Why Microsoft EAs are Difficult to Negotiate
Microsoft Enterprise Agreements are structured to lock mid-market and enterprise organizations into multi-year commitments with built-in cost escalations. The complexity of Microsoft's licensing bundles (such as E3 vs E5 profiles) combined with Azure committed spend agreements makes it challenging for IT and finance leaders to verify if they are paying benchmark market rates.
Furthermore, standard software resellers (VARs) are paid direct comission fees by Microsoft to hit sales targets. This means they are incentivised to increase your contract size rather than cut waste. As an independent, conflict-free advisor, Procuvance represents the buyer exclusively.
Our Sourcing Approach for Microsoft EAs
We divide our Microsoft EA sourcing process into three core phases to secure maximum negotiation leverage:
- 1. Usage & Baseline Audit: We audit your active Office 365, Power BI, and Azure usage data. We identify inactive accounts, duplicate licenses, and downgrade opportunities (e.g. profiling users who only require E1/E3 instead of premium E5 licenses).
- 2. Benchmark Mapping: We benchmark your Microsoft pricing proposal against actual market data to identify target discount levels for your specific organization size and industry.
- 3. Vendor Interface & Negotiation: We build the negotiation playbook and interface directly with Microsoft sales and account management teams to enforce discounts, price protection caps, and flexible growth terms.
Microsoft EA Sourcing Checklist
- ✓ Price Protection Caps: Limit renewal price hikes to 3% or less.
- ✓ Profile Rightsizing: Downgrade E5 profiles to E3 where premium compliance features are unused.
- ✓ Azure Commit Sizing: Optimize Azure MACC limits based on realistic cloud run-rate data.
- ✓ Step-up Flexibilities: Secure terms that allow scaling seat counts up or down dynamically.