Eighteen thousand users. A Microsoft proposal that bundled M365 E5, Copilot, and Azure consumption into a single seven year framework. The buyer side reframed the proposal across nine fronts and rebuilt the renewal at twenty six percent below the proposed run rate.
This is the engagement file from a Microsoft Enterprise Agreement renewal handled by the Redress Compliance Microsoft practice across the second half of 2025. The client is a US professional services firm of eighteen thousand active users, multi state, with a substantial knowledge worker population and a Microsoft estate that had grown organically across two prior EA cycles. The client engaged Redress at the proposal stage, after the Microsoft account team had presented a renewal framework that pushed the projected three year run rate twenty nine percent above the prior agreement. The buyer side reframed the proposal across nine fronts and rebuilt the renewal at twenty six percent below the proposed run rate. The work referenced our Microsoft advisory practice, the Microsoft EA negotiation strategies playbook, and the renewal proposal evaluation framework.
The client is a US professional services firm with offices across nine states and three operating divisions. Headcount sits at eighteen thousand active users, with a further three thousand contractor and partner identities. The Microsoft estate at the start of the engagement included Microsoft 365 E3 across the full population, Microsoft 365 E5 Security across roughly four thousand five hundred users, Power BI Pro across eleven thousand users, and a baseline Azure spend of roughly fourteen million per year. The estate had grown across two prior EA cycles without a structured rationalization review. The Microsoft account team had positioned the new EA cycle as the moment to consolidate the estate into a unified M365 E5 plus Copilot plus Azure framework.
The client procurement organization had handled the prior two EA renewals as procurement events. The renewals were transactional, the discount conversation was a price item, and the EA terms were largely accepted as the publisher had presented them. The client CIO and CFO had become uncomfortable with the run rate trajectory and the pace of the Copilot conversation, and engaged Redress to bring a buyer side framework to the renewal. The brief was to defend the EA value, neutralise the Copilot bundling pattern, and put the Azure consumption framework on a buyer side footing.
The renewal trigger was the EA expiration date in February 2026. Microsoft delivered the renewal proposal at the eight month mark, which is the standard playbook timing. The publisher's account team framed the proposal as the strategic Microsoft partnership across the next term, with the unified M365 E5 plus Copilot plus Azure framework as the central commercial architecture. The proposed run rate was twenty nine percent above the prior agreement, before any discount on the Copilot SKU and before the Azure consumption framework. The publisher framed the headline price increase as the unavoidable consequence of the 2026 NCE pricing reset, the Copilot bundling pattern, and the new Azure commitment framework.
The client accepted the proposal in principle and entered the standard four month negotiation window. Redress engaged at the proposal acceptance stage with three weeks to the first commercial meeting and four months to the renewal date. The engagement scope covered the proposal evaluation, the counter proposal construction, the buyer side negotiation framework, and the close out documentation. The client retained the lead negotiation seat, with Redress operating as the buyer side advisory and analytical resource across the negotiation.
The Microsoft proposal had nine commercial elements.
The proposal was constructed as a unified package, with the discount structure tied to the acceptance of the full framework. The Copilot pricing was framed as the enterprise tier rate, with no discount on the SKU itself but a Copilot specific Azure consumption credit as the package element. The MACC commitment was framed as the natural extension of the prior Azure run rate, with a six percent uplift to capture the projected consumption growth. The seven year term was framed as the strategic commitment that protected the discount structure across the term. The aggregate run rate uplift across the proposal was twenty nine percent, before the publisher's offered discount on the M365 E5 conversion.
The Redress analysis ran across nine fronts in parallel. The principal finding was that the proposal bundled commercial elements that the client did not need into the unified package, and that the headline twenty nine percent uplift was a function of the bundling rather than the underlying renewal economics. Two of the nine elements were aligned with the client's actual usage and operational direction. Four of the nine elements were Microsoft preferred SKUs that did not match the client's deployment plan. The remaining three elements were commercial framing that the buyer side could neutralise without operational impact. The framework is set out in our CIO level playbook for evaluating Microsoft renewal proposals.
The M365 E5 conversion across the full population was the load bearing commercial element. The client's actual E5 dependency sat at roughly six thousand users, with a further three thousand users that benefited from the E5 Security suite. The remaining nine thousand users had no operational requirement for the E5 framework and would derive no incremental value from the conversion. The Copilot SKU dependency sat at roughly one thousand five hundred users in year one, with a measured deployment plan that pointed to four thousand five hundred users by year three rather than the publisher's framing of twelve thousand. The Azure consumption framework had material headroom against the prior baseline but did not justify the six year MACC commitment at the proposed level.
