Transacting on the Microsoft commercial marketplace
Article
This playbook (guide) helps partners create offers and transact on marketplace. The guide was created to recommend best practices to onboard you and guide you through the marketplace experience.
Important terms to know
Partner/ISV: Independent Software Vendor; The entity looking to publish or with a transactable offer on marketplace. Sometimes referred to as software publisher.
Customer: The entity looking to purchase a transactable offer from the marketplace.
Solution / Offer: Products, services, or a combination of both provided to customers.
Partner Center: Streamlines several business processes to make it easier for Microsoft partners to manage their relationship with Microsoft and their customers. Partner Center gives you access to the tools you need to get work done including referrals, insights, partner payout, and benefits.
Co-sell and IP Co-sell: Co-selling is any collaborative engagement between Microsoft and its partner ecosystem. Offers must meet certain requirements to be Co-sell eligible. IP Co-sell brings more partner benefits including MACC eligibility.
Partner benefits
When you publish your transactable offers on the Microsoft commercial marketplace, you unlock a set of marketing and sales benefits.
Rewards: As you grow through the commercial marketplace, you unlock benefits based on your engagement and sales. The more you grow, the more benefits unlock.
Operational support: By applying Microsoft's billing and tax services, you can focus on building great solutions while Microsoft handles the administrative aspects.
Access to customers: Simply creating a listing in the marketplace gives you access to over 4 million active visitors per month across 140+ geographies.
Scale: You can scale your sales force through Microsoft field sellers and partner-to-partner co-sell.
Details about these benefits can be found later in this article in Step 13.
Partner journey on marketplace
This section describes your journey through the marketplace ecosystem.
Start your partner journey on the marketplace by using the steps shown in the following diagram. Details and supporting links are in the sections that follow the diagram.
Let's get started on Microsoft commercial marketplace!
Account setup
The following sections walk you through the steps required to set up your account in Partner Center.
Step 1: Enroll in the Microsoft AI Cloud Partner Program account in Partner Center
Please note: Step 1 only needs to be done if you aren't already a member of the Microsoft Cloud AI Partner Program (formerly called the Microsoft Partner Network).
Select Partner (Microsoft Cloud AI program), and select Next.
Login with Work Account if you have one. If you don't have a work account, then select Create a Work Account. To see whether your company already has a work account, learn how to create a new work account, or learn how to set up multiple work accounts to use with Partner Center, see Company work accounts and Partner Center.
Agree to the terms and conditions
Important
To perform activities such as purchasing new offers, renewing existing offers in the Microsoft AI Cloud Partner Program, or publishing offers to Commercial Marketplace your account must be verified. To learn more, see Verifying account details in Partner Center.
To have a transactable offer in marketplace, you'll need a tax profile that has been submitted and validated by Partner Center. A tax profile needs to be submitted before a payout profile can be created. A tax profile can take up to 48 hours to validate.
Important
Your tax profile contains the information that Microsoft needs to fulfill tax withholding and reporting requirements. For additional support see Setting up a tax profile in Partner Center.
To set up a tax profile, an Owner or Finance Contributor role for the Microsoft Publisher account is required. To learn more, see Assign user roles and permissions.
Step 4: Set up payout profile
Set up your payout profile in Partner Center. Your payout profile refers to the bank or PayPal account designated to receive the funds generated from your sales. You'll need to ensure that your payment currency is selected in order to complete the payment profile process.
Once your profile is set up, it shows Pending Microsoft Validation. Validation takes about 48 hours to be completed. The account owner receives an email indicating the payment profile is updated.
Important
To transact or sell an offer through the commercial marketplace, a tax profile and payout profile must be submitted and validated in Partner Center so be sure to complete Steps 3 and 4 before moving forward.
To set up a payout profile, an Owner or Finance Contributor role on Microsoft publisher account is required.
Let's get started creating offers in the marketplace!
Offer creation on marketplace
The following sections walk you through the offer creation process on marketplace.
Step 5: Determine your transactable offer type
There are various offer types on the commercial marketplace. To determine which transactable offer type best suits your needs as a software publisher, let's first look at the various offer types on the marketplace.
SaaS (Software as a service) SaaS offers are a good fit if your customers want to subscribe to your service and use it online. With SaaS, the partner hosts the software in your cloud infrastructure, managing technical infrastructure, app software, and data management responsibilities.
Professional Service Use this offer type if you want to offer assessment, briefing, implementation, proof of concept, workshop, migration, or customer support services for software that is platformed on the Microsoft Cloud (this offer can be for your own software, another partner's software, or Microsoft software).
Virtual Machine Use the virtual machine offer type when you deploy a virtual appliance to the subscription associated with your customer.
Azure Application (Managed App) There are two kinds of Azure application plans: managed applications and solution templates.
Managed application plans are transactable via marketplace. These plans have the same capabilities as solution template plans. You can configure them to be managed by the publisher or the customer. These plans give customers full or restricted access to protect your IP.
