SUSE expands Cloud Elevate to make enterprise software procurement as simple as clicking a button

Buying enterprise software has never been anyone’s idea of a smooth experience. Weeks of legal back-and-forth, manual configurations, and fragmented vendor relationships have long made procurement one of the more quietly painful parts of running a technology operation. Consequently, SUSE is addressing that friction directly with a significant expansion of its Cloud Elevate program.

The open-source infrastructure company announced new integrations with AWS and Google Cloud Marketplace, giving enterprise customers a more direct path to acquiring SUSE solutions using pre-committed cloud budgets they already hold. The expansion introduces two distinct programs tailored for different parts of the partner ecosystem, each designed to reduce the administrative weight that typically slows down software deals.

The first program, AWS Designated Seller of Record, allows distributors to act as designated sellers of record on behalf of AWS Marketplace transactions. The second, Google Cloud Marketplace Channel Private Offers, targets channel partners specifically, enabling resellers to extend private offers directly to clients while preserving their existing business relationships. Together, these two mechanisms cover meaningfully different parts of how enterprise software deals actually move through organizations.

According to research cited by SUSE, enterprises that shift procurement to cloud marketplaces achieve meaningful efficiency gains across the board. The procurement process cycle supposedly takes 66% less time, sales cycle time is increased by 40%, and the onboarding process is made much easier through the use of marketplaces instead of manual contracts management. This might be crucial for companies that spend heavily on technologies.

The timeliness of this expansion is associated with yet another trend being embraced by enterprises. A significant portion of enterprise cloud budgets sits as pre-committed spend with major providers, and organizations increasingly want to apply that spend toward software purchases rather than letting it go underutilized. Furthermore, traditional procurement channels simply cannot offer the same flexibility that cloud marketplace integrations provide.

According to analysts, the adoption of a market-based approach to enterprise technology by SUSE reflects a wider trend among enterprise software vendors, who increasingly view their presence in the marketplace as an equally critical factor to the capabilities of their products when competing against each other.

For partners working within the SUSE ecosystem, the expansion adds two concrete mechanisms to close deals faster and serve customers through the channels where those customers already operate.

 

 

 

 

Top