Off-Prem

Channel

Post-pandemic hard-sell under way: Resellers leaned on to convert free trial users into fully paid-up customers

Eight weeks to turn ‘helping you enable remote work with Office 365 at this difficult time’ into cash


Organisations that took up Microsoft’s offer of a free six-month Office 365 trial to help them enable remote working during the COVID-19 pandemic are about to see the other side of that offer.

The world’s largest technology distributor, Ingram Micro, has introduced incentives for resellers that convert trialists into paying customers.

The scheme’s in plain sight: Ingram has even popped out a press release to announce the “new Microsoft Remote Work Rebate Program.”

The deal is pretty simple: if a reseller can find a freebie user, and get them to buy either Microsoft 365 Business Basic or Office 365 E1, they’ll get rewarded if the user is still a paying customer after a year. But they need to make the sale between May 4 and June 30.

Here’s what resellers stand to make for upselling a trialware user:

Seat Tiering Microsoft 365
Business Basic
Office 365 E1
50-250 seats $ 2 / seat $ 2.50 / seat
250-1,000 seats $ 4 / seat $ 5 / seat
1,000+ seats $ 8 / seat $ 10 / sea

Clearly the big money is in selling to big customers: a sale to a 249-seat organisation will earn a reseller $498 or $622.50.

And even that small sum won’t land straight into a consultancy’s bank account: Ingram’s asking resellers to use its own Cloud Marketplace to do the selling and will disburse the rebates as credits. So those who chase these post-panic deals will commit further to the distributor's ecosystem. ®

Send us news
6 Comments

Microsoft signs 1.5 million seat contract for Office 365 and more

$940m agreement with one of world's largest employers is value for money, we are assured

Microsoft's Activision fight with FTC turned up a Blizzard of docs: Here's your summary

Windows PCs in the cloud, spending Sony out of business, mobile woes, and more – and the files to read

Google formally accuses monopolist Microsoft of trapping people in its cloud

Fight! Fight! Fight!

Microsoft Azure OpenAI lets enterprises feed corporate secrets to ChatGPT

Apparently you're all dying to do this?

Microsoft rethinks death sentence for Windows Mail and Calendar apps

Shifting those duties to Outlook set for next year – well, maybe

Clippy designer was too embarrassed to include him in his portfolio

Love him or loathe him, the default Office Assistant remains an icon of personal computing history

This Windows update is snarling up some endpoint security tools

Malwarebytes and Trellix upgrades to the rescue

Microsoft postpones death date for personally licensed Teams Rooms hardware

The 'upgrade' is free, yet an amnesty is needed despite months of warning

Microsoft's GitHub under fire for DDoSing crucial open source project website

A tale of emergency firewalling, a little bit of victim blaming, and workflow scripts gone berserk

Microsoft Fabric promises to tear into the enterprise analytics patchwork

Meanwhile, users are left to figure out how to cut their cloth

With dead-time dump, Microsoft revealed DDoS as cause of recent cloud outages

Previous claims its own software updates were the issue remain almost, kinda, plausible

FTC pulls emergency brake on Microsoft's marriage to Activision Blizzard

Agency concerned the pair are planning to combine before it's able to make a decision whether to allow it