Azure Container Use the Azure Container offer type when your solution is a Docker container image provisioned as a Kubernetes-based Azure container service.
To plan, price, and build your marketplace offer, follow the steps for your chosen type of offer.
Important
Use this flowchart to help determine the appropriate transactable offer type and pricing plan to sell your software in the commercial marketplace.
This chart assumes that as the partner, you have a clear understanding of your software delivery and licensing/billing models.
There are different options and requirements such as hosting tenant and billing options for publishing software as a service (SaaS) offer to the marketplace. To understand all the options and requirements for publishing SaaS offers, see Plan a SaaS offer.
Create a SaaS offer
After you Plan a SaaS offer and understand the options and requirements for publishing a SaaS offer, you're ready to create a SaaS offer. To get started, sign into Partner Center and create your SaaS offer.
Important
You may have started your online presence in the marketplace with a simple listing to advertise your services. This does not, however, create a transactable offer that can be sold through the marketplace. To learn how to convert your existing listing into a fully transactable SaaS offer, see Migrating Listings to SaaS Offers.
We recommend that you create a separate development/test (DEV) offer and a separate production (PROD). To learn how to create a DEV offer, see Plan a test and development SaaS offer.
Professional services are customer engagements that support a customer's use of the Microsoft Cloud. Use this offer type if you want to offer assessment, briefing, implementation, proof of concept, workshop, migration, or customer support services for software that is platformed on the Microsoft Cloud (this offer can be for your own software, another partner's software, or Microsoft software). Professional services can be transacted on the marketplace via Private Offers. To understand all the options and requirements for publishing professional service offers, see Plan a professional service offer.
Create a professional service offer
After you Plan a professional service offer and understand the options and requirements for publishing a professional service offer, you're ready to create a professional service offer. To get started, sign into Partner Center and create your professional service offer.
Plan a Virtual Machine (VM) offer
Virtual Machine (VM) offers in the marketplace are transactable offers that provide you with preconfigured, ready-to-deploy virtual machine images for various operating systems, applications, and configurations, allowing you to quickly spin up new VMs in the cloud environment.
To understand the different options and requirements for publishing a virtual machine (VM) offer to the commercial marketplace, see Plan a virtual machine offer.
An Azure Application offer (also referred to as Managed App offer) is one way you can publish an offer in the commercial marketplace. Managed Apps are transactable offers that are deployed and billed via marketplace.
Important
With Managed Apps, you can enable or disable management access to the resource group in the customer tenant, or give customers full or restricted access to it.
Create an Azure Application offer
You can create an Azure Application offer (also referred to as Managed App offer) so potential customers can buy your offer. To learn the process and how to create an Azure Application offer on the marketplace, see Create an Azure application offer.
Azure Container offers help you publish your container image to Azure Marketplace. Azure Container offers are transactable offers that are deployed and billed through the marketplace. Use the Container offer type when your offer is a Kubernetes application meant to be deployed on a managed Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) cluster.
All offers go through our certification process, which checks your offer for standard requirements, compatibility, and proper practices. To learn about the process, see Create an Azure Container offer.
Step 7: Review offer plans and pricing models
Offers you create and sell through the Microsoft commercial marketplace must have at least one plan. The marketplace allows you to create various plans with different options within the same offer. These plans (sometimes referred to as SKUs) can differ in terms of version, monetization, or tiers of service.
A private plan is a plan that isn't publicly visible but allows an ISV to create and make it available exclusively to specific customers within the Azure Marketplace.
Professional services do not have technical integration.
Step 9: Test, publish, and go live with offers
Now that you have created an offer that you want to publish, the next steps are to preview your offer, test it, and publish it to go live to the commercial marketplace.
For each of the offer types see the step-by-step process to preview, test, publish, and go live.
Due to the custom nature of professional services, they do not have testing functionality
Important
Use the SaaS Accelerator tool to expedite the publishing process of your transactable SaaS offers.
Co-sell
A co-sell opportunity is a collaboration of multiple parties to sell products to meet a customer's needs. A co-sell deal is a live marketplace offer that you intend to co-sell with Microsoft.
You must upload collateral documents with a co-sell offer. That collateral undergoes automated and manual review before determining the co-sell program status that the offer can be given. This offer is available in internal Microsoft catalogs along with the uploaded collateral. See Manage co-sell opportunities in Partner Center.
Co-sell eligibility
Any offer published through the commercial marketplace developer program in Partner Center is eligible for co-sell-ready status if co-sell-ready requirements are met. Offers that are in-market are still eligible to be attached offers in co-sell deals. To qualify for co-sell-ready status, your offer or service must be published live to at least one of the online stores: Azure Marketplace or Microsoft AppSource. To learn how to publish offers to the commercial marketplace, see Publishing guide by offer type.
