Most businesses don’t fail because they start badly. They fail because they stop adapting. That’s what makes this conversation with Mark Taylor, Founder and CTO of Chorus, such a useful one. Mark didn’t build Chorus in a hot market with perfect timing, big funding, or some polished founder playbook. He built it the old-fashioned way. From scratch. From his parents’ bedroom. By spotting a real Microsoft opportunity early. And then by staying in the game long enough to evolve with the market over and over again. In this episode of Microsoft Mentors, we get into how Chorus grew from a Small Business Server opportunity in 1999 into a much broader Microsoft business spanning managed services, Dynamics, and cybersecurity. But more importantly, we get into the decisions underneath that growth. Because this isn’t just a story about staying around for 27 years. It’s a story about changing before the market forces you to. Mark talks about what it looked like to start as a technical founder wearing every hat, why Microsoft became a day-one strategic commitment, how a small early acquisition unexpectedly helped Chorus move into Dynamics, and why cyber has now become such a major growth engine for the business. He also reflects on one of the harder founder decisions: knowing when the company needs something different from you as a leader. There’s a lot in this one for founders, Microsoft partners, MSP leaders, and anyone trying to build a business with staying power. Because the truth is, long-term growth usually doesn’t come from doing one thing well forever. It comes from knowing what to keep. What to change. And when to let the business evolve into something bigger than its starting point. If you enjoy this episode, don’t forget to like, follow, and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube. What You’ll Learn in This Episode Why Microsoft Small Business Server gave Chorus such a clear starting point in the early days What it actually looks like when a technical founder has to learn sales, finance, operations, and leadership on the job How an early acquisition helped Chorus gain traction in Microsoft Dynamics Why staying tightly aligned to Microsoft created long-term leverage for the business How Chorus evolved from traditional managed services into a multi-pillar Microsoft business Why cybersecurity has become such a major strategic growth area How Chorus turned part of its cyber capability into a channel-led SOC-as-a-service model What changed in customer expectations as the market moved from server uptime to user experience and service speed Why stepping out of the CEO role was one of the right moves for the business What long-term adaptation really looks like when you’re trying to build a company that lasts Memorable Quotes “we had the very specific goal early on that... small businesses, they're going to want this small business server thing.” “you suddenly go, yeah, no, I can do this better. I can do this.” “if we stick to this, let's stick to this and be good at this.” “we now deliver SOC as a service to other MSPs.” “our CEO these days is just perfect for that role.” Enjoyed the Episode? Subscribe to the Microsoft Mentors Newsletter for insight-led conversations on cloud, cyber security, leadership, partnerships, and scale across the Microsoft ecosystem. Links & Resources Connect with Mark Taylor on LinkedIn 👉https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-taylor-1041864/Explore Chorus 👉 https://www.chorus.co.uk/Connect with Oli Ridley on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/in/oli-ridley/ Follow Cloud Decisions on LinkedIn 👉 https://www.linkedin.com/company/clouddecisions About Cloud Decisions Cloud Decisions helps Microsoft Partners and Microsoft-aligned businesses build high-performing teams across Cloud, Data, Security, and AI.
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