Microsoft Mentors

Cloud Decisions

Microsoft Mentors: The Podcast lifts the lid on the journeys of the most successful leaders in the Microsoft Partner ecosystem. Through candid conversations with founders, business owners, and technical leaders, we explore the strategies, grit, and lessons behind their growth and how they’re building competitive advantage for the future. These are the untold stories and practical lessons from leaders who are defining success in Azure, AI, Data, App Innovation and Security. Our mission? To tell Partner stories at scale and create impactful Microsoft conversations.

  1. 6d ago

    How Intercity Built a Microsoft-First MSP Through Acquisition

    A conversation on acquiring Microsoft capability, integrating culture, protecting people, and turning M&A into a real strategic advantage. Buying Microsoft capability is the easy headline. Building a business around it properly is the harder bit. That’s what makes this conversation with David Keeling so useful. This isn’t just a story about an acquisition. It’s a story about why businesses make them in the first place. David talks openly about the gap between wanting Microsoft capability and actually building it. Because in his words, you can’t just flick a switch, hire a few people, and suddenly become a serious Microsoft partner. The ecosystem is too complex, the skills are too specialist, and the credibility takes years to build. Because this isn’t just about buying revenue. It’s about buying capability. Buying trust. Buying a team that already knows how to navigate Microsoft properly. David reflects on why Centrality was attractive as an acquisition, how Intercity approached the process with a clear cultural fit in mind, and why so much of the due diligence came back to one question: how do you make sure the capability you’re buying actually stays intact? There’s a lot in this one for founders, Microsoft partners, MSP leaders, and anyone thinking seriously about growth through acquisition. Because the truth is, becoming Microsoft-first isn’t just a positioning line. It has to show up in the people. The process. The capability. And the way the business actually operates after the deal is done. If you enjoy this episode, don’t forget to like, follow, and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube. What You’ll Learn in This Episode Why Intercity chose acquisition rather than trying to build Microsoft capability from scratch Why becoming a credible Microsoft partner takes years, not months What made Centrality such a strategic fit for Intercity Why cultural alignment and people retention mattered so much in the acquisition process How David approached scaling Centrality with stronger structure, process, and capability Why Microsoft security has become a much stronger proposition for customers and partners How Intercity is helping customers unlock value from Microsoft licensing they already pay for Why proprietary IP and customer-facing tooling can help Microsoft partners stand out How David thinks about AI adoption, customer maturity, and practical use cases Why leadership, health, and bringing people with you matter just as much as strategy Memorable Quotes “we are now Microsoft First MSP that is absolutely at our core” “it’s not something that you can flick a switch and overnight… say we’re Microsoft capability” “that journey to be known as they’re a great Microsoft partner can take… years” “you’ve got great people how do we make sure that during this process that capability isn’t lost” “the asset is the people” “you’re like a Ferrari with no brakes” Enjoyed the Episode? Subscribe to the Microsoft Mentors Newsletter for insight-led conversations on cloud, cyber security, leadership, partnerships, and scale across the Microsoft ecosystem. Links & Resources Connect with David Keeling on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-keeling-bb84a84/ Explore Intercity 👉 https://intercity.technology/ Connect with Oli Ridley on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/oli-ridley/ Follow Cloud Decisions on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/company/clouddecisions About Cloud Decisions Cloud Decisions is a trusted Microsoft Talent Partner, we combine deep ecosystem knowledge with data-led hiring strategies to help organisations scale securely and sustainably in a rapidly evolving technology landscape.