Co-sell eligibility for business applications
IP-based offers built on Dynamics 365 apps on Dataverse, and Power Apps and Dynamics 365 Operations Apps that are enrolled in the ISV Connect program are also eligible for Co-sell ready status, which can be attained by completing the requirements for co-sell-ready status (described previously). Once completed, Microsoft sellers can co-sell the offer with you.
As a partner you must provide all the required information on the Co-sell > Offers page, including a one-pager and a pitch deck. We provide templates to help you create these documents. To learn more, see Configure Co-sell offer.
IP co-sell requirements
Azure IP co-sell eligible status is required to make a Marketplace offer MACC eligible. To learn about the requirements for Azure IP Co-sell Eligible status, see Requirements for Azure IP co-sell eligible status. The requirements apply to the following offer types:
Azure Application
Azure Container
Azure Virtual Machine
Software as a service (SaaS)
Important
The IP co-sell eligible designation is at the offer level. You must have an offer in order to have it in IP co-sell eligible status. For additional support and resources on Co-Sell, see the following articles:
You must confirm your MACC eligibility before transacting on Marketplace.
The Microsoft Azure Consumption Commitment (MACC) program is for transactable offers that are published through the commercial marketplace. MACC-eligible offers purchased through marketplace decrement customers' MACC for the amounts invoiced.
This section of the onboarding playbook (guide) describes options to transact private deals in the marketplace. This section describes what you need to know about the types of private offers: Private offers—customer private offers, Private offer to Cloud Service Provider (CSP), and Multiparty private offers (MPO).
Step 11: Execute a deal: Customer private offer (CPO), Multi-party private offer (MPO), private offer to Cloud Solution Provider (CSP)
Customer private offer
Partners use private offers to create tailored deals that are directly extended to an end customer through the marketplace. This type of offer allows for custom pricing, terms, durations, and configurations, enabling a personalized approach to business transactions.
In Partner Center, start by creating your private offer. Next, submit the offer. The offer goes directly to the customer for acceptance. The customer reviews the private offering, accepts it, and makes the purchase. The following image illustrates the customer's private offer experience.
Multiparty private offers are like CPO (customer private offers), but they allow partners and ISVs to add a selling partner to the private offer.
The ISV and the selling partner create an offer in Partner Center. After the offer is created, the selling partner extends the offer to the customer through the marketplace. The customer purchases through the marketplace. Microsoft then pays both the selling partner and the ISV. The following image illustrates the Multi-Party Private Offer experience.
CSP private offers allow you to create time-bound customized margins that suit your business needs and sell to customers through CSPs. As a partner, you can specify the margin and duration to create a wholesale price for your CSP partner. Marketplace delivers payout to you based off the wholesale price configured for the deal.
Because CSPs complete the sale to a customer outside of the marketplace, these deals won't decrement customers' MACC.
Partner Center provides dashboards that help you analyze the data related to your offers, customers, transactions (including private offers), and other activities in the marketplace. You can access these insights directly in Partner Center. To see your workspace dashboard, go to Partner Center and select the Insights page. From this page, you can download reports, data, and analysis.
As you grow through the commercial marketplace, you unlock benefits designed to help you convert customers and close deals.
Your benefits are differentiated based on whether your offer is a list, trial, consulting, or transaction. To get started, publish an offer in the marketplace. To see your list of benefits, in Partner Center, go to the Benefits workspace and select the Marketing benefits tab.
Incentives
As a Partner in the Microsoft AI Cloud Partner Program, you have access to various incentives programs that can reward you for delivering services to customers. These programs can also help you expand your business.
Marketplace Rewards is a free program that provides you with benefits that are designed to help you market, sell your offers, and generate leads. You'll do this alongside Microsoft's sales team, through our sales channels using the commercial marketplace.
The most comprehensive on-demand content available, Mastering the Marketplace, helps you develop transactable offers for the Microsoft commercial marketplace. This site features instructional videos, interactive hands-on labs, and sample code to provide a better understanding of the marketplace.
Microsoft Learn
Microsoft Learn is a free, online training platform that provides frictionless, interactive learning for all Microsoft products. Microsoft Learn includes documentation, training, certifications, Q&A, code samples, and more to support your commercial marketplace learning needs.
Tools
Partner Center streamlines several business processes to make it easier for you to manage your relationship with us and your customers. It gives you access to the tools, insights, and data you need to get work done seamlessly. Learn how to set up your Partner Center account.
Once you set up your Partner Center account, you can access Partner Center to manage your Microsoft account and users, engage with customers, build relationships with other partners, enroll in incentive programs, manage customer subscriptions, and more.
Azure portal is an online interface used to build, manage, and monitor Azure services.
SaaS Accelerator: Provides a fully functional community-led SaaS reference implementation for partners interested in publishing transactable SaaS offers in Microsoft's marketplace quickly.
The Microsoft commercial marketplace is a catalog of cloud applications and services that contains offerings from Microsoft and thousands of partners. In this learning path, you'll be introduced to concepts that will help your organization get ready to sell your cloud products and services through the commercial marketplace.