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Microsoft tapping consumer savvy for slew of enterprise announcements

Atlanta – Microsoft Corp. pitched its software solutions and cloud offerings for business on the strength of its experience making consumer products, as it announced a slew of updates to core enterprise products including Dynamics, Office, Skype, and Azure.

Addressing a packed sports stadium at Microsoft Convergence, the Redmond vendor’s annual conference for its business customers and partners, CEO Satya Nadella painted a picture of sea change for organizations in the digital age. He alluded to how the mainframe era saw the beginning of computers put to use in business, then the extension of computing throughout the enterprise thanks to the client-server model of delivery. But cloud computing is changing the game again.

“We’re at the dawn of a new era in business systems. We can now build these systems of intelligence,” he said. “These systems of intelligence don’t sit in isolation, they in fact build on the entire digital record we have with the systems of engagement and create one feedback loop.”

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says Microsoft is in the ’empowerment business.’

Before listing off the product announcements in store for the keynote, Nadella framed Microsoft’s identity as a company.

“It is about empowering you as individuals and organizations. To be able to drive your agenda and succeed in your business,” he said. “We are in the empowerment business.”

Nadella’s keynote hit at the tension that many organizations are feeling in the bring your own device (BYOD) era, says Natalie Petouhoff, vice-president and principal analyst at Constellation Research. While technology has become easier to access and enabled my professionals to be productive, thanks to software as a service, it has sometimes cut IT out of the picture and created integration and security problems. Many professionals also have heightened expectations of enterprise software, due to the ease of which they’re able to use services such as Google and Facebook in their personal lives.

“Microsoft is in a unique position,” she says. “I think they might be the only one to integrate the personal and professional capability into one vision.”

After Nadella set up Microsoft as the company that could deliver consumer-style apps that are enterprise-ready, his colleague drove home the message a bit more pointedly. Kirill Tatarinov, executive vice-president of business services at Microsoft took the stage to tell the audience of professionals that their businesses were in need of transformation.

“Ultimately the customer is viewed at the central part of every business,” he said. “We must treat the customer as if they are part of our organization, that is what’s expected.”

Kirill Tartarinov, EVP of business services at Microsoft, says proactive service is what the world demands today.

Microsoft has 15 years of experience when it comes to implementing back office solutions, and along with its partners are ready to help customers reinvent back-office processes. He described the roles of CIO and marketer as moving closer together – while CIOs are helping businesses adopt technology, marketers are also often enabling everyone within their company with the means to advance their brand.

“This is all about delivering visible and measurable outcomes and being able to demonstrate impacts,” he said.

While the tools may be there and Microsoft is certainly ready to help deliver them, the biggest bottleneck in realizing Nadella’s vision may lie in training, Petouhoff says.

“There’s a shortage of people with the skills to use this software,” she says. “There’s this disruption happening in the digital process. But it always comes down to people. It’s always been true and it always will be true. You can have the best software on the planet, if people don’t use it, it doesn’t matter.

“Here’s an overview of the product announcements out of Microsoft Convergence thus far:

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