDN / Virtualization, Cloud,

Challenges always accompany opportunities. Tell us more about the challenges that you face? This appetite for mobility has led to consumers and businesses starting to question their trust in the mobile services and devices that they use for critical personal and business purposes. When we released our Trusted Mobility Index in May, we found that only 15 per cent of consumer respondents have a great deal

increased BYOD penetration, LTE and social computing. “New Network” sounds very interesting. What’s it all about? Juniper’s vision for the future of networking is open, scalable, simple, secure and automated. At the heart of the New Network is our promise to transform the economics and experience of networking for our customers. The “New Network” for mobility is designed to address rapidly

NEWS UPDATE

Juniper Networks Gains Momentum for Junosphere In May this year, Juniper Networks announced customer momentum and milestones for Junosphere, its first-ofa-kind cloud offering that allows service providers and enterprises to create and operate networks on-demand, in a risk-

free virtual environment. Junosphere enables network lab exercises at a scale that is practically impossible to achieve with any physical equipment. Juniper Networks also announced an expansion of its Junosphere partner ecosystem

How do you foresee the growth for Juniper Networks in the Indian market? We are operating in a growing market, where there are lots of opportunities, especially in the enterprise space. While the service provider sector is a mature market for us, we are keen to engage partners who can take us into newer enterprise verticals. Partners need to invest on an innovative commercial model in order to drive profitability. To achieve this, we will double our channel support strength and align them with our growth strategy.

with the integration of Ixia’s IxVM into the Junosphere virtual environment. Ixia, is the newest partner working with Juniper Networks to provide customers with more network design and testing options. Junosphere Lab users can perform extensive pre-deployment testing using Ixia’s IxVM at no additional cost within the Junosphere virtual environment.


CUSTOM SOLUTIONS GROUP

PRODUCT SHOWCASE

QFX3000-M PARTNER PROGRAM

Advantage Partners Juniper Networks’ new Partner Advantage Program focuses on driving and supporting a deeper and profitable relationship with its partners. Juniper Partner Advantage has been designed to help partners cultivate deep customer relationships and, at the same time, effectively respond to the macro trends that are driving change across the industry. It’s all about scaling with pre-

cision, investing with impact, and recognizing achievement. It’s a tool for growing network architecture expertise, and differentiating partners based on the value they add. Bottom line, it’s about evolving to help customers adapt. The Juniper Partner Advantage program includes, three key pillars—Reach, Accelerate, and Reward. Juniper Reach is an innovative approach to help technical and sales specialists share their expertise, imagine the possibilities, outsmart the competition, and master the new network. With Reach, the partner will drive adoption, empower customers, and

grow the sales and technical skills of your entire organization. Juniper Accelerate is the forum for partners seeking to amplify their marketing efforts, generate more qualified leads, and grow their sales pipeline. It allows access to marketing tools that help go-to-market faster, create a stronger connection between marketing and sales, and ultimately, accelerate the sales achievement. Finally, Juniper Reward is a comprehensive partner incentive system that increases profitability with abundant opportunities to be rewarded for adding value. With it, the bottomlines improve by identifying new prospects, demonstrating the partner networking architecture expertise, and closing more deals quickly.

EVENT UPDATE

Juniper Underscores Partner Benefits In May, Juniper Networks hosted a two-day workshop in Hua Hin, Thailand to engage and educate partners on the

company’s advanced technology product line-up and the diverse value proposition solutions it brings to the table to

cater to the New Network platform architecture. The workshop encompassed Juniper’s Data Centre Value Proposition, which included, understanding customer’s perspective on their choice for selecting Juniper’s products over competing vendor offerings and Juniper’s take on the benefits QFabric brings to a modern datacentre network architecture. Juniper also elaborated on its Core Value Proposition which highlighted the need for MX Service edge routers, underscored the next level of scalability and effectiveness it brought to the LTE service, and, additionally, talked about how the Core Value Proposition has secured the SP networks.

QFX3000-M ( Fabric) is a new addition to the QFabric family. It is a smaller fabric solution system designed specifically for the mid-size datacenter market. The “M” configuration (Micro-fabric) solution was specifically created to cater to the needs of the mid–tier, satellite and container datacenter environments. The micro-fabric solution supports upto 768 10GbE ports with an average latency of 3 microseconds port to port translating into blazingly fast and truly consistent application performance throughout the network.

VGW VIRTUAL GATEWAY

Juniper’s vGW Virtual Gateway is a comprehensive, first-ofits-kind security solution that offers organizations access to robust, comprehensive security optimized for high performance, flexibility and scale in virtualized environments. vGW provides complete virtual network and datacentre protection through inclusion of a high-performance hypervisorbased stateful firewall, integrated intrusion detection (IDS), virtualization-specific antivirus (AV) protection, and unprecedented management scale for cloud security.

Authorized Distributor


CHANNEL

TITANS

B Raghavendran Vice President and Head, Partner Organization, CISCO, INDIA AND SAARC

My management philosophy. I believe leadership is about enabling the team, setting a vision and driving the team towards achieving that vision.

addition to this, partners want to move into new markets and expect the vendor to help them move up the value chain.

Channel myth I’d like to bust. Channel partner business is transactional and does not bring value to customers.

Technology that will take off in 2013. I feel cloud computing will revolutionize the way technology is consumed, and will be the next growth-driver for both partners and vendors. The focus on enabling the workforce to be connected has made the shift to a virtual environment inevitable.

Biggest learning this year. Over the years, I have realized that partners prefer to work with a vendor who invests in their overall growth. In

36

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Raghavendran is a connoisseur of good food, and enjoys cooking immensely. He has experimented with a variety of dishes, but mostly ends up cooking what his kids like. He is also a big soccer fan and follows the game religiously. He plays the sport on weekends.


ONE BIG INITIATIVE

2009

CISCO

Over the past few quarters, we have significantly increased our channel efforts to augment partner capabilities by providing leading practices, tools, and knowledge transfer, which in turn enable them to have successful and profitable customer engagements. We also introduced several incentive programs that were designed specifically to reward and recognize channels.” Best advice I’ve ever got. In order to ensure that OEMs enjoy a positive mindshare within the partner community, it is important to look at all programs and initiatives from a partner perspective. A business idea that should get more attention. Technologies that empower users to be more social, visual and mobile, should be actively considered for use. A habit you wish you could get rid of. From what I’ve been told, I tend to get

aggressive to complete a job that I’ve started. It would probably be a good idea to take a back-seat and relax sometimes. What would you like to invent? A perpetual battery to power our gadgets. An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. John Chambers said, “we innovate, and create markets that are different from any other company our partners do business with.”

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL Inavailability of quality workforce and the lack of infrastructure in tier-2 cities is a key challenge. There is a need for partners to increase investments in certifications and specializations, which guarantees them with market recognition of their technology expertise and growth.

As the business gets tough, it’s imperative for channel partners to start looking at new revenue streams. This calls for investments ahead of the curve where large partners need to invest in new market adjacencies and work with OEMs in creating and developing new markets. This provides new avenues.

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH B. Raghavendran is Vice President and Head Partner Organization, Cisco India & SAARC. In this role, Raghavendran is responsible for building and leading Cisco’s partner efforts in the region and will drive the channel organization and the strategic alliances team under the Partner Organization umbrella. Raghavendran’s charter would be to ensure current partners are in-sync with Cisco’s vision and roadmap and help identify niche partners to drive Cisco’s architectural solutions. In addition, Raghavendran would work with his team to create platforms to engage with organizations to help drive vertically relevant opportunities and transformational partnerships. An industry veteran with over 19 years of experience in the technology industry, Raghavendran joined Cisco India in 1998 as an Account Manager for the company’s banking and financial services vertical where he played a key role in achieving several strategic wins for Cisco India. Subsequently, he headed the IT Services vertical, Western region where he grew the business significantly. Raghavendran has now been with the networking giant for over 14 years and his contribution to Cisco’s India growth has been multi-fold.

1993 WIPRO Prior to joining Cisco, Raghavendran was Regional Manager at Wipro Infotech for over five years. He joined Wipro in March, 1993. 37


CHANNEL

TITANS

B Suryanarayanan Director-Sales, SOUTH ASIA INTEL

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Suryanarayanan completed his first trek to the Himalayas in 2010 with no formal training or preparation. He lost all his gear and luggage even before he started the trek! Taking the set-back in his stride, and overcoming the challenge at hand made the entire experience fulfilling.

Best advice I’ve ever got. Don’t spend too much time on data analysis and wait for perfection. A good plan executed with vigour today is much better than a great plan waiting to be executed tomorrow. My management philosophy. I believe in very open and direct communication. Get the team involved in building the strategy that’s actionable, make the mistakes early and learn from them, listen but make those tough decisions. Channel myth I’d like to bust. Channels worrying about their future due to new business models. The channel model has been in existence for centuries and will continue to exist, as they play a significant role in delivering optimal customer solutions. Biggest learning this year. Long-term assumptions need to be validated constantly as markets change dynamically, new technologies, business models and external factors play a significant role. One has to stay 38

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012


1997

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL

INTEL

We are seeing that the future business growth in India is happening in the tier-3 and tier4 markets. We are focusing on accelerating our footprint in these markets and engage with channels here. We will enable them to address the growing demand for technology products. This should help us get a foothold and establish ourselves.

Intel is investing to enable its channel partners to evolve and capitalize new business opportunities inline with Intel’s compute continuum strategy. With the continuous changing needs of IT, I would like to see more channel partners transition to new business opportunities in emerging segments.

focused on what needs to be controlled.

programs that can scale higher need to be deployed with strong backing from government.

