Microsoft CSP

Learn about the Microsoft Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) program.

The Microsoft CSP program is designed to provide businesses with easy access to Microsoft's cloud services, such as Microsoft 365, Dynamics 365, and Azure, through certified partners.

Working with a CSP provider like SoftwareOne offers numerous benefits and ensures a smooth onboarding process. Here are some of the benefits:

  • Tailored Solutions - SoftwareOne can bundle Microsoft cloud services with additional offerings and services, creating customized solutions that meet specific business needs.

  • Expert Support - Gain access to dedicated support from SoftwareOne's experts, who can help with everything from initial setup to ongoing management and technical issues.

  • Simplified Billing - Enjoy the convenience of monthly billing and invoicing, making it easier to manage budgets and expenses.

  • Strategic Guidance - SoftwareOne provides strategic guidance to help businesses optimize their use of Microsoft cloud services, ensuring they get the most value from their investment.

  • Scalability and Flexibility - Easily scale services up or down based on business needs, with the flexibility to adapt to changing requirements.

Buying Microsoft products in the Marketplace Platform

The Marketplace Platform enables you to manage your onboarding process for Microsoft cloud services, from creating a Microsoft organization tenant to accepting the Microsoft Customer Agreement, and more.

You can track your Microsoft subscription purchases and manage the entire subscription lifecycle through the Marketplace Platform.

CSP products

In the CSP program, various product types (or service types) are available, each with unique benefits and constraints.

License-based products (Online Services)

Licenses for products such as Office 365 E3 are User Subscription Licenses; you need one license for each user. These products are also known as seat-based offers or license-based services and include all the Office 365, Microsoft 365, Dynamics 365, and Windows 365 products.

When an order for a seat/license-based service is placed, a subscription is created. This is essentially a container that holds the licenses that have been ordered.

A subscription may only contain a single license type (for example, Office 365 E3) associated with a single commitment term (for example, 1 year) and a single billing frequency (for example, annual).

Software subscriptions

Software Subscriptions are available for Windows Server and SQL Server and for a fixed subscription term of either 1 or 3 years.

They give access to the Azure Hybrid Benefit, which means that you may install the products on-premises or use them to license the products within an Azure virtual machine.

Consider the Server Subscription as the best friend of Azure Reserved Instances since they now offer the most cost-effective way to license predictable Windows and SQL Server workloads in Azure through the CSP program.

Perpetual software

Perpetual software licenses are licenses for on-premises Microsoft products that you acquire in perpetuity. In the CSP program, the software is license-only (L-only) and does not include the option to add Software Assurance (SA).

Software licenses available in CSP include desktop tools such as Word, Excel, Project, and Visio; infrastructure servers that include Windows Server, SQL Server, Biztalk Server; and productivity servers that include Exchange, SharePoint, Skype for Business, and Project Server.

Usage-based (Azure Plan and Entitlements)

The Azure Plan new commerce experience gives CSP providers access to Azure services at pay-as-you-go (PAYG) rates for CSP clients under the Microsoft Customer Agreement. This plan simplifies the purchase experience.

You can have multiple Azure subscriptions in an Azure plan. In this new commerce experience for Azure, Microsoft has aligned to a single global pricing principle enabling CSP providers to offer Azure at the published prices.

CSP onboarding with SoftwareOne

You can execute each step of the onboarding process through the Marketplace Platform.

Step 1: Creating a Microsoft organization tenant

  1. Consultation - SoftwareOne begins with a consultation to understand your business needs and goals.

  2. Setup - SoftwareOne creates a Microsoft organization tenant for your business. This tenant acts as a dedicated instance within Microsoft's cloud, housing all users, resources, and data.

  3. Configuration - SoftwareOne configures the tenant to align with your business requirements, ensuring optimal setup for security, compliance, and performance.

Step 2: Accepting the Microsoft Customer Agreement

  1. Understanding Terms - SoftwareOne guides you through the Microsoft Customer Agreement, explaining the terms and conditions for using Microsoft’s cloud services.

