
Microsoft Marketing
Why Your Microsoft Marketplace Listing Isn’t Generating Leads and How to Turn It Into a Demand Channel
| 6 min read

- Donna McCabeDirector of Marketing
Many Microsoft partners publish a solution in Microsoft Marketplace expecting it to become a new source of demand. And why wouldn’t they? Microsoft Marketplace puts your solution in front of customers who are already investing in Microsoft technologies.
But many partners assume that simply publishing a Marketplace listing will automatically bring in new leads. In reality, most Microsoft Marketplace listings function more like a directory entry than a demand engine even after they’ve been made transactable. Many generate little activity beyond a handful of views. Check your analytics: is your Marketplace listing bringing in the right combination of views and conversions?
Too often, partners publish their Microsoft Marketplace listing and think of it as checking a box. The listing goes live and the assumption is: job done. And that’s a huge missed opportunity.
In our experience reviewing Microsoft Marketplace listings with partners, the issue usually isn’t visibility. More often, it’s positioning. The listing may describe the solution, but it doesn’t clearly communicate why a buyer should care or what problem it solves.
Below are some of the most common reasons Microsoft Marketplace listings fail to generate leadsand what successful partners do differently.
Why do Microsoft Marketplace listings fail to generate leads?
Microsoft Marketplace listings often fail to generate leads because they focus on product features instead of customer problems, lack clear differentiation, include little proof of real customer outcomes, and do not guide buyers toward a clear next step. Listings that perform well clearly explain the problem they solve, demonstrate outcomes, align with Microsoft priorities, and make it easy for buyers to engage.
Let’s take a closer look at some of the most common reasons this happens.
1. The Listing Describes a Product Instead of Solving a Problem
One of the most common issues we see is listings that read like a product overview. They describe the features and capabilities, but they never clearly explain the business problem the solution actually solves. Marketplace buyers usually arrive with a specific challenge in mind.
If the listing doesn’t quickly connect to a real problem, buyers struggle to see whether the solution applies to them.
For example, we often see language like:
“A scalable cloud platform with advanced monitoring and automation capabilities.”
Technically accurate, but generic and not very helpful for a buyer.
Compare that to:
“Reduce Azure infrastructure costs and gain visibility into cloud spending with automated cost optimization and governance.”
This second example connects the solution directly to a business outcome. It answers the question buyers are already asking.
It’s worth noting that some well-known Marketplace solutions still lean heavily into technical capabilities. That can work when the buyer already understands the category and knows what they’re looking for. But for many Microsoft partner solutions, the listing needs to do more work to connect the technology to the business problem it solves.
2. The Solution Isn’t Clearly Differentiated
Another challenge we see frequently is that many Microsoft Marketplace listings sound almost interchangeable.
If you take nothing else from this article, review your listing. If it says things like “competitive advantage,” “end-to-end solution,” “industry-leading,” or “accelerating digital transformation,” delete those tropes. They may sound impressive, but they rarely help a buyer understand what the solution actually does or why it matters.
From a buyer’s perspective, that makes it difficult to understand why one solution is different from another.
The strongest Microsoft Marketplace listings narrow their focus and clearly communicate who the solution is designed for.
Examples might include:
Azure modernization for manufacturing organizations
Security improvement for mid-size healthcare providers
AI-driven document processing for financial services firms
Specific positioning helps the right buyer immediately recognize that the solution may apply to them. If your solution has something that truly sets it apart, make sure that is clearly reflected in the listing. This type of differentiation helps Microsoft sellers quickly understand where the partner fits in customer conversations.
3. There Are No Proof Points
Many Microsoft Marketplace listings rely heavily on descriptive language but provide little evidence of real customer outcomes.
We often see statements such as “trusted by leading organizations,” “proven methodology,” or “best-in-class technology,” but rarely do listings explain what results customers actually achieved.
For a buyer evaluating solutions, proof is one of the most important signals of credibility.
Effective listings often include simple but powerful examples such as:
Reduced Azure compute costs by 30 percent
Migrated 100+ workloads to Azure within six months
Improved security posture across hybrid environments
Even short outcome statements help buyers understand the real-world impact of the solution.
These can be hard to quantify, but it’s worth taking the time to identify those data points. They really help you stand out in a crowded market. If you have a case study, reference it. Even a brief testimonial can be very impactful.
4. The Listing Doesn’t Align With Microsoft Priorities
Microsoft Marketplace exists within the broader Microsoft ecosystem.
That means buyers and Microsoft sellers often look at solutions through the lens of Microsoft solution areas such as:
Azure infrastructure
Data and AI
Security
Business applications
Listings that don’t clearly show how their solution aligns with Microsoft technologies or priorities can be harder for both buyers and sellers to interpret.
Strong listings typically explain:
What Microsoft technologies the solution supports
How the solution helps customers adopt Azure or Microsoft platforms
How the solution fits into broader modernization or innovation initiatives
This clarity helps both customers and Microsoft sellers quickly see where the partner adds value.
5. There Is No Clear Next Step for the Buyer
Even when a Microsoft Marketplace listing explains the solution well, it often fails to guide the buyer toward action. In marketing parlance, we call this a Call-to-Action, or CTA.
A buyer may read the listing, find it interesting, and then simply move on because it’s unclear what to do next.
Successful listings make the next step obvious and move the buyer toward that action.
Examples include inviting buyers to:
Schedule a solution briefing
Start with a short assessment or workshop
Request a demonstration
Download a solution overview
Don’t assume it’s clear to the buyer just because it is clear to you.
Turning Your Marketplace Listing into a Demand Channel
Microsoft Marketplace can be much more than a place where a solution is listed. When positioned correctly, it can become a real engine for demand. The listings that generate meaningful opportunities tend to do a few things well: they clearly explain the problem being solved, differentiate the solution in a meaningful way, include proof that builds credibility, align to Microsoft priorities, and guide the buyer toward a clear next step.
When those elements come together, the listing becomes more than a description; it becomes a tool that supports customer discovery and sales conversations.
Partners invest a lot into building their solutions. Making sure they’re positioned clearly in Marketplace is what allows that investment to actually translate into visibility, credibility, and pipeline.
If you’re wondering how your Marketplace listing stacks up, we put together a quick diagnostic to help you find out. It takes just a few minutes and gives you a clear view of where your listing may be falling short and what to focus on next.
Take the Marketplace Revenue Readiness Diagnostic














