Technology that will take off in 2013. Touch-enabled devices will see an increase in usage.

A habit you wish you could get rid of. A habit that I need to rectify is making phone calls while driving.

A business idea that should get more attention. Education and healthcare delivery services in emerging markets need focus. Technology can help drive affordable solutions in both the fields. Strong public-private partnership

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. “The PC is not going away anytime soon, if ever. It will continue to evolve.” I think this was an interesting observation.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE The embedded systems market in India is emerging as a significant growth opportunity. My current focus is to grow the embedded business in channels and help them scale their business into new segments with end-to-end solution capabilities. Majority of the channel partners are interested in tapping this market, and we are currently organizing several training and channel enablement programs.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

39

With nearly sixteen years of experience with Intel, he is currently responsible for growing the business in channels, LOEMs and to create new business opportunity in the embedded segment. Previously, as Director Sales & Marketing– West & Central Region from Oct 2010 he was responsible for leading the team in the western region of India. It included growing the channel business, driving technology adoption, influence Intel architecturebased solutions in key enterprise government accounts, and execute marketing programs to drive demand generation for PCs via ecosystem enablement and partnership. He was responsible for leading the South and Sri Lanka teams to grow business in channels, enterprise and government. It included executing marketing programs to drive demand generation for PCs, work with government to roll out POCs on PC usage model in healthcare and education. He was responsible for marketing server platforms at Regional OEMs, channels and end-customers for APAC and working with in-country teams to execute enterprise adoption of new server technologies, usage models, platform transitions and pricing. His first stint with Intel began in January 1997 as Regional Channel Manager. Later, he was OEM manager from March 2000 onwards.


CHANNEL

TITANS

Ganesan Arumugam Director-Partner Sales, VMWARE

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Coming from business-family, his ambition was to run a business of his own. Till the age of 17, Arumugam used to spend a lot of time working for his family business. However due to the changing business scenario, he decided to take up a professional course, and has not looked back since.

My management philosophy. Keep things simple and direct. I believe in participative management and respect the individuals. All individuals have their unique strengths and manager’s need to extract them. Channel myth I’d like to bust. Channel is only for fulfillment. Infact, the channel does add value in all businesses and they act as a bridge between OEM and customer. Biggest learning this year. We must always begin with our strengths. While attempting to improve upon the weak areas, we should not let our strengths slip. Technology that will take off in 2013. Private and public cloud services. Best advice I’ve ever got. One should not shy away from proposing new ideas in fear of rejection. Even if nine out ten ideas are rejected, one good idea will get implemented. Otherwise, the good ones will not see the light of day. 40

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012


WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL

2009

CAREER GRAPH VMWARE

The vendor-partner association has always been a love-hate relationship. There has been a lot of blamegame between the two. I think it’s very important to bring in more transparency and trust in vendor-partner relationships and this is something I have been consciously trying to develop.

I want to make partners more independent in driving their business and reduce their dependency on vendors. It’s important to ensure that the partner develops the right capabilities to address the varying concerns of customers. Being vendor independent and customer-centric is important for the success of channels.

A habit you wish you could get rid of. I tend to be emotional if things do not go in my way. I should probably have a professional approach in the future. What would you like to invent? A method by which we can eradicate corruption from India and build a value-based society. An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year.

Excellence cannot be forced from the outside, the need should be felt from the inside. Excellence is not an act, it is a habit. The heart and soul, apart from mind should be involved in striving for excellence.

Arumugam is Director-Channel and Alliance at VMware, India. He joined VMware in 2009 and has been instrumental in developing the company’s channel business in the country. In his current role he is responsible for developing the channel organization for this virtualization vendor in the country.

2009 HITACHI DATA SYSTEMS

Prior to joining VMware, Arumugam was the Global Alliances Director at HDS, and took care of the global relationship for India based SI partners. He was responsible for setting up global alliance relationships with key partners, His stint at HDS was short. He left after working for 8 months.

2005

A question you wish you had better answers to. Why do people not put their 100 percent, knowing well that it would help in their growth?

SYMANTEC

Arumugam was Director for Global Alliance Partners in Symantec. He worked with the security vendor for more than four years and during his long association with the company, he took up different roles, including managing very strategic relationships with global SI partners of Symantec in India.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE

Managed Partner 2000 Focus: Under this program, we selected partners IBM who are interested, invested and Arumugam’s experience in the committed to our business. We started focusing channel front began in IBM, where all our initiatives through them. We invested he worked as the VAD manager. He was involved in setting up a value our resources in terms of man-power and added distributor network for IBM development funds through these partners. Software Group and successfully This approach helped in increasing our revenue expanded their independent software vendor network. rather than spreading too thin.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

41


CHANNEL

TITANS

Hrishi Parthasarathy HEAD-ALLIANCES, MICROSOFT

My management philosophy. Begin with the end in mind, take on big bold goals and challenge the status-quo.

42

Channel myth I’d like to bust. That innovation in channel programs and management has evolved and is now mature.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW

Parthasarathy is a Chartered Accountant who worked in a finance job for only a few months. His first manager thought he had a nose for business, and pushed him in that direction. He is also an aspiring long distance cyclist, having cycled from Bangalore to Ooty.


2002

ONE BIG INITIATIVE

MICROSOFT

Geo-expansion through partners: We built a rapidly scalable, pay-for-performance model to dramatically increase Microsoft’s footprint in 65 tier-2 cities and in total of 250 cities, covering 1700 partners. This was built through partners using a unique win-win approach.” Biggest learning this year. The benefits of genuine focus on partner win-ability and profitability. Technology that will take off in 2013. Enterprise mobility—led by Windows 8. Best advice I’ve ever got. Execute, evaluate and evolve. A business idea that should get more attention. Implement social and crowdsourcing techniques to broad IT consulting and large scale IT projects. A habit you wish you could get rid of.

While at Microsoft India, Parthasarathy holds the alliance responsibility for top Indian SIs. Also, he drives solution sales to gain a share through partners besides improving mindshare and readiness with solution architects and bid teams. His other roles include Director – SMB & Distribution from July 2009 to June 2011 where Parthasarathy was responsible for running a large scale SMB business. He was responsible for SMB Customer and Channel Marketing Parthasarathy was also Director-Business Planning & Operations (SMS&P) for two years. Here, he was focused on the SLAs drawn out by the operations team. His KRAs included licensing, structuring and negotiating multi-year agreements, business insight & analytics. As Lead – Partner Strategy & Programs Parthasarathy was entrusted with the transformation of India landscape with the partner network. His roles included responsibility for Microsoft partner readiness and enablement of best-in-class channel incentive implementation.

I wish I could do away with internal meetings and email overload. What would you like to invent? A business model that demonstrates and deploys the business value of IT to smaller, under-served customers. One that makes a ton of money. An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Execution is strategic. A question you wish you had better answers to. What are the biggest drivers of loyalty?

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL Drive differentiation based on influence versus transactions: Too often the distinction is ignored, or the value of sales motion is understated. Both are extremely important, but these have to be executed to a plan and deserve differentiated returns. If executed well, the benefits for business are immense.

2001

Respect for viewpoints: Often, vendors do not put themselves in their partners shoes and walk around in them for a bit. It does not happen the other way round either. Trusted advisor relationships are too precious and is the only way to succeed. To get to the crux of the problems, and then push growth, mutual respect is vital.

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

SUTHERLAND GLOBAL Hrishi Parthasarathy was responsible for the marketing outsourcing services and tech helpdesks, besides handling tele and web lead generation support to US sales teams during his twenty two month stint with the company.

1998 REDINGTON Parthasarathy was business manager at Redington running the national software distribution business for close to three years. 43


CHANNEL

TITANS

Jitendra Gupta Director, Channels & Alliances-India & South Asia, JUNIPER NETWORKS

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Uttar Pradesh,

My management philosophy. Be responsive, determined and empower your team at all times.

Best advice I’ve ever got. Be enterprising, think big and execute well.

Biggest learning this year. The biggest learning this year is was to create a differentiator through a value-selling business model. This is vital not only to beat competition but importantly to carve a niche in front of the customers.

Channel myth I’d like to bust. Who will be the first person to bring business to the table—partner or OEM?

44

A business idea that should get more attention. Partnership is all about mutual trust

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

in Born to a business family al growing Jitendra Gupta spent his initi a risk taker ays years in the hinterland. Alw he claims to and a consistent performer, blem solving pro possess strong analytical, . Challenging and organizational abilities s a feeling of vide pro it as him ite exc s task cess is achieved. accomplishment when suc spending and es plac new to Traveling unwind. free-time reading, helps him


WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL

2012

CAREER GRAPH JUNIPER NETWORKS

It is always the case that the early bird catches the worm. Partners should be attentive enough to spot any changes in the market dynamics, and as soon as they spot a new trend, be prepared to react accordingly. It’s easier to traverse this less treaded path if there is mutual-trust between vendors and channel partners.

It is imperative to build confidence and valuable partnerships with channel partners. In many cases, they are the face of the company. The vendors should be accommodating of their varied business objectives whenever and wherever possible. The channel partners are unquestionably intrinsic to any vendor’s growth and expansion.

between both sides—you win and lose together. A habit you wish you could get rid of. Staying calm even when things don’t work in your favor. What would you like to invent? A device that can help achieve a great equilibrium between personal and professional life Technology that will take off in 2013. Cloud and Gigabit Wi-Fi will do well in next year.