    1h 9m
  2. Apr 29

    How Chorus Grew from a Bedroom Startup into a Multi-Pillar Microsoft Business

    Most businesses don’t fail because they start badly. They fail because they stop adapting. That’s what makes this conversation with Mark Taylor, Founder and CTO of Chorus, such a useful one. Mark didn’t build Chorus in a hot market with perfect timing, big funding, or some polished founder playbook. He built it the old-fashioned way. From scratch. From his parents’ bedroom. By spotting a real Microsoft opportunity early. And then by staying in the game long enough to evolve with the market over and over again. In this episode of Microsoft Mentors, we get into how Chorus grew from a Small Business Server opportunity in 1999 into a much broader Microsoft business spanning managed services, Dynamics, and cybersecurity. But more importantly, we get into the decisions underneath that growth. Because this isn’t just a story about staying around for 27 years. It’s a story about changing before the market forces you to. Mark talks about what it looked like to start as a technical founder wearing every hat, why Microsoft became a day-one strategic commitment, how a small early acquisition unexpectedly helped Chorus move into Dynamics, and why cyber has now become such a major growth engine for the business. He also reflects on one of the harder founder decisions: knowing when the company needs something different from you as a leader. There’s a lot in this one for founders, Microsoft partners, MSP leaders, and anyone trying to build a business with staying power. Because the truth is, long-term growth usually doesn’t come from doing one thing well forever. It comes from knowing what to keep. What to change. And when to let the business evolve into something bigger than its starting point. If you enjoy this episode, don’t forget to like, follow, and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube. What You’ll Learn in This Episode Why Microsoft Small Business Server gave Chorus such a clear starting point in the early days What it actually looks like when a technical founder has to learn sales, finance, operations, and leadership on the job How an early acquisition helped Chorus gain traction in Microsoft Dynamics Why staying tightly aligned to Microsoft created long-term leverage for the business How Chorus evolved from traditional managed services into a multi-pillar Microsoft business Why cybersecurity has become such a major strategic growth area How Chorus turned part of its cyber capability into a channel-led SOC-as-a-service model What changed in customer expectations as the market moved from server uptime to user experience and service speed Why stepping out of the CEO role was one of the right moves for the business What long-term adaptation really looks like when you’re trying to build a company that lasts Memorable Quotes “we had the very specific goal early on that... small businesses, they're going to want this small business server thing.” “you suddenly go, yeah, no, I can do this better. I can do this.” “if we stick to this, let's stick to this and be good at this.” “we now deliver SOC as a service to other MSPs.” “our CEO these days is just perfect for that role.” Enjoyed the Episode? Subscribe to the Microsoft Mentors Newsletter for insight-led conversations on cloud, cyber security, leadership, partnerships, and scale across the Microsoft ecosystem. Links & Resources Connect with Mark Taylor on LinkedIn 👉https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-taylor-1041864/Explore Chorus 👉 https://www.chorus.co.uk/Connect with Oli Ridley on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/oli-ridley/ Follow Cloud Decisions on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/company/clouddecisions About Cloud Decisions Cloud Decisions helps Microsoft Partners and Microsoft-aligned businesses build high-performing teams across Cloud, Data, Security, and AI.

    58 min
  3. Apr 22

    From Active Directory to AI Agents: Luke Elston on the New Shape of Microsoft Security

    How has Microsoft security evolved from the world of Active Directory and infrastructure into one defined by AI, data security, and non-human identities? In this episode of Microsoft Mentors, Oli sits down with Luke Elston, Microsoft Practice Director at CyberONE, to explore both his personal journey and the wider evolution of Microsoft security over the last decade. From starting out in engineering roles at Microsoft during the early Azure years, to building deep expertise across identity, Defender, and Purview, to now shaping the roadmap for a specialist Microsoft-first MSSP, Luke shares a practical view of how the security conversation has changed — and where it is heading next. This is a conversation about much more than certifications or tooling. Luke reflects on how identity has come full circle as a security priority, why Microsoft’s investment in security has changed the market, and what it takes to turn technical depth into commercial leadership. He also explains why CyberONE doubled down on Microsoft, how that specialisation has strengthened its relationship with Microsoft, and why leaders who want to grow their careers need to stop waiting for opportunities to happen by accident. Along the way, the conversation explores Sentinel, Defender, Purview, MISA, MXDR, shadow AI, data governance, AI-powered attacks, voice cloning, non-human identities, and the growing importance of securing agents as organisations adopt Copilot and broader AI systems. For Microsoft partners, cyber leaders, technical specialists, and anyone trying to understand the new shape of Microsoft security, this episode offers a grounded look at what good security really looks like now. If you enjoy this episode, don’t forget to like, follow, and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube. 💡 What You’ll Learn in This Episode • How Luke’s career started in Microsoft engineering roles and why Active Directory gave him such a strong security foundation • Why identity has come back to the centre of the security conversation in the age of AI and non-human identities • How Microsoft’s security stack evolved from early Azure and Defender investment into the broader ecosystem we now see across Sentinel, Purview, and AI security • What changed in Luke’s career when he moved from engineering into architecture, go-to-market, and commercial leadership • Why CyberONE chose to specialise so deeply in Microsoft security and how that has accelerated its growth • What MISA, MXDR verified status, and Microsoft’s security ecosystem actually mean for partners and customers • Why any serious AI adoption needs to start with a data security mindset • How organisations should think about agent sprawl, shadow AI, and the risks of unmanaged non-human identities • Why data security remains one of the most overlooked parts of many organisations’ security posture • Why Luke believes a SOC should be one of the first investments a business makes, not one of the last • How CyberONE is using AI internally to strengthen human-led security operations rather than replace them 💬 Memorable Quotes “identity is that is a key part of security.” “any adoption of AI generally needs to come with a data security mindset.” “organizations who were early adopters of the various copilot products likely have agents floating around that don't have an identity associated.” “assume breach or assume compromise.” “get a SOC. Just get a SOC. Don't make that the last thing you invest in.” 📬 Enjoyed the Episode? Subscribe to the Microsoft Mentors Newsletter for insight-led conversations on cyber security, AI, leadership, partnerships, and scale across the Microsoft ecosystem. 🔗 Links & Resources Connect with Luke Elston on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/luelston/ Connect with Oli Ridley on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/oli-ridley/ Follow Cloud Decisions on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/company/clouddecisions