  2. Agreement Acceptance - SoftwareOne assists you in accepting the agreement, which simplifies the purchasing process and provides clear terms regarding service usage, data privacy, and compliance.

Step 3: Service provisioning and integration

  1. Service Activation - Once the tenant is set up and the agreement is accepted, SoftwareOne provisions the required Microsoft cloud services for your business.

  2. Integration - SoftwareOne integrates these services with your existing systems, ensuring seamless operation and minimal disruption to your business activities.

  3. Customization - SoftwareOne can further customize the services to meet specific needs, such as setting up user roles, permissions, and additional configurations.

Step 4: Ongoing support and management

  1. Training - SoftwareOne provides training to ensure your team can effectively use the new services.

  2. Continuous Support - SoftwareOne offers ongoing support to address any issues and provide updates, helping your business adapt and grow with the evolving cloud landscape.

  3. Optimization - Regular reviews and optimization services are provided to ensure you continue to get the most out of your Microsoft cloud investment.

CSP and granular delegated admin privileges

For SoftwareOne to provide support to our customers, we require access to your workloads.

Granular delegated admin permissions (GDAP) is a security feature that provides CSP providers with least-privileged access following the Zero Trust cybersecurity protocol. It lets SoftwareOne configure granular and time-bound access to our customers' workloads in production and sandbox environments. This least-privileged access needs to be explicitly granted to SoftwareOne by our clients.

With GDAP, SoftwareOne can provide services to clients who might be uncomfortable with the high levels of partner access. GDAP also helps customers who have regulatory requirements to provide only the least-privileged access to partners.

New Commerce Experience

New Commerce Experience (NCE) is a specific update within the CSP program that introduces changes to the pricing, licensing, and billing of Microsoft’s cloud services.

Overall, the NCE is a more flexible and predictable option for clients who are looking for a longer-term commitment to Microsoft cloud services.

NCE’s primary objectives are to simplify transactions, enhance customer purchasing experiences, and offer flexible pricing options. It aims to provide greater transparency and predictability in costs. This enables organizations to scale their services seamlessly based on their evolving needs.

The move to NCE for seat-based offers took place in 2022 following the move to NCE for Azure (Azure Plan), Azure Reserved Instances, and Server-based Software Subscriptions in October 2019 and the launch of Perpetual Software in CSP in 2020/21.

What’s changing in 2024?

Starting 1 March 2024, the new commerce system launched education and nonprofit offers.

What about the legacy seat-based offers?

Existing Commercial legacy seat-based offers can still be managed (quantity changes) and will continue to renew as legacy offers (until further notice).

Subscription lifecycle states

When a subscription is created, it can have several states throughout its lifecycle.

License-based NCE subscription states

NCE subscriptions can be in one of these states: Active, Cancelled, Suspended, Expired, Disabled, or Deleted.

Active

Active is the default state for an NCE subscription. Whilst the subscription is in this state:

  • Customers can access and use services.

  • Admins can access service data and properties.

  • Partners can access and make changes to the subscription properties.

  • The transacting partner continues to be billed.

Cancelled

NCE subscriptions can be canceled within the first 7 days following subscription creation or renewal of the subscription.

After the 7-day window passes, the subscription can no longer be canceled.

  • After a subscription is canceled, there is a 7-day grace period in a Suspended state where:

    • Customers can continue to access their data.

    • Partner administrators can back up data before it's removed.

    • If the partner purchases the same product/SKU equivalent to the one canceled, customer data and user license assignment settings are automatically restored.

    • If a new purchase is made with a lower number of licenses, customer data, and user license assignment settings will still be retained, and the partner should manage these appropriately.

    • After the 7-day period, these actions are no longer allowed, and data will be removed.

  • Transacting partner will no longer be billed (pro-rata charges may apply)

Suspended

Partners can suspend (previously known as ‘Pause’) a subscription to temporarily make the services unavailable to customers. Whilst the subscription is suspended:

  • Customers can no longer access and use services.