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. How do we win as a company? Two things: One is innovation—which is delivering great products that are different from anything the competition has, and the other, a remarkable customer experience.

Gupta joined Juniper in January 2012 as Director of Channels & Alliances for South Asia region. His main responsibility is to strengthen Juniper’s relationship with its strategic alliances and channel partners in the region and establish new partnerships. He is spearheading partnerships for tier-1 and tier-2 channels and distribution networks

2006 EXTREME NETWORKS

Gupta was Country Manager for India and SAARC and was instrumental in establishing Extreme Networks as a leading networking brand in India with a highly profitable and multi-million dollar revenue stream. Leading a team of 12 people, he was responsible for global partners like Avaya, Siemens, Ericsson, NSN in the South-Asia.

2000

A question you wish you had better answers to. How to recruit and sustain a team of self-driven and motivated performers to the organization?

INGRAM MICRO As Product Sales Manager for Cisco business, he managed the overall product line revenue, gross margin and distributor market for Cisco. He lead a team of 10 people indirectly across India. From Oct 2000 to March 2005 , he was Sales Manager (ESG) for North India.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE My goal is to go deeper with fewer partners and nurture our relationship with the existing partners. This will build Juniper’s footprint across all major Indian cities through mutually beneficial partnerships which are inline with our long term objectives. The recently implemented Juniper Partner Advantage program will help their business immensely.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

1997 MULTI –TECH COMPUTERS For a period of three years from 1997 to 2000, he worked with MultiTech Computers as Sales Manager (North India). He was responsible for development of channel networks for Datacom products in the major cities of North India with an additional responsibility to push Multi-Tech products in ISP and telecom sector. 45


CHANNEL

TITANS

Kaushal Veluri Director–Channels & Alliances, CITRIX INDIA

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW world’s

Veluri has to his credit, the skydived has highest bungee jump. He , and also from a plane, has a tattoo Everest to k tre to am dre a nurtures se feet, goo ted tas base-camp. He has and pickled at me oo gar kan s, opu baby oct a huge is and gs blo eggs. He has two . fan rs Star Wa

My management philosophy. If everyone is moving forward together, then success will take care of itself. Teamwork is an essential ingredient to ensure success in an organization. Channel myth I’d like to bust. Channel partners are only good for transactions. My belief is that channel partners can add tremendous value to any organization with their customer relationships, skill sets, reach and passion. It is up to vendors to enable and treat them as business partners. Technology that will take off in 2013. Desktop-as-a-Service is one of the key technologies that will take-off in coming years, making end-point devices redundant. Best advice I’ve ever got. It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare, it is because we do not dare that they are difficult. 46

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012


2012

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL The relentless focus on extracting maximum margins from each vendor in their portfolio is what the partners need to try and de-focus from. They must focus on adding value at the customer-end. Partner organizations also need to leverage the vendor resources appropriately and keep the focus on the customer pain-points, and provide the best solution possible.

Channel partners can add tremendous value to any organization. I would encourage training programmes for our partners, which will not only help them understand the latest technology but also enable them from a sales and technical perspective to take it to market, and add value to their business.

A business idea that should get more attention. Food pool—collect the left over ingredients and food from all the hotels in the city, pool it together, make good dishes and feed the homeless.

CAREER GRAPH CITRIX In his current role since April 2011, Veluri is responsible for maintaining the health of the channel business across Citrix solution advisors, distributors, global alliances and SI partners through training, enablement, and business planning. He has been Marketing Director since 2007 till present and he is responsible for strategic marketing across eight nations.

2006 ORACLE Veluri had been on the channel development role before Citrix. At Oracle, he was a Market Development Manager handling a team of 15 tele-resources who were responsible for generating a pipeline for the SMB team in tier-2 cities.

Biggest learning this year. You cannot do everything. Focus on the top five things to do, have a plan to achieve them, do them diligently, do them well.

A habit you wish you could get rid of. The inability, sometimes, to say no.

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Inspire your partners. Support them. Business will follow.

What would you like to invent? A time machine, maybe along the lines of the movie, Back to the Future’!

A question you wish you had better answers to. What motivates a partner to be loyal and perform efficiently for a vendor?

2001 IBM Prior to Oracle, Veluri also worked in IBM where he managed marketing for the ISV ecosystem of software partner. This involved both marketing to and marketing through the ISV partners. This facilitated an expansion in business at the organization.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE I am a strong believer in constant learning, and that applies to channel partners as well. I have come up with a consistent quarter-wise training program for our partner resources that runs in multiple cities. Through many of our programs we address the enablement needs of the partner organization.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

1997 3M

Across his 18 year career, Kaushal has also worked in organizations like 3M managing their Channel Sales in South India for the Visual Systems Division while also falling prey to the dotcom bug having managed the Alliances for an online site called BuyAsOne.com

47


CHANNEL

TITANS

Kerman Rana Vice President–Channel Sales, D-LINK INDIA

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW and

My management philosophy. I believe in ‘management by consensus’, as it is very important for teams in any organization to unanimously decide and device strategy based on the same. This not only creates a healthy work environment but also makes the process more gratifying. Channel myth I’d like to bust. Over the years whenever a 48

technology is introduced, there is a lot of apprehension as to how we communicate this to the consumer. And my answer has always been that ‘technology is not that complex to propagate to an end-user’. Biggest learning this year. No matter what you do, ‘focus’ is the key to achieving positive results. This approach helped D-Link grow from Rs.128 Crores to Rs.223 Crores.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Parsis are known to love their cars, Rana is no exception. Immensely passionate about cars , speed is a way of life for him. Rana has been a rally driver and has won a few of them. He was the winner of ‘Maharashtra Car Rally’ championship back in eighties.


2011

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL

D-LINK

All partners need to do is focus more on profitability along with revenue targets and this will definitely bring a positive outcome to their overall business. Also, it is important for channels to align their business with trusted vendors and long standing industry brands so as to associate themselves with a bigger growth story. This helps improve their overall standing in the market.

As a part of the IT industry for over two decades, I had the opportunity to travel and interact closely with the partner community across the country. Based on my experience so far, I would like to suggest the channels to not panic when the there is an air of uncertainty in the market, as the circle of business always evens-out.

Since Rana joined as Vice President–Channel Sales in April 2011, Rana is responsible for driving the channel business along with formulating sales strategies, business planning and channel schemes for the networking company.

2010 QNAP SYSTEM

From January 2010 to March 2011 as Director - Business Development, Rana was primarily responsible for setting up the India operations for the company. This included charting a pan-India distribution strategy working with the channel community on product positioning, business planning and marketing strategy .

Technology that will take off in 2013. Personal cloud computing.

A habit you wish you could get rid of. My temperamental nature.

Best advice I’ve ever got ‘Never say never’ is probably the best piece of advice I have received, which I strongly believe in.

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Focus, speed and team work is the key to success.

A business idea that should get more attention. Anything innovative and a cut-above the rest deserve more attention. After all it’s innovation that’s the key differentiating factor.

A question you wish you had better answers to. Given the current market scenario,how do I convince my teams to target exponential growth despite the low market sentiment.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE For profitability, we introduced various promotional schemes that guarantee lucrative business opportunities along with good margins for partners. To further accelerate our channel sales, I initiated strategic bundling of fast moving products along with niche products to channel partners. This strategy has paid-off well.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

2004 NETGEAR Rana helped set-up Netgear business in India in 2004, followed by streamlining its distribution strategy to engage with VARs. Rana was instrumental for product planning, engaging with channels, and driving sales. Following his India success, he was appointed MD for Central Asia Pacific in October 2007.

2003 PHILIPS INDIA From January 2003 to June 2004, Rana was Head of Corporate Sales of Computer Monitors for CRT and LCD range of monitors at Philips. During his tenure, he was successful in identifying key corporate resellers and system integrators, expanding business, and increasing market share. 49


CHANNEL

TITANS

K Neelakantan Director, Channel & Alliances, India & SAARC Operations, NETAPP

My management philosophy. There are three aspects to my philosphy: Empower employees to drive efficiencies and quality, enable employees so that they go further than expected, and that there should be no economy in one’s efforts. Channel myth I’d like to bust. Services business is essential for growth and profits. If your partner builds the right solution for the customers, there will be no looking back.

50

Biggest learning this year. To thrive in an era of social computing, build communities, leverage employees and partners as marketers, and create brand-loyalists. Technology that will take off in 2013. Innovation is an all-time favorite when it comes to any technology. However, I think real time analytics will take-off. Best advice I’ve ever got. Losing a deal is not as bad as losing customer respect.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW is a

Neelakantan is voracious reader. He cially keen follower of biographies, and is espe a read has He ry. histo d worl in interested he lot on World War-II. Apart from books, t direc to es wish is a big fan of Rajnikant and he who tar, pers h-su a film with the Sout considers a personal hero.


2012

ONE BIG INITIATIVE I think the launch of ‘Agile Data Infrastructure’ is the convergence of innovation at NetApp. Customers can ensure their data is immortal, remains intelligent and can scale infinitely. All this in one unified architecture has dramatically simplified deployment and management. We are preparing our partners to deliver this to the customers across geographies and industries.”

CAREER GRAPH NETAPP

In his current role as Director, Channels and Alliances at NetApp for India and SAARC, Neelakantan heads the channel strategy for the region. He spearheads channel development and channel enablement programs, cementing channel relationships and further drives sales through joint go-tomarket with NetApp partners.

2004 SUN MICROSYSTEM

A business idea that should get more attention. I believe that agility and efficiency of IT, which is the Holy Grail of computing, should get more attention from businesses.