The buyer side reframe ran across nine fronts.
The buyer side ran the negotiation across four phases. Phase one was the proposal evaluation and the counter proposal construction, which took the first six weeks of the engagement. Phase two was the first commercial meeting, at which the buyer side presented the unbundled framework and the tiered population analysis. Phase three was the publisher response and the iterative commercial conversation across the next eight weeks. Phase four was the close out and the contract execution across the final three weeks. The Redress role across the four phases was the buyer side analytical resource, the commercial framework owner, and the publisher engagement coach.
The first commercial meeting was the load bearing event. The buyer side presented the unbundled framework, the tiered population analysis, and the three year EA preferred term framework. The publisher response was the standard pushback, with the framing that the unbundled framework would forfeit the discount structure and that the seven year term was the only path to the headline rates. The buyer side response was the documented benchmark framework, the published EA pricing tier framework, and the explicit willingness to walk to the alternative procurement framework if the publisher could not meet the buyer side commercial position.
The publisher response across the next four weeks was the staged retreat from the unified package framework.
The buyer side counter proposal had four commercial elements.
The counter proposal also included the renewal terms framework, with the audit posture, the deployment audit framework, and the standard EA terms protections that the buyer side had let drift across the prior cycles. The terms framework was structured as a non commercial element of the counter proposal, with the framing that the terms framework was the standard buyer side protection rather than a commercial concession from the publisher. The publisher response on the terms framework was the standard incremental engagement, with the audit posture and the deployment audit framework moving to the buyer side preferred position across the negotiation.
The close ran across the final three weeks of the engagement. The publisher response landed on the buyer side counter proposal across all four commercial elements, with the discount tiers protected across the three year term. The aggregate run rate uplift across the executed agreement was three percent above the prior agreement run rate, against the proposed twenty nine percent uplift. The aggregate run rate reduction against the proposal was twenty six percent. The aggregate savings across the three year term was twenty four million against the proposal trajectory.
The close out documentation included the executed agreement, the SKU structure summary, the discount tier framework, the MACC commitment framework, the renewal terms framework, and the operational handover to the client procurement organization. The Redress role at the close was the buyer side analytical resource, the documentation owner, and the publisher engagement coach across the final commercial conversations. The engagement closed with the contract execution at the four month mark, on the original renewal date.
The engagement reinforced four buyer side lessons that apply across the Microsoft EA renewal cycle. First, the publisher's unified package framework is a commercial construction rather than a deployment requirement. The buyer side can unbundle the package across the underlying SKU layers without operational disruption, and the unbundling typically shifts the discount conversation in the buyer side's favor. Second, the Copilot SKU deployment trajectory is the load bearing commercial conversation across the 2026 cycle. The buyer side needs a measured deployment plan rather than the publisher's framing of the population coverage, and the deployment plan needs to anchor the SKU population conversation. The framework is set out in our Microsoft Copilot licensing guide for 2026.
Third, the Azure MACC commitment is a separate commercial conversation from the EA package. The MACC commitment frame is a six year horizon at the publisher's preferred consumption growth assumption. The buyer side preferred frame is a three year horizon at the actual consumption baseline plus a measured growth assumption. The unbundling of the MACC from the EA package typically improves both the EA discount structure and the MACC commitment framework. Fourth, the renewal terms framework is the buyer side protection that drifts across the prior cycles. The buyer side needs a structured renewal terms review at every cycle, with the audit posture, the deployment audit framework, and the standard EA terms protections restored as a non commercial element of the renewal. Read the CIO playbook for the 2025 to 2026 Microsoft licensing model for the broader framework.
The full Microsoft EA renewal playbook used in this engagement, including the unbundled package framework, the tiered population analysis, the MACC commitment framework, and the renewal terms framework, is available as a forty page download. The playbook is the buyer side framework that anchors the Redress Compliance Microsoft practice across the EA renewal cycle.
The unbundled package framework, the tiered population analysis, the Copilot SKU deployment trajectory, the Azure MACC commitment framework, the renewal terms framework, and the buyer side moves at every step of the EA renewal cycle.
Used across more than five hundred Microsoft engagements. Independent. Buyer side. Built for IT procurement leaders running the next EA cycle.
Microsoft framed the renewal as a unified package across M365, Copilot, and Azure. Redress unbundled the package, anchored the SKU populations to our actual deployment, and held the line on the three year term. We landed twenty six percent below the proposal trajectory.
We work for the buyer. Always. There is no other side of our table.
EA renewal patterns, Copilot deployment moves, NCE pricing signals, and the Microsoft licensing leverage signals across the Microsoft practice.