  • Admins can access service data and properties.

  • The transacting partner continues to be billed.

  • Partners can reactivate the subscription before the end of its commitment term.

  • Partners can cancel the subscription if it is still within the 7-day transaction window.

If the Suspended subscription reaches its end date still in the suspended state, it will now move to a 30-day disabled state.

Expired

Following the end of an active subscription term, a 30-day expired state follows. A previously active subscription will enter this state if auto-renew is turned off and the terms end. In these 30 days:

  • Users can access files and services.

  • Admins can access data.

  • Transacting partner won’t be billed.

  • Subscription can’t be reactivated.

After 30 days in the expired state, the subscription moves to a 90-day disabled state.

Disabled

A 30-day disabled state follows the end of a suspended subscription term:

  • Partners that suspend their subscription leading to the term end will find their suspended subscription moved to this 30-day disabled state.

  • After 30 days in the disabled state, the subscription moves to a 90-day disabled state (120 days disabled in total).

  • Users can't access files and services, and only admins can access the data.

  • Transacting partner won't be billed.

  • Subscription cannot be reactivated.

The 90-day disabled state follows the 30-day Expired or a 30-day Disabled state:

  • Data is retained for 90 days after the end of the previous state.

  • Users can't access files and services, and only admins can access the data.

  • Transacting partner won't be billed.

  • Subscription can't be reactivated.

Deleted

After the subscription passes the 90-day disabled state, it stays deleted, which means:

  • The subscription is nonrecoverable.

  • If the partner cancels their subscription, the subscription will first go into the Suspended state for 7 days, and then to Deleted where data will be removed.

  • Transacting partner won't be billed.

  • The subscription cannot be reactivated.

License-based legacy subscription states

Legacy subscriptions can be in one of these states: Active, Suspended, or Deleted.

Active

In the Active state:

  • The default (normal) state of a subscription.

  • Partners can access and make changes to subscription properties.

  • Customers can access and use services.

  • Admins can also access service data and properties.

  • The transacting partner continues to be billed.

Suspended

In the Suspended state:

  • Partners suspend a subscription to temporarily make the services not usable to customers.

  • Partners can reactivate the subscription before the end of the term.

  • If the subscription is still suspended by the term's end, the subscription is deleted.

  • Partners can only reactivate the subscription.

  • Customers can no longer access and use services.

  • Admins can access service data and properties.

  • Transacting partner won't be billed.

Deleted

After 90 days in the suspended state, the subscription will be deleted and is nonrecoverable.

Subscription states within the Marketplace

The following table shows how the Microsoft subscription states are represented in the Marketplace Platform:

Product TypeMicrosoft StatesMarketplace States

License-based New Commerce

(example: Microsoft 365 / Dynamics 365)

  • Active

  • Cancelled

  • Suspended

  • Expired

  • Disabled

  • Deleted

  • Active

  • Active

  • Terminated

  • Terminated

  • Terminated

  • Terminated

License-based Legacy

(example: Microsoft 365 / Dynamics 365)

  • Active

  • Suspended

  • Deleted

  • Active

  • Terminated

  • Terminated

Usage-based

(example: Microsoft Azure)

  • Active/Enabled

  • Deleted

  • Disabled

  • Expired

  • Active

  • Terminated

  • Terminated

  • Terminated

Perpetual

(example: Perpetual Excel license)

  • Active

  • Cancelled

  • Active

  • Terminated

Software subscription

(example: Windows Server CAL 1yr)

  • Active

  • Cancelled

  • Active

  • Terminated

Further information

For further information on CSP, contact your account team.

Last updated

SoftwareOne is a trademark of SoftwareOne, Inc. "The Software Licensing Experts" is a service mark of SoftwareOne, Inc. VAR assist is a trademark of SoftwareOne, Inc. "It pays to partner" is a service mark of SoftwareOne, Incorporated.