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Watch out for talent within the organization as well as outside. Seek them out and look for opportunities to work with them.

A habit you wish you could get rid of. My impatience for results.

A question you wish you had better answers to. India has the scale, talent and ability. I often wonder why we lack the innovation to harness IT better to build an equitable society?

What would you like to invent? I would like to invent BYOD batteries that can be recharged without wires— using light.

Before joining NetApp, he was Director–Channels at Sun from March 2010. He was exposed to different roles during his eight year stint with the vendor including expanding channels, creating new markets for established products and exploring new avenues for products by creating capable channel representation in the market. He joined Sun in 2004 as National Business Development Manager.

1995

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL We have a robust channel community and I would like show them several options on how they can definitely grow their business by building the right kind of collaboration with organizations like NetApp. Through adding innovative solutions to its portfolio, channels can certainly build better business and benefit further.

WIPRO

He joined Wipro in 1995 and worked as Area Channel Manager and also worked as Regional Channel Manager. He executed various roles, from expanding channels, creating new markets for established products, exploring new avenues for products by creating capable channel representation in the market to managing multiple lines of businesses ranging from education, healthcare, volume sales, business development and channels. His four year career experience with Wipro helped him to understand the importance and relevance of good channel partnerships.

I would recommend investment in the right partnership which can help them enable their customers solve their business problems efficiently. I am particularly working towards cementing channel relationships and further drive sales through joint go-tomarket with the NetApp partner ecosystem to facilitate growth.

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

51


CHANNEL

TITANS

Navin Sadhwani Head, Channel and Commercial Business, India and SAARC, RSA

IDN’T KNOW YOUAD BOUT ME Navin Sadhwani is passionate about sports, especially those that have been traditionally played in India. Kabbadi is one of his favorite games. He will wake-up early in the morning to watch a kabaddi match if India is playing. He would love to contribute to Indian sports in the future.

My management philosophy. Provide strategic direction and vision to the team for growth and selfdevelopment with the right dose of feedback, encouragement and rewards. Channel myth I’d like to bust. Channel is not integral to a company’s enterprise strategy. It is infact the complete opposite, as channels play a key role with any product company and is essential for the business growth. Biggest learning this year. Traditional security measures are not enough to stop new threats. Threats are becoming more complex and are evolving each day. It’s important that we remain aware of the sophistication in these attacks. Technology that will take off in 2013. Network security analytics platform: This is the future, and the path beyond network monitoring and log analysis. Best advice I’ve ever got. You’ve got to make your deposits before you can make a withdrawal. 52

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012


WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL Develop stronger and deeper services capability to add value to transactions. This always reaps dividends in the long-term. Services are going to be a better opportunity in the future for channels and they need to consciously develop these capabilities to capitalize on all available business avenues.

In order to meet market needs, channel partners today have been expanding their product portfolio without planning their growth strategy properly. This has resulted in them losing their stance as a vertical market exporter, and has infact resulted in them becoming an overall technology channel partner rather than an expert.

A business idea that should get more attention. Automating governance, risk and compliance. Today, the enormous cost and complexity of compliance and risk is managed manually through disconnected processes within the organization. What would you like to invent? I would like to create a technology that eases the use of technology.

2012

RSA

Sadhwani is responsible for fostering and managing RSA channel relationships by empowering channel partners effective informationcentric solutions. He came onboard about two months back. He will also be responsible for formulating and executing the India channel and commercial strategy, and work closely with RSA’s channel partners.

2011 SYMANTEC

At Symantec, he worked as the Product Lead-Core Security. His was primarily responsible for growing core security revenue in India and SAARC through a strong channel eco-system. During his first stint with Symantec in 2001, he was instrumental in the the company becoming a prime security vendor in the region.

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Our adversaries are better coordinated, have developed better intelligence, and easily outflank our traditional perimeter defenses. A question you wish you had better answers to. Is technology the means to an end or an end in itself?

2010 ORACLE

Sadhwani joined Oracle as General Manager–Commercial in 2010. He was part of the technology division with a responsibility to drive commercial sales in the southern and western regions. He has over 17 years of professional experience in enterprise sales, alliance and channel functions.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE Although I joined RSA only recently, a couple of early initiatives include strong partner account mapping in the enterprise space. I would want to drive engagement in the enterprise space with mapped partners leading with joint business planning and executing it with complete transparency to minimize channel conflict, and gain partner loyalty.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

2008 MICROSOFT

In 2008, Sadhwani moved to Microsoft as the National Partner Manager and looked after some of the key partner relationships. During his two year stint in Microsoft, he was responsible for managing and growing revenue from national partners (large account resellers) like Wipro, HCL, Dell and Sonata.

53


CHANNEL

TITANS

Niraj Kaushik Senior Director, Alliances & Channels–India, ORACLE

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW My management philosophy. Get the right people on board, work out the vision, and then guide the team into working their magic. Consistent and clear communication is vital to the organization’s success. Best advice I’ve ever got. Focus on what is within your control, than blame external forces. Channel myth I’d like to bust. 54

Do not wait for the OEM to build new markets for the partner. When a partner realizes a new business opportunity, they must initiate it with the OEM. If not, the partner will lose a vital opportunity to become a leader in a new space. Technology that will take off in 2013. Combination of mobility, security, customer experience and big data will reap huge business dividends.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Kaushik’s interest in cooking started at an early age when he spent time in the kitchen picking up tips and tricks. Gradually, he went through books and courses to improve his skills. Presently, his interest is smoked and barbecued meats. He also dabbles in Hindi-film music and often has karaoke sessions with friends.


2008

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL

ORACLE

Since June 2011, Kaushik is driving sales through channels, leveraging the entire Oracle portfolio of applications, middleware, database, servers and storage. The role of Senior Director - Commercial & Channel Business from June 2009 to June 2011 gave him exposure to large opportunities, high volume transactions and created new GTM models.

OEMs deploy well defined and comprehensive partner portals for the benefit of their channel partner base. However, most of the time, the partner’s employees do not take as much advantage of the information and knowledge assets. This hampers their awareness and preparedness in sales engagements in front of their cusomers.

Build disciplined engagement in planning and execution. In an environment where revenue expectations are going up and budgets are being tightened, it is vital that the OEM and partner have complete clarity on where to do business, how to engage for the desired outcome. It is important that both sides work outside their comfort zone.

A business idea that should get more attention. Engineered systems: Partners and customers are slowly gearing up to this new concept, but it requires advanced understanding of selling/buying beyond the standard box experience. A habit you wish you could get rid of. The tendency to get into everything —roll up my sleeve and start digging right away. What would you like to invent? A device that allows citizen services

2003 TREND MICRO

As a Country Manager for India/SAARC with Trend Micro, he led business operations in SAARC region for over five years. His role involved strategic planning and overall operational execution, developing and effective utilization of people. Under him, Trend Micro grew to be a recognized leader in the security space.

to be delivered by the government at home, thereby eliminating external interventions. An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Do you buy a car by its components – engine, steering, seats, etc? Then why do customers buy IT in pieces and integrate them? Simplify IT and make hardware and software work together, and that’s the idea behind Oracle’s integrated technology stack.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE The consolidation of our channel teams into one group under my leadership this financial year. For a product focused company, this is a big development and challenge that the channels division will have to deliver on. Now my team becomes the true representative of the Oracle Red Stack—where hardware and software work together.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

1999 HP Between June 1999 and April 2001, Kaushik spearheaded HP’s business expansion in the infrastructure segment as the company’s Country Business Manager. Later in his stint, he was responsible for running the UNIX server business in India. He also set up a new UNIX server sales model and new systems for configuration, pricing and support.

1996 LOTUS DEVELOPMENT During his association with Lotus Development as Channel Manager, he handled channel marketing, development and management for SAARC. He also drove the work flow solutions and established successful OEM sales programs with HCL, Wipro, Compaq, HP, IBM, Sprint, Sun as an evangelist. He built the Lotus Business Partner program in India. 55


CHANNEL

TITANS

Praveen Sahai Vice President, Channels, EMC India and SAARC

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW My management philosophy. I believe in a blend of participative and delegative styles of management. If the situation demands, one needs to be authoritative as well. Channel myth I’d like to bust. Neither the companies nor the channel partners have an upper hand in the relationship. To build a healthy business both need the support of the other. Mutual respect and vision is beneficial. 56

Biggest learning this year. A sale is a by-product of a relationship. Technology that will take off in 2013. The next year will see an increased adoption of big data and analytics. I also believe that cloud computing will become main stream. Big data will be driven by video surveillance, BFSI, media and entertainment, and government projects. We will have to wait and watch how it unfolds.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Sahai is a foodie and his family co-owns a chain of restaurants. The restaurant presently serves only oriental cuisine but he plans to introduce continental cuisine soon. Personally, he love to cook and often prepare Indian dishes for his friends and family. While dining out, he prefers oriental cuisine.


WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL To help partners shape their strategic outlook besides meeting short term goals and quarterly goals. In addition, I would like to make the partners a part of the EMC family and give them the right to do pricing and support service. This will uplift their morale and further empower them to address a much wider customer base.

To increase the addressable market for my partners and build discipline around sales adjacency growth. I would like to introduce new initiatives in the partner’s line of business, and enable them to sweat every dollar invested, as they are trusted advisers to their customers. Our initiatives include ones on cloud, big data and analytics

2012

EMC Sahai is responsible for growing and driving EMC’s Partner strategy in India and SAARC region. He also spearheads the company’s distribution and systems integrators strategy, deepening current partnerships and alliances, and creating new ones to increase EMC’s footprint in the market.

