How to Price Azure Solutions
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How to Price Azure Solutions

???? Hello and welcome to this edition of Interesting Stuff, your fortnightly dose of things I think you'll find interesting if you're in the world of Azure, partners, small business, and Microsoft. I'm?James Marshall, SMB Azure Partner Success Lead for the UK at Microsoft, and if you find this content useful, please remember to subscribe and share this with your network. Thank you! ??

In this edition, you'll find:

  • ?? My thoughts on the different strategies for pricing Azure solutions.
  • ?? A summary of the latest Azure updates.
  • ?? Interesting articles I've seen around the web.

If you've ever scratched your head and wondered how to make selling Azure a bit simpler, then this edition of Interesting Stuff is for you! By the time you've finished reading, you should have a good idea of two of the main ways you can take Azure solutions to market. Let's get started...

Cost + Margin

The method of applying a margin (or discount) to the consumed services bill each month has its pros and cons. The big benefit is it's agile, and well suited if you're designing bespoke solutions for your customers.

The downside is that it can expose a layer of volatility that creates overheads on your business each month. For example, local currency conversion fluctuates each month as the Pound Sterling changes versus the US Dollar. This means that over a 12 month period of unchanging Azure services use, the actual bill could be different every month.

A Small, Simplified Example

In the chart below, I've plotted what $1000 USD of Azure looks like in Pound Sterling over 12 months, accounting for FX changes each month and including a 5% profit margin on top. Over 12 months, the partner would make £486.06 of "profit" (not including any rebates, incentives, or other adjustments that happen in the back end).

An example chart of an Azure bill over 12 months, showing the fluctuation in profitability over time.

This fluctuation can make it harder to plan and forecast your business, especially if too much of your success is pegged against the Azure bill itself; if the customer reduces their spend, you see less profit each month. It also likely means you're either having to charge for the value you create separately, or perhaps try and squeeze it into the margin you add.

Value Based Pricing

There is another way to approach this; value-based pricing. Instead of applying a fixed margin on top of the cost of the Azure services, you could sell a "solution" that encompasses the service costs, your created value (like the managed services, support, IP, etc. that you deliver), margin, etc. for a fixed price. A bit like a bundle. A bit like a mobile phone tariff.

You could get an PAYG tariff and only ever pay for what you've used. However, if you take a contract it's likely you pay a fixed amount each month for a bundle of minutes, data, or other services. The cost to the operator to provide those services will go up and down over the months, but they'll have priced their bundle to account for that and still make them money.

Back to our fictitious example, where this time we'll sell a solution bundle that is priced at £1000 per month to the end-customer. We arrived at this price by understanding the value we create, the amount our target customers might be willing to pay for the business outcome, and other factors. It includes the same $1000 USD of Azure services but this time the customer doesn't need to worry as it's the same price every month. They're paying for the business outcome (e.g. inclusive of your services, IP, and other value added work), not just the raw services.

An example chart of an Azure bill over 12 months, showing the fluctuation in profitability over time.

In this example, even though the underlying Azure bill changes each month, the partner would see an average profit margin of 24%, or £2,279 for the year. It shouldn't matter exactly how much Azure service is being consumed, because you're selling the overall value of your solution.

If the underlying Azure consumption rises through time, you may choose to revisit your pricing. For example, if you provide a managed backup solution and the customer ends up backing up huge amounts more data than your standard offer includes, you might 'upsell' another chunk of storage, or charge a per GB cost on top of your solution bundle price.

Have It Your Way

You could pick one or both of these strategies to go to market with Azure. The most successful partners create repeatable solutions, resorting to custom designs and bespoke pricing as little as possible. They also derive much of their profitability from the value created on top of the Azure consumption, not only relying on any back-end rebates or incentives. IDC estimates that by 2024, for every $1 of Microsoft revenue, there'll be up to $10.04 of partner ecosystem opportunity.

How much of that $10.04 are you capturing today? ??


There's always something new to share, so here are a few highlights I think you should know about.

How to in-place upgrade Windows Server in Microsoft Azure

Microsoft's Chief Evangelist for Azure Hybrid, Thomas Maurer , re-posted a blog to his timeline from earlier this year all about doing in-place upgrades on Windows Server on Azure. It's well worth checking out if you're wondering how it all works!

Until next time...

If you found this newsletter interesting, why not give it a ?? and share it with your network? I'd love to know your thoughts or suggestions for future topics in the comments below.

David Keiller

Microsoft Azure Business Manager @ TD SYNNEX and Chairman for our LGBTQIA+ resource group Spectrum

1 年

Thanks James great post as usual , an all to common issue for an MSP if supplying a service like Azure on a cost plus model, like selling hardware. I am certain that my Phone or Cable bill each month has more than 5% margin in there for Virgin !! and I don't argue with them about the cost of the phone line vs the included Netflix ;) Its the old "just sell the burger " analogy

回复
Eliott Chandler

Global Cloud Technology Director ??

1 年

Love this. It’s a message we’ve been pushing for about 6 or 7 years. Back in the day when I was still trying to convince people that the be successful selling AzureC you don’t sell azure. The pricing conversation is such an important one to have as an MSP starts transacting Azure.

Stewart Kennedy

Microsoft Cloud Consultant @ Micromail | Technical Cloud Specialist

1 年

Great article James, offers sound advice for MSPs struggling with common issues.

Mike Douglass

I help teams increase revenue, boost team productivity and secure data with tech ?????@labdesk ??

1 年

Great read James.... A common struggle for many MSPs is the lack of confidence and in house knowledge on how to package and price azure correctly. The MSPs that are 'winning' are getting to that holy grail of fixed per user per month bundle with their MSP value built in... ????

James Marshall

?? The Azure Partner Success Guru

1 年

?? This one even has charts. CHARTS, people! ??

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