
SoftwareOne India in pact with Microsoft launches solutions for small enterprises
The launch of SaMBIT to mark the Global Small and Medium Businesses (SMB) Day reflects SoftwareOne's commitment to simplify, accelerate, maximize, build, inspire, and transform the way Indian SMBs operate, collaborate, and innovate, it said.
The 'SaMBIT- SoftwareOne India' is a curated set of Microsoft solution bundles designed to help India's small and medium businesses (SMBs) boost productivity, enhance security and adopt AI with confidence, according to a statement.
Gurugram, Jun 27 (PTI) Technology solutions provider SoftwareOne India on Friday announced the launch of a software stack in collaboration with Microsoft, which will help small businesses enhance security and adopt artificial intelligence.
'At SoftwareOne, we believe SMBs are not just part of India's economy, they are the backbone of its innovation,' said Munish Gupta, Managing Director, SoftwareOne India.
'With SaMBIT, we are bridging the technology access gap for this segment, offering future-ready solutions that are affordable, scalable, and aligned with business needs', said Vaishali Kasture, India and South Asia Leader, Small Medium Enterprises and Channel, Microsoft India.
To support field and frontline staff, the deskless workforce communication bundle offers Microsoft 365 F3, Copilot Chat, and the agentic AI application — enabling real-time, AI-assisted communication across distributed teams.
'SaMBIT by SoftwareOne not only addresses critical business communication and unified service requirements but also integrates specialised cybersecurity workshops that demonstrate the complete spectrum of Microsoft Security solutions,' says Amit Bidasaria, Director, VSN International Pvt. Ltd'. PTI CORR HVA
This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.
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Hindustan Times
19 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
India-US trade talks need political push for final leg
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Secondly, the US cattle feed includes non-vegetarian products, something against religious sentiments of Indian consumers,' a third person said. Similarly, India is unable to accept the US demand to allow unrestricted access to American agricultural items such as corn and soybean because Indian law does not permit genetically modified crops. 'America is unwilling to accept an institutional mechanism which would certify that its India-bound agriculture produce are not genetically modified, saying there is a practical problem in segregating GM and non-GM products,' this person said. This person added that solving such issues now require a political directive from the highest levels of the government. 'While majority of issues have been resolved with near consensus, including on removing tariff and non-tariff barriers on most of the items of interest for both countries, certain sensitive matters require political directives from the two leaders. 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The prudent move for Washington would be to respect Indian sensitivities and forge a deal for stronger strategic cooperation in future, he said, noting that 'agricultural goods account for less than 5% of US exports to India.' Another expert working in a multinational consulting firm said: 'Now it is the time for America to act as India has already given several concessions, making its intent clear for stronger and everlasting economic cooperation with the US.' After a week where tariffs took a back seat to the US strike on Iran's nuclear facilities and the massive tax and spending bill in the US Congress, the Trump administration's trade negotiations have picked up. News agency Reuters reported Washington had sent a new proposal to the EU on Thursday and held talks with Japan on Friday. Both India and Japan are in advanced negotiations.


Indian Express
28 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Behind Mazagon Dock's Lanka deal: Eye on China, Colombo bailout plea
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Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
MSME hubs to cut carbon emission by 4mn+ tonnes
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