2006 IOMEGA

name around “composite data storage, networking and media device” to help utilization of cloud-based solution for healthcare and education sectors.

Best advice I’ve ever got. It is great to have a strategy, but success is all about execution. A business idea that should get more attention. I believe cloud computing has a huge potential in healthcare and education. If I get a chance, I would build a business around cloud solutions for the healthcare and education sectors. What would you like to invent? In fact, EMC has filed a patent in my

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Joe Tucci said, “It’s all about how we understand our customers’ needs, wants, how we understand where we’re doing a great job and where we’re falling short.”

ONE BIG INITIATIVE I am proud of the corporate social responsibility initiative by EMC with HOPE School in Bengaluru. In 2011, the school educated 395 underprivileged children, which included 207 girls. This is part of our long cherished dream that will allow children to get an education from cradle to college, through the HOPE school.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

Sahai was Director of Sales, India & SAARC, and Strategic Marketing Director–Asia Pacific and Japan, for Iomega for six years. He was responsible for all operations in the region which included all local functions like sales, marketing, and support. Additionally, he spearheaded strategic marketing in APJ.

2002 SUN MICROSYSTEMS

As the product manager for the South-Asia region, Sahai was responsible for developing marketing strategies for the Data Management Group in South Asia. He was responsible for developing marketing strategies for Sun’s data management group during his four year tenure.

1997 CITRIX Sahai began his career at PowerTel Boca where he was in charge for sales, channels development and management of enterprise accounts. He went on to become Marketing Communications and Alliance Manager following Citrix’s acquisition of PowerTel in India. He was with Citrix for five years from 1997 to 57


CHANNEL

TITANS

R Lakshminarayanan General Manager-Channels, FUJITSU INDIA

My management philosophy. My philosophy in personal as well as in professional life has been about empowerment and accountability.

Technology that will take off in 2013. Private and public cloud are the two main technologies that will really take off.

Channel myth I’d like to bust. I would not call it a myth but a channel generally looks forward to someone they can trust and rely upon.

Best advice I’ve ever got. Don’t leave money on the table. This is an advice I received when I joined this industry. Ultimately cash is king.

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INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Lakshminarayanan believes that in his line of business, it is very important to think out-of-the box and come up with innovative ideas. His decision making and communication skills have kept him in good stead.


ONE BIG INITIATIVE

2010

When I joined Fujitsu, almost 60-65 percent of our customers came from the direct engagement model. Thereafter, the main aim of the company then was to make it a completely channel driven company. That is where I stepped in. Today, I can proudly claim that Fujitsu is nearly 90 percent channel driven.”

CAREER GRAPH FUJITSU Presently, Lakshminarayanan is managing the channel sales unit of Fujitsu India. He is responsible for management of of enterprise level products like servers and storage through the partner ecosystem. Fujitsu has helped him build his knowledge in various domains and he continues expanding his horizon.

2009 A business idea that should get more attention. One key observation that I have made is the lack of focus in today’s generation in managing accounts endto-end.

Biggest learning this year. It is important to work with your head on your shoulders from the company’s messaging and channel standpoint. This helps improve the standing within the industry.

A habit you wish you could get rid of. The team gets all the facilities that they need to deliver. Probably I need to push them a little less to achieve the desired results.

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Commitment is something he stresses upon a lot.

What would you like to invent? I would like to invent predictability. It is very difficult to forecast. Therefore, I would like to device something that could forecast the industry.

A question I wish I had better answers to. Forecast. Client needs and demands is an aspect that is difficult to forecast. I wish i has better answers to it.

INFOLINE LLC

2008 LENOVO Lakshminarayanan was initially in charge of the transaction business at Lenovo. Thereafter, he took over as Vice President Transaction Consumer Sales Business and also briefly looked after the SMB business where he handled about 1500 partners around the country. While at Lenovo, he was responsible for creating business in the major metros.

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL The two very important aspects which most of the competitors miss are transparency and being upfront. It is important to build a good relationship with the channel. Once our partners articulated their expectations from us we worked with committed effort to meet those expectations consistently. Commitment and longterm relationship is extremely crucial.

It is also important to be upfront about issues like cost with the channel, and not keep them in the dark about such matters. It makes a whole world of sense to keep a good relation with the channel community, and communicating regularly helps keep them well informed about our initiatives and their prospects.

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

Lakshminarayanan used to work for Infoline in the Middle East. As the vice president of the company, he was responsible for the sales and marketing of the hardware and system integration business and at the same time,he also took care of the BPO business at the organization.

1988 HCL At HCL Infosystems, he started off as a trainee in 1988 and worked there for almost 12 years. The journey at HCL gave him a lot of opportunities to learn and grow. He quit HCL in 2000 and started a new venture of his own but eventually rejoined HCL. He later quit HCL after his second stint as Vice-President. 59


CHANNEL

TITANS

Shrinivas Chebbi Country General Manager and President, India & SAARC, SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW

My management philosophy. I believe that every human being is born with immense potential and it is upon us to nurture that potential. I believe in motivating my team to push themselves, to achieve their best and to not give up till they succeed. Channel myth I’d like to bust. That “channel partners do not have the foresight to build a long term relationship with a company; they focus on short term goals and immediate profit”. 60

On the contrary, they have always added value to a project and built a strong customer-base for us. Biggest learning this year. Long term strategies entail a primed mindset to sow some seeds today, nurture it , while you know the fruits borne will secure the future. Technology that will take off in 2013. Data analytics (big data) and energy efficient infrastructures will do well.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Shrinivas Chebbi is an egalitarian and free-spirited individual. He also nurses a secret dream of becoming a vagabond—just breaking away and exploring the world as a backpacker. He wants to explore countries, meet different people, learn about their culture and way of life.


WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL The way channels use their principals to train and develop new talents should be improved. It is important to work closely with each employee; they should be kept abreast of new technological developments and the changing market scenario. Most importantly, they should be given sufficient exposure and be able to implement the learning.

I would like to change the way investments are made by channels towards building their future and change management. I understand their pain-points due to the changing technology, increasing operating and service costs, and availability expectations, but they need to think of long-term gains instead of short-term profits.

2008

CAREER GRAPH APC BY SCHNEIDER Shrinivas moved to APC by Schneider Electric (Critical Power & Cooling Solutions BU) India as Country General Manager & President of India & SAARC countries in 2008 April.

1998 SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC

Best advice I’ve ever got. “Karmanye Vadhikaraste, Ma phaleshou kada chana”. It is a verse from The Gita which means, “You have the right to perform your actions, but don’t expect the rights to the fruits of the actions.”

A habit you wish you could get rid of. At times, I think I am guilty of chasing perfectionism.

A business idea that should get more attention. Enterprise energy management and leveraging carbon efficiency as a key differentiator is a great business idea that will provide opportunities.

A question you wish you had better answers to. I would like to know how I could reduce or prevent the attrition of key talent, despite providing the best of everything?

What would you like to invent? Personal power generator that runs on water and air.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE

He joined Schneider Electric International Division in 1998 and was responsible for the operational Marketing of Industrial Control products (Telemecanique) for the Gulf countries based in Dubai as Business Manager. He established the Telemecanique brand and industrial control offer in Gulf which enjoyed significant growth during his tenure and after. Shrinivas moved to Bahrain as Country Manager in 2001. He was instrumental in establishing Franchise licensee operations of the group for LV equipment and led the success of the group in securing large contracts in the Kingdom Of Bahrain. He moved to Dubai in 2004 as Regional Director and member of the Gulf management committee and was responsible for the Country Management of Dubai, Northern Emirates and Oman which contributed 50 percent of the Gulf Countries business. He led the establishment of Square D offer in Dubai and was responsible for driving the growth through strong participation in buildings and infrastructure boom of the country.

In line with our company’s strategy to become an energy Ambassador 1988 and trusted advisor to our BELL customers, I set up a vision with my Shrinivas started his career in 1988 in the power electronics leadership team to become a full-suite datacenter field. Later, his stint in industrial and critical facility service provider. As a result, our automation and process control services are in demand with more than 50 practice filed for next eight years and was involved in many significant consultants and specialists in this domain.” projects in India.

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

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CHANNEL

TITANS

Sudhir Nayar Director-Channel, Alliance & Networking, India & SAARC, AVAYA

Your management philosophy. My management philosophy is based on the three fundamentals: 1) Hiring the best talent 2) Empowering them with all the right tools to help perform efficiently 3) Mentoring them to reach their maximum potential. Channel myth I’d like to bust. In India, there exists the concept of reverse leveraging of OEMs by channels which needs to change. Normally, it

62

should be the reverse, with the channels having more people than OEMs. Biggest learning this year. Unlearn all that I did learn in the last 11 years. Technology that will take off in 2013. Video is the next big technology that everyone will be using across devices. Best advice I’ve ever got.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW

Public speaking was a field that Nayar was not comfortable with initially. But this being an essential part of any leadership role, he decided to take the bull by its horns . He referred a number of books and participated in as many events as possible, before he could achieve the goal of speaking in front of a live audience.