    1 hr
  4. Apr 15

    How Margaret Totten Built, Sold, and Rebuilt in the Microsoft Ecosystem

    What does it really look like to build a business in the Microsoft ecosystem, sell it, and then do it all again? In this episode of Microsoft Mentors, Oli sits down with Mags Totten, CRO at Yavrio and one of the most well-known commercial leaders in the Microsoft partner community, to unpack a career shaped by reinvention, timing, and a clear ability to spot where the market is heading next. From launching IA Cubed at the moment cloud was becoming the next major shift, to building Akari around accessibility and automation, to stepping into the ISV world with Yavrio, Mags shares what it takes to keep evolving while staying commercially sharp. This is a conversation about much more than startup success. Mags reflects on what changed when IA Cubed shifted from a lifestyle business into a company built for exit, what she learned from navigating post-acquisition integration, and why the Microsoft partner ecosystem has been such an important constant across every chapter of her journey. She also explains how her second company was shaped by a more personal mission, and why she still believes the best operators are the ones who can see what’s coming just before everyone else does. Along the way, the conversation explores cloud adoption, accessibility, modern work, product-led growth, partner strategy, the move from services into ISV, and what the next growth chapter at Yavrio could look like. For founders, Microsoft partners, commercial leaders, and anyone trying to build something meaningful in the ecosystem, this episode offers a grounded look at what it means to start, scale, exit, and start again. If you enjoy this episode, don’t forget to like, follow, and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube. What You’ll Learn in This Episode • Why Mags launched IA Cubed at the point cloud was becoming the next big market shift • How personal loss changed the company’s trajectory from lifestyle business to exit-focused growth • What Mags learned while building a business that investors would want to buy • Why brand, relationships, and ecosystem presence mattered so much in attracting acquisition interest • What the reality of post-acquisition integration looks like for founders, teams, and customers • How an accessibility event helped spark the vision behind Akari • Why technology became a bridge for inclusion, and how that shaped Akari’s early direction • What changed when Mags moved from service-led growth into the world of product and ISVs • Why Microsoft is putting bigger strategic focus on ISVs and ecosystem extensibility • What drew Mags to Yavrio and why she believes it’s the right business at the right time Memorable Quotes “we decided that we were going to be Scotland's first cloud champion.” “we started looking at how we would build a company to exit, which was brand new to me.” “It's a very steep learning curve and it's something you have to learn on the job, not alongside the job.” “I can usually see what's going to come just before it starts to come.” “what we're trying to do is change how fintech works.” Enjoyed the Episode? Subscribe to the Microsoft Mentors Newsletter for insight-led conversations on leadership, growth, partnerships, technology, and scale across the Microsoft ecosystem. Links & Resources Connect with Margaret Totten on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/margarettotten/Connect with Oli Ridley on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/oli-ridley/Follow Cloud Decisions on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/company/clouddecisions About Cloud Decisions Cloud Decisions helps Microsoft Partners and Microsoft-aligned businesses build high-performing teams across Cloud, Data, Security, and AI. As a trusted Microsoft Talent Partner, we combine deep ecosystem knowledge with data-led hiring strategies to help organisations scale securely and sustainably in a rapidly evolving technology landscape.

