Learn about your responsibilities as a Microsoft supplier

Read the Microsoft Supplier Code of Conduct (SCoC) to review how our values, integrity, honesty, and compliance extend throughout the supplier ecosystem.

About the Supplier Code of Conduct (SCoC)

At Microsoft, we have the tremendous opportunity to work with thousands of suppliers in over 100 countries across the globe. We rely on these suppliers every day to support our mission of empowering every person and organization on the planet to achieve more - and realize their full potential. Our partnership is more than building innovative technology and delivering solutions that transform the way we live - it's about our values, who we are as a company and individuals, and how we manage our businesses while working together.

We require suppliers to be aware of, attest to, train on, and always adhere to the SCoC. The SCoC and training focus on:

  • Doing business ethically when it comes to anti-corruption, conflicts of interest, hiring practices, human rights, and honesty in business and corporate recording
  • Demonstrating respect and inclusion - ensuring accessibility, the ability to raise workplace concerns, and share our climate and environmental commitments
  • Protecting information, data, and Intellectual Property rights
  • And of course, ensuring privacy rules and regulations are met for all 

Thank you – to our Microsoft suppliers for your continued collaboration and hard work - helping ensure Microsoft runs on trust.


Supplier Code of Conduct training

Microsoft expects suppliers to act ethically and with integrity. Suppliers demonstrate this commitment by complying with our Supplier Code of Conduct and ensuring that their eligible employees and subcontractors are trained annually on the SCoC.

Annual supplier managed training requirements:

  • On an annual basis, an authorized representative from the supplier must review and acknowledge the SCoC, and complete the Microsoft SCoC training course. Confirmation of this must be attested to annually in Microsoft’s SupplierWeb platform.
  • Suppliers are required to train eligible employees and subcontractors working on Microsoft matters annually on the content of the SCoC.

In addition to Supplier’s training obligations noted above, all external staff requiring access credentials to the Microsoft corporate network and/or buildings are required to complete SCoC training before they obtain their access rights. This training will be managed and provided by Microsoft.

For more information on the SCoC training requirements, review the training requirements FAQs.


FAQs

Select a tab below to learn more information in each section:

Subcontractors

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SCoC obligations are carried down to supplier's subcontractors for work that is directly related to a Microsoft contract.

Microsoft defines a supplier’s “subcontractor” as a third party to whom a supplier delegates its obligations under an Agreement, or a Supplier Affiliate not contracting directly with Microsoft. This means that the supplier has hired another company or person to complete a portion of or all the goods/services being delivered to Microsoft.

All supplier categories are in scope to obtain written permission to use subcontractors on any Microsoft engagement. The supplier must request from the Microsoft business owner’s approval to use a subcontractor for each engagement. There are no blanket approvals for suppliers to use subcontractors beyond the specific, approved engagement.

 

Approval can be provided or removed at any time during the engagement via a SOW Amendment and/or Change Order. Written approval to use subcontractors on an engagement expires on the SOW termination date unless a new SOW and/or written permission is provided.

Yes, the supplier’s subcontractor must complete SCoC training.

Raising integrity concerns

To report questionable behavior or a possible violation of the Supplier Code of Conduct