ONE BIG INITIATIVE

2010

When I moved to Avaya, I realized that 70 percent of our orders were very small in size, but the amount of effort that was going into processing these orders was significant. We launched our project called ‘Avaya Swift’, to route all orders of small values to one distributor. This has worked well for us.” “The most difficult thing in life is to handle success. If one can handle success, then humility and politeness will help handle any situation.” A business idea that should get more attention. A mechanism to demonstrate our products in a uniform manner. A habit you wish you could get rid of. I wish I can get rid of my habit of staying connected on emails for 15-17 hours a day. A question you wish you had better answers to. How do I encourage my team mem-

AVAYA

Nayar joined Avaya as the Channel Head for India and SAARC in 2010. In this role he is responsible for growing business with more than 200 partners and also drive specialized products like networking and SME product sales. He also takes care of the channel capacity and competency planning, business development activities through channel, and ease of operation.

bers to spend at least 10 percent of their time on self-development? An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. There is a saying, “In God, we will trust; everybody else, please bring your data.” This simply implies that we do not need to go by perception but we will have go by data and facts.

CAREER GRAPH

2009 ORACLE

Post the Sun acquisition by Oracle, he was responsible for the corporate strategy where he was responsible for drawing a three year growth blueprint. In 2009-10, he was responsible for the national sales growth of the software division at Oracle. After the acquisition of Search, he was successfully able to lead a team that managed two large wins in India for Sun Software.

What would you like to invent? A tool that can help customers see all of the company’s products at the click of a button. This should help us communicate better with clients.

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL I want the channels in India to be more independent than they are today. Both, from a people and technology perspective, channels rely extensively on the OEMs which should change. The channels should make all efforts to understand technology and have a meaningful interpretation of that technology for their customers.

Each of the channels need to bring their own focus and not tie-up with vendors for the sake of it. I read a study that shared that an average channel has tied up with atleast 12 OEM vendors. It is important that the channel is focused, specialized and strategic, because it is difficult to do justice to every product line.

SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

2001 SUN MICROSYSTEMS During his stint here, he was designated various roles. For six years he was heading the channel business at Sun. His last assignment was as Country Head for the software business. He has 21 years of experience leading diverse teams to new levels in a variety of highly competitive industries and fast-paced environments.

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CHANNEL

TITANS

Vijayant Rai Director-Channel Sales, India & SAARC, CA TECHNOLOGIES

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW

In addition to a healthy interest in various sports, Rai tries to take time-out to play them whenever possible. He also likes to indulge in computer gaming and gadgets. At gaming, be it Nintendo or Playstation, he considers his 10 year-old-son, a worthy competitor.

My management philosophy. To provide an environment that leads to the creation of a productive and growth oriented business ecosystem. Focus is on fostering collaboration at all levels, internally as well as with partners and customers. The idea is to create consistency and predictability in the business whilst staying nimble and pragmatic to take advantage of changing market scenarios. Channel myth I’d like to bust. That the channel is only for fulfillment. From my years of experience, while working with the channel community, I can vouch that nothing is farther from the truth. Biggest learning this year. What got reinforced this year pretty strongly is that change is a constant. We need to be well organized to handle the challenges which arise. We must be nimble enough to take advantage of opportunities it presents. Technology that will take off in 2013. Remote infrastructure management 64

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012


WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL It is encouraging to see many enterprise channel partners aligning with the latest market trends and customer requirements by providing a number of cloud-based services. Having said that, it is important that each partner evaluates his best fit or positioning in this respect, and then focuses on necessary enablement in real time.

Though, by and large a majority of partners have augmented their technical and services capabilities, we would like to see more of these skill-sets upgraded by the channel community. This not only helps them to create a differentiation in the marketplace but it also helps improve stickiness with customers.

and adoption of hybrid cloud in case of enterprises will move to the next level. In addition, backed by enormous growth of data, technologies catering to storage and big data are expected to see vigorous adoption in next few year. Best advice I’ve ever got. Success is where preparation and opportunity meet. A business idea that should get more attention. Initiatives that promote propagation

2004

CA TECHNOLOGIES

Rai heads CA’s Nimsoft & Data Management business for India and SAARC region. He is a member of CA’s Asia Pacific Growth Markets Management & Leadership team. He joined CA India in 2004 and has held a variety of senior roles within the enterprise and channel sales organization.

2003 ISS

and access of technology, and consequently quality education content/systems across India need more attention. This has the potential to unlock huge value both in terms of growth of human resources and innovation.

As Regional Sales Manager at Internet Security Systems (ISS), he managed business in the western and eastern regions of India across both partner & enduser constituencies. He handled Major Account Solution Sales with a focus on targeted large enterprise accounts and enhancing ISS’s customer base.

2001

What would you like to invent? A teleportation device like the one used in the sci-fi series Star Trek to beat Mumbai’s snarling traffic. This will make travelling effortless and non-cumbersome.

ONE BIG INITIATIVE The intention of Partner On-Boarding program was to bring in and technically enable new partners on CA’s Arcserve Backup, Replication & High Availability solutions. This was followed up by intensive hands-on technical training and certification in various cities. This initiative has given a huge impetus to our data management channel coverage across the territory.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

CAREER GRAPH

TREND MICRO

Rai was a key member of the team which set-up Trend Micro operations in India. As Sales Manager–Overseas Business Unit, he was responsible for signing up, enabling and nationally driving business through large system integrators like HCL Infosystems, HCL Comnet & SIFY. He rolled-out a well-received partner program for Trend Micro’s enterprise partners.

1999 ORACLE As channel manager at Oracle he was responsible for handling a set of major accounts besides the Internet Start-up/Dot Com segment in western India. At Oracle, he was conferred with Oracle's ‘Values Champion Award - FY2000’ for market development Dot Com/ Internet start-up market segment. 65


CHANNEL

TITANS

Vivek Rawat Head of Ecosystem and Channel, SAP

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW My management philosophy. I have always believed in motivating my employees and helping them focus on doing the right thing which would eventually show in their work. Channel myth I’d like to bust. The myth that there is no perceived value for channel partners in the enterprise segment. Technology that will take off in 2013. 66

We will see a surge in the adoption and enterprise deployment of mobile applications across verticals. Best advice I’ve ever got. Well, it is not a nice idea to procrastinate in your personal and professional life. A business idea that should get more attention. Universal communication proficiency.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Rawat is an adventurous person. He loves to be amidst nature. Considering his busy schedule, he still ensures that he takes his family out, atleast once a year, to experience a sporting activity and be one with the natural world.


WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL I would like to bring a change in the perception that channel partners do not add signification value in the enterprise segment. Partners not only help optimize market expansion and customer touch points, but they can scale adoption of the portfolio across all segments—both SME and enterprises.

2010

CAREER GRAPH SAP

We also would like drive adoption. I would like to scale-up the partners’ services capacity and skills, especially for the latest innovations, while ensuring quality delivery. This should help drive profits for partners and strengthen our relationship with the channel. This will further help expand the services protfolio for their customers

At SAP, Rawat heads the Ecosystem and Channel functionality. In his current role, he is responsible for the partner and channel contribution to SAP’s overall success. This includes driving the five-pillar strategy with partners, increasing indirect channel business and ensuring high quality implementation services capacity across the entire ecosystem and channel.

2000 This should help remove the language barrier. A habit you wish you could get rid of. My inability to switch-off at certain times. What would you like to invent? I would definitely like to find an affordable alternative to fuel for increased efficiency. Biggest learning this year. To be able to adapt well to this dynamic industry and improvise to accelerate innovation.

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. While we all have broader responsibilities, we should always look forward to pick and choose the battles or instances where you can help the team as a whole and make an impact.

IBM Prior to joining SAP, Rawat was a part of the IBM India Software Group. He was involved in various sales leadership positions in the region. At the same time, he had held some key SWG Leadership role in India as Sector and Territory leader. In his last position at IBM India, Vivek was the Vice President – WebSphere Brand and was responsible for the sales, channel sales and marketing of the WebSphere brand portfolio.

A question you wish you had better answers to. I would like to know how effectively can we execute and coordinate between various internal and external processes of the organization?

1997

ONE BIG INITIATIVE

ORACLE

The expansion of partner investment and focus on large enterprise reselling is our focus. Accelerate co-innovation around all five of SAP’s market categories with an emphasis on game-changing co-innovation, growing third party solution portfolio and the proliferation of partner-developed solutions on all platforms, will be our mandate.” SEPTEMBER 2012

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

While at Oracle India, Rawat was involved in various alliance and channel roles and has been responsible for software enterprise sales across all complex large software transactions. He has also been instrumental in setting up the Offshore Software Global Alliance team based out of India which included sales, pre-sales and solutions for global customers.

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CHANNEL

TITANS

Yogesh Sawant Director, Partner Sales and Field Alliances Organization, India, HDS

My management philosophy. Whatever you do, do it for glory. Channel myth I’d like to bust. Price is not equal to cost. Being cheaper does not mean not having the lowest cost. Technology that will take off in 2013. One technology that will continue to shine bright all through 2013 would be virtualization. Consolidation will drive virtualization in a big way.

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Best advice I’ve ever got. Always go prepared for every call. Your meetings with customers and partners should be for only two reasons: If it’s not to close a sale, then it should be to create opportunities. A business idea that should get more attention. Success means a great strategy and even greater execution. One must focus on execution as much as one focuses on the strategy.

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

IDN’T KN YOUADBOUT ME OW Those who know Yogesh Sawant would unanimuosly agree that he is a movie buff. Moreover, very few people are aware of his desire to showcase his acting capabilities to an audience.


ONE BIG INITIATIVE We have engaged with key partners in mutually identified accounts and industries. For enablement, we have aggressively delivered various training programs. We have also floated aggressive bundles aimed at garnering mindshare if not market share in the mid-market segment. We are confident that these bundles will allow our partners in the long run.�

2012

HITACHI DATA SYSTEMS

Presently, Sawant heads the Partner Sales & Field Alliances Organization at Hitachi Data Systems. He has been working for HDS for a year with a charter to foray into the system integration and re-seller segment as well as the alliance community.