    57 min
  5. Apr 8

    Inside Microsoft’s AI Evolution: Alex Pearce on Copilot, Frontier, and What Comes Next

    What does Microsoft’s AI story actually look like now, once you get beyond the surface-level Copilot conversation? In this episode of Microsoft Mentors, Oli sits down with Alex Pearce, Chief Strategist for Microsoft at Softcat and one of the UK’s longest-standing Microsoft MVPs, to unpack how the Microsoft AI landscape is evolving in real time. From the early days of Copilot as an in-app productivity tool to the rapid rise of agents, MCPs, extensibility, Microsoft Foundry, and frontier AI, Alex gives a grounded, practical view of what’s changing and what organisations need to understand next. This is a conversation about much more than product releases. Alex breaks down why the real opportunity in Microsoft AI is increasingly moving toward agentic workflows, richer context, and systems that can interact with data more intelligently. He also explains why Microsoft’s long-term edge may not always be first-mover innovation, but the ability to bring powerful AI capability into compliant, enterprise-ready environments. Along the way, the conversation explores frontier terminology, the growing role of MCPs as a foundational AI integration layer, the rise of shadow AI inside businesses, and why observability, quality assurance, and human oversight will become critical as agents get more capable. For Microsoft partners, technical leaders, and anyone trying to understand what comes after “just use Copilot,” this episode offers a clear lens on where the ecosystem is heading next. 👉 If you enjoy this episode, don’t forget to like, follow, and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube. 💡 What You’ll Learn in This Episode Why Alex says Copilot has evolved from a productivity tool into something much broader How Microsoft’s AI story now spans AI in Office, native AI apps, data and extensibility, and agentic platforms What Microsoft means by “frontier” — both as a transformation idea and a product lifecycle stage Why agents are creating more ROI than simple prompt-based use cases for many organisations How MCPs are becoming a foundational integration layer across Microsoft and other AI ecosystems Why context quality still drives output quality in AI and agent design Where Microsoft may hold an advantage over other AI vendors when compliance and governance matter How shadow AI is becoming a real commercial and operational risk inside organisations Why infrastructure, hyperscaler demand, and hardware constraints may shape the next phase of AI growth Why observability and quality assurance could become one of the most important disciplines in agentic AI 💬 Memorable Quotes “copilot is getting complicated, but for the good.” “it’s copilot not autopilot at this point.” “the more context you can give, the better the output.” “Microsoft will always bring these and go, there you go. Now you can use it in a GDPR data center.” “Quality assurance and observability with agentic is going to be so important. If you want to start a startup today, build that.” 📬 Enjoyed the Episode? Subscribe to the Microsoft Mentors Newsletter for insight-led conversations on cyber security, AI, leadership, and scale inside the Microsoft Partner ecosystem: 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/build-relation/newsletter-follow?entityUrn=7175453155780915200 🔗 Links & Resources Connect with Alex Pearce on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/ajp15/Explore Softcat 👉https://www.softcat.com/Connect with Oli Ridley on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/oli-ridley/Follow Cloud Decisions on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/company/clouddecisions 🏢 About Cloud Decisions Cloud Decisions helps Microsoft Partners and Microsoft-aligned businesses build high-performing teams across Cloud, Data, Security, and AI.

    55 min

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Microsoft Mentors: The Podcast lifts the lid on the journeys of the most successful leaders in the Microsoft Partner ecosystem. Through candid conversations with founders, business owners, and technical leaders, we explore the strategies, grit, and lessons behind their growth and how they’re building competitive advantage for the future. These are the untold stories and practical lessons from leaders who are defining success in Azure, AI, Data, App Innovation and Security. Our mission? To tell Partner stories at scale and create impactful Microsoft conversations.