2010 ORACLE

What would you like to invent. I would like to contribute to a cleaner environment with a technology that uses minimum power consumption, low heat generation, yet, one that generates maximum output.

An insightful observation your CEO made in the last year. Organizations are adopting cloud as an alternative to save on growing infrastructure costs. However, they are fundamentally failing to identify what the reasons are for the increase in infrastructure costs. 2003

Biggest learning this year. There is no substitute to hard work. I realized that the harder I worked the luckier I got.

A question you wish you had better answers to. How do I motivate people better to ensure improved efficiency?

A habit you wish you could get rid of. Procrastination.

I believe that it is necessary to leverage the available resources to a certain threshold and encourage the channel community to fully exploit the tools and alliances available to them so that they can derive the maximum benefit enhance profitablity, and expand business. This should is a sure-shot way to doing well in business.

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INDIAN CHANNELWORLD

Prior to joining Hitachi Data Systems, Sawant was in Oracle India as a part of the alliance and channels team in the role of Key Partner Director. His responsibilities included the sale of cross-LOB products through TCS across various industries throughout India.

SUN MICROSYSTEMS

Sawant spent close to eight years at Sun Microsystems. In this role, his varied responsibilities ranged from partner management to being involved in various direct sales and partner sales roles. He also headed the sales for the Western region, and also handled the sales of Sun products and services in different verticals.

WHAT I’D CHANGE IN THE CHANNEL Trust is one of the most important factors in our line of business. We have to focus on mutual trust within the partner community. At the same time, I would want to take concrete steps towards building a symbiotic relationship between the channel community and us. This kind of mutual trust will enhance the belief in our shared engagements.

CAREER GRAPH

2001 HP

Sawant was a part of Hewlett Packard for five years in the role of Major Account Manager at Compaq (later acquired by HP) from 1998 to 2001, and then at HP for two years extending from 2001 to 2003. His key job was to strengthen the alliance relationship of the technology vendor.

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EVENT REPORT

NETWORKING WITH PARTNERS

FOR BUSINESS GROWTH With the constant changes in technologies like cloud and mobility across enterprises, Juniper Networks gets in

touch with the channel partner community to emphasize its value proposition in today’s times.

uniper Networks conducted the first phase of the event called ‘Toward Disruptive Growth’, for enterprise channel partners in association with Avnet Technology Solutions. The event held in Delhi (24 July) and Mumbai (25 July) powered by ChannelWorld witnessed participation by C-level executives of partner organizations. To strengthen their presence across South India, Juniper Networks conducted the second phase in association with Ingram Micro. Over 40 partner organizations attended the event in Bangalore (28 August) and Chennai (29 August). Both events began with Vijay Ramachandran, Editor–in–Chief, IDG Media sharing the results of the CIO Mid Year Review Survey 2012. The survey was recently conducted by CIO India (a sister publication of ChannelWorld) which details about 192 Indian enterprises, their business drivers and IT spend patterns. The survey gave a roadmap on how the growing adoption of cloud and mobility is infl uencing the CIO community. Ramachan-


CUSTOM SOLUTIONS GROUP JUNIPER

dran pointed, “the emergence of the new trends has shown an increased concern among CIOs about the lack of good systems integrators in the country. This often compels them to form internal teams or outsource certain applications.” The Juniper team was led by the Kevin Ackhurst, Vice President, APAC Partners, Juniper Networks in the first phase, while Ravi Chauhan, Managing Director–India, Juniper Networks was present in Bangalore and Chennai. India Channel Head Jitendra Gupta and other technical/sales executives of Juniper interacted with the partners through the course of the event.

Focus on ‘Cloud & Mobility’ Kevin Ackhurst, concurring with the survey results, said , “partners need to adapt quickly to the two trends— mobility and cloud computing—that will lead to disruptive business growth. Issues like frequent change in demands and IT projects of shorter

“Juniper is perfectly poised to empower the partner community with a high tech portfolio, unlimited business opportunities, and importantly, good margins.”

KEVIN ACKHURST, Vice President, APAC Partners, Juniper Networks

duration mean that partners need to be alert and highly skilled to stay relevant and ensure long-term business with their customers.” Ravi Chauhan, stated “most enterprise deals in last few quarters have been won by Juniper through our partner network. We are no longer just an alternate networking brand, but are fast becoming a vendor of preference.” He added, “we are ahead of competition as our solutions for BYOD work seamlessly across most mobile platforms. Junos Pulse can be uploaded on the enterprise network .Whenever a new device enters the network, it can be configured easily and quickly to the existing platform.”

“Junos Pulse is a great mobility solution for partners to pitch for, especially with the incessant demand for BYOD, and register good business revenues.”

Addressing Partner Concerns The Q&A session saw ample participation from the solution providers in both cities. Pawan Khurana, CEO ,QuantM Net Technologies expressed diffi culty in replacing the prominent networking vendor in their accounts. In response Ackhurst said, “our Open source technology (powered by Junos) helps partners position our products in the existing infrastructure and the interoperability ensures a smooth transition.” Anantharam Varayur, MD, Webcom Information Technology, enquired about the scope of value-addition by a partner. Chauhan said, “The valueaddition comes in the form of customized solutions according to the customer’s business demands. With cloud and mobility, CIOs would need frequent and dedicated hand-holding from partners which is an opportunity for them.” Many partners at Delhi and Mumbai enquired on the leasing option by Juniper. Diwakar Khatri, Founder and CEO at Ingenius Technologies, Mumbai asked, “most enterprise deals occur on an opex model in India through finance option. How is Juniper placed?”. In response, Ackhurst said, “We do have a leasing option arrangement with IBM on a global basis, and we can pass it to partners too.”

RAVI CHAUHAN, Managing Director– India, Juniper Networks Subramaniam Madhira, CEO, Omninet Systems remarked about the growing difficulty in maintaining the correct price due to various partners fi ghting for a single deal. “Our strategy is to have lesser but competent channels to help partners create a differentiator and demand a good premium price,” said Chauhan More than 100 executives from 80 partner organizations across Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai benefited from Juniper’s enhanced value proposition especially around cloud and mobility.

This event report is brought to you by IDG Custom Solutions Group in association with


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Focal Point EVERYTHING ABOUT SOCIAL NETWORKING

Getting It Started

Here’s how setting up social networks can help you drive innovation internally. By Todd R. Weiss

N

ASA COULD land humans on the moon and put exploratory rovers on Mars, but in the last three years, the agency just couldn’t find a way to build an internal social network that would encourage its employees to collaborate.

Initially launched in early 2009, “SpaceBook” was supposed to be a place where NASA workers could go online anytime to get feedback, learn from others’ experiences, collaborate on projects and get to know each other better. But NASA ultimately squashed the

effort this June, taking it offline for good. The problem, says Kevin Jones, a consulting social and organizational strategist with NASA’s Marshall and Goddard Spaceflight Centers, was that no one sufficiently explained to users what they could do with SpaceBook to move their collaboration forward. So it languished when users didn’t adopt it. That kind of crash-andburn experience happens in enterprise IT when plans are established without understanding what users want or need. But it doesn’t have to be that way for your organization, according to companies that have made internal social networks an integral, thriving part of their employee communications streams. What it takes to make a successful internal social network, they say, is strategic planning, careful follow-through and a willingness to change direction as your users show you how they want to use the tools you’re giving them. We’ll share these companies’ best tips for getting employees on board with a private social network. But first we’ll explore some of the benefits internal social networking can bring.

HOW ARE ORGANIZATIONS UTILIZING IT? Why invest in a company social network in the first place? That’s a familiar question for Jonathan Yarmis, principal analyst at The Yarmis Group, which follows social, mobile and cloud technologies. “Clients ask how can they get value from this and why should they spend money on it when they’re not convinced that there is ROI,” he says. “But I think it’s pro-

foundly important. It allows people to do things with information that they can’t do with email. During the course of the day you can ask, ‘Who do I know that knows what I need to know?’ You can only do this on a social networking platform.” The companies we spoke to have found that their internal social networks provide multiple benefits, including giving employees a stronger voice, helping them pool and share information, and strengthening company culture.

PROVIDING EMPLOYEES A VOICE At San Francisco-based Salesforce.com, the social media tsunami known as Facebook got company executives very interested in how such a phenomenon would eventually affect enterprises, says Dave King, the company’s director of product marketing. That’s how the company developed its Chatter employee social networking application. Unveiled to customers in June 2010, Chatter was first rolled out internally to Salesforce’s 8,000 global employees in the months before the product launch. “We used it ourselves before we offered it to anybody else,” King says. Every Salesforce employee has a Chatter profile and can post questions or comments, share information and collaborate from around the world in real time. “People tell us that instead of hitting a bottleneck, they post an inquiry on Chatter and get an answer,” he says. And the platform is searchable, so users can pull up past discussions, data and more. The social network gives a voice to individual contributors, King says. “In the past

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n FOCAL POINT | SOCIAL NETWORKING it was people in the corner office who had power in a company. But with this, people anywhere in the company can give input that can be influential.” One young developer was fresh in the company and in his free time was building applications for Chatter, King says. Other users saw them, downloaded them and used them. That creativity and success bubbled up to Salesforce’s chairman and CEO, Marc Benioff, who invited the young developer to a closed-door leadership session with company executives about innovation. “That 24-yearold junior employee makes this huge impact and now leads one of our Apple iOS development teams.”

INFORMATION SHARING Santa Cruz, Calif.-based Plantronics launched a pilot of the Jive Social Business Platform in March for 150 beta testers, with plans to roll it out to all 3,500 employees later this year, says Barry Margerum, the company’s chief strategy officer. Jive was brought in to modernize communications among employees, deliver a framework for integrated knowledge management and to encourage crowdsourcing the company’s informational assets, he says. “Crowdsourcing information benefits a company by opening up information to everyone,” Margerum says. “You find out people are very smart who you didn’t know about. That changes things for everybody.” Margerum says Plantronics chose Jive because of its extensive search capabilities and its good integration with desktop applications from other vendors, such as Microsoft, 74

A BRIGHT FUTURE FOR ENTERPRISE SOCIAL SOFTWARE

D

emand for enterprise social software will grow strongly in the coming years, as more organizations implement the products to improve collaboration and communication primarily among employees, but also with customers, according to IDC. Between 2011 and 2016, IDC expects the compound annual growth rate in spending to hit 42.4 percent for this type of product, also commonly referred to as “enterprise social collaboration” and “enterprise social networking” software. “We’re seeing good strong growth from the major players in this market and that’ll continue for quite a while,” said Michael

that Plantronics is already running. “It has a Facebook-like approach,” he adds. “It’s clearly not ‘what I did yesterday’ or ‘what I did on my vacation.’ It’s about a news article someone saw or someone asking a question about a particular idea. You might mention that a competitor brought out a new product and ask people what they think about it.” The end result is real-time idea sharing that benefits the company, Margerum says. “You’re trying to get a conversation started that’s going to elevate this knowledge to everyone in that community. It’s sort of like a brainstorming session.” It’s still too early to point to specific successes in the company, he says, but participation has been very strong and is showing clear benefits. “Jive is emerging as a frictionless way to share expertise and opinions with the enterprise pool,” he says. “It seems to be motivating

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

Fauscette, lead author of two IDC reports out this week about enterprise social software. Customers spent $767.4 million (Rs 4259 crore) on the products globally in 2011, and will spend almost $4.5 billion (Rs 25, 000 crore) in 2016, according to IDC’s “Worldwide Enterprise Social Software 2012-2016 Forecast.” Due to their potential for sharpening employee communication they’re becoming important tools for “decision support” and productivity across most industry verticals, according to Fauscette. Among the growth drivers are a push to add social

employees to share more of their knowledge than we’ve seen before.” Margerum wouldn’t disclose how much his company spends on Jive for its employees, but Jive says that pricing for its Jive Social Business Platform for internal corporate use begins at $12 (Rs 650) per user per month.

REINFORCING COMPANY CULTURE At BMC Software in Austin, Texas, internal social networking has been used for a year, with some 7,000 employees creating 965 groups in which they collaborate and share information, said Hollie Castro, senior vice president of administration. The company uses Chatter from Salesforce and has found that it enhances communications with and among employees in several ways, Castro says. BMC uses Chatter to introduce new employees to the company before they start their first day on the

collaboration capabilities to other enterprise applications, and demand from employees for software that resembles the consumer applications they use outside work. Google officials have also been saying for months that they are developing a workplace version of the company’s Google+ social networking site, which could give Google Apps an enterprise social component it currently lacks. In addition, large software vendors, including Oracle and Salesforce.com, are also adding enterprise social features to their enterprise application stacks. -By Juan Carlos Perez

job. Here the company onboards new workers and shares HR information, company procedures and more in a social place where the new employees can ask questions and meet coworkers immediately. The social networking system gives a “look into the hearts and minds of employees, where they can see a bit about the culture of the company and fellow workers. Especially if you are a work-athome employee, I think this is really important,” Castro says. “We can disseminate messages and hear from the employee base in a much more fluid and transparent way” compared to email and other communications. The platform also helps workers share best practices inside BMC, she says. “It allows us to have dialogues on topics, and to support these policies and allow employees to ask questions and get answers.” Finally, it allows employees to follow topics that are


relevant to them, rather than the company sending out information randomly. “This is a huge benefit,” Castro says. “It’s giving us another vehicle for internal communications that is more effective.” Castro wouldn’t disclose how much BMC pays for Chatter, but the basic Chatter social networking service is free, while the paid service, which adds features such as workflow tracking and calendar integration, starts at $15 per user per month, according to a Salesforce spokesperson. The success of any social network depends on user engagement. If employees aren’t using it, even the most innovative internal network is a failure. Here are a few keys to success.

START WITH THE EASY STUFF One of the lessons Salesforce executives learned, says King, was to do the easy things first to introduce users to the new system. “We started with a high-value process—global account planning—that was easy to implement from a change management perspective,” he said. “It had been a total pain to deal with previously, then we put it into a Chatter group. It made everyone’s lives easier.” Next were other areas that could bring in quick wins with users, he says, including groups where employees could air grievances. Only then did the company begin to look at larger, more ingrained processes that would be harder to implement and take more time to finish. “Where we see internal social networking go wrong is when people start with those tough ones,” he says.

CONSULT USERS EARLY AND OFTEN BMC’s Castro says her company started small with a pilot program so that feedback could be collected and an internal buzz could be generated among employees. “We worked with groups of employees around the world to get input,” she says. “You learn along the way. One of the reasons we are getting good use by employees is that we really engaged our user groups up front.” Being responsive to employees’ feedback—and flexible enough to try out their ideas—is vital, King adds.

tasks, advises Ethan McCarty, digital and social strategist at IBM. McCarty says all 400,000 global employees use IBM’s homebuilt social networking platform, Connections, which is also sold to customers. “You have to make it part of the work as opposed to a separate thing people do,” he says. “If it’s not integrated and is an additional task, it becomes a burden and hurts productivity.”

EASE THEM IN McCarty says it’s also important to make sure that your employees understand what

applications that drive businesses, says analyst Yarmis. Right now, the data from each are typically in different silos—“they don’t talk with each other yet.” Once that kind of integration truly arrives, he says, it will make these kinds of platforms more useful for enterprises. The time to begin planning for such integration is now. “While you’re investing in it right now, it will put you ahead of the game when this is important five to 10 years from now,” he says. Jon Reed, an independent enterprise analyst with JonERP.com, agrees that social

“The social network gives a voice to individual contributors. In the past it was people in the corner office who had power in a company. But with this, people anywhere in the company can give inputs that can be influential.” “What kills these things is when people bring in their own new ideas for how to make improvements and they get shot down by executives or legal or HR,” he says. “Even when you’re not sure, give things a chance. It’s important not to manage it at an institutional level too closely. Inevitably what happens is that there are bright spots for users that pop up. You need to bring them in and encourage them.”

EXPLAIN THE BENEFITS Another key to getting employee buy-in, King says, is to clearly explain to users what they can do and gain by using the social network. “Articulate where the value is and share those best practices, such as sales leaders telling how they sell more using Chatter. By doing this, these tools get adopted by others.” Better yet, make social networking integral to other

the expected user etiquette will be under the systems you choose. “That understanding needs to be arrived at mutually and collaboratively” so that users feel comfortable posting their comments and profiles, he says. IBM has developed a system where less technical users can earn “merit badges” as they gain experience and confidence with the capabilities of Connections, McCarty adds. “You have different groups of people who are going to use it differently. It builds confidence with those users. We want to reward them for their success using the system.”

MORE NEEDS TO BE DONE So is this technology ready for every business to deploy? Not quite, say some analysts. To make social networking a must-have tool for enterprises, those capabilities need to be tightly integrated with the critical enterprise

networking will be critical for enterprises in the future, but he cautions against getting caught up in all of the hype surrounding it at this early time in its development. One big issue, is that social networking vendors haven’t yet solved all their products’ shortcomings or filled all their customers’ needs. That will happen in the next year or two, he predicts, as vendors bolster their offerings and provide the critical features that business users want, he explains. “I think that vendors are going to be aggressively trying to pursue things in the end that deliver a lot more value” than is available now, Reed says. “Right now you’re just scratching the surface. We’re early in that journey. It’s not headed to be Facebook for the enterprise. It’s going to be something entirely different.” n

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 ENDLINE

OFF THE WALL

Giving the Creeps

BA’s new program will make travelers wary of booking. By Jared Newman

W

E’VE ALL Googled our-

selves from time to time, but British Airways has crossed the creepy line for looking up its own passengers on Google Image Search. The airline is rolling out a new program, called Know Me, that tries to improve passenger recognition through Google search and other methods. British Airways will create dossiers on passengers, and will use the profile data to offer 4,500 personal recognition messages by the end of the year, the London Evening Standard reports. For instance, flight attendants may

76

reference Google image results to greet a high-profile, first-class passenger when he or she boards the plane. British Airways will also dig into its own passenger data, so if a regular customer experienced a delay on a previous flight, airline staff can offer a personal apology. Not surprisingly, some privacy advocates are upset. “Since when has buying a flight ticket meant giving your airline permission to start hunting for information about you on the Internet?” Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch, told the Standard. Some customers just don’t want to be bothered—especially fa-

INDIAN CHANNELWORLD SEPTEMBER 2012

mous ones—so it’s presumptuous for the airline to think no one will mind being stalked on Google for the purpose of a greeting. A better way might be to let people opt-in to such a service through Facebook. That way, the information would be more reliable and less creepy, and would only affect willing participants. Using Google for image search is also a slippery slope that could lead to broader Internet data mining. British Airways should draw the line at image recognition, and think of smarter ways to provide personalized service that doesn’t revolve around Internet stalking. 



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