Commentary - Channel Insider
Empowering the next generation Channel
 
security
Surprising Security Shortcomings After nearly a decade of threat warnings, evolving threats and billions of dollars in technology investments, you’d think that businesses have at least a baseline of IT security protections. Recent reports reveal some surprising security shortcomings in the business community.



Sponsored Links
  • SonicWALL VS Status Quo Solutions. No Contest
  • Sell BlackBerry® Technical Support and earn
  • Ready. Set. 7. See who’s building with Windows 7.
  • Special support for Microsoft partners in today’s economy
  • Green is a huge opportunity with HP PartnerONE



  •  

    Dell Enters the Managed Services Business

    in Commentary


    Article Rating:starstarstarstarstar / 0
    Article Views: 1163

    Rate This Article:
    Add This Article To:
    Opinion: Dell's planned acquisition is in line with ongoing trends, but it will also pose challenges for the vendor.

    Dell's announcement that it plans to acquire SilverBack Technologies clearly shows how the IT industry is shifting from a product focus to a service orientation. While the size of this transaction was minute compared with the mega-deals that are getting headlines today, the significance of this acquisition could be great.

    SilverBack was one of the original MSPs (managed service providers) who pioneered the managed services market, and shifted its business to become a remote monitoring and management services delivery platform provider for other aspiring MSPs. Part of the reason for this transition was because SilverBack was having difficulty building its own business as a MSP when the overall market was still evolving.

    SilverBack was also one of the first enabling technology vendors to recognize that resellers, integrators and other aspiring MSPs needed more than just the right technology to deliver their services. SilverBack recognized these MSP wannabes also needed business training regarding how to package, price, sell and support a managed services business. In response, SilverBack developed a "franchise" model for getting new MSPs up and running.

    To read about what a former SilverBack executive thinks about the acquisition, click here.

    Resource Library:
    Despite this innovation, SilverBack has continued to face significant challenges as a stand-alone vendor. In addition to having to evangelize and educate resellers, integrators and other MSP wannabes on the virtues of managed services and how to do it right, it also faced a widening array of competitors including N-able, Level Platforms, Zenith Infotech, Everdream and Kaseya, not mention BMC Software, IBM and HP.

    Since its target customers were often cash-restricted, SilverBack and its competitors have often had to structure its contracts to be "success-driven," meaning SilverBack would be paid when the MSP sold its services. This extended the sales and revenue recognition cycles, and created an ongoing constraint on the company's growth.

    This acquisition by Dell is important because it shows that Dell is serious about regaining its momentum in the market, in part by strengthening its service delivery capabilities. Dell is in a unique position to leverage SilverBack's capabilities through its direct sales model. Unlike its competitors who rely heavily on channel partners to support the end customer, Dell can deliver an added level of managed services to meet customers' escalating support needs.

    This advantage can enable Dell to demonstrate a greater ability to ensure higher reliability, security and return on investment of its products.

    Ironically, Dell has made recent pronouncements that it will be adding indirect channels to its traditional go-to-market approach, which could complicate its managed services strategy. Going forward, Dell will have to clearly segment its managed service offerings to minimize the risk of channel conflict. It will must also overcome its own internal product-centric culture in order to fully leverage its new managed services assets.

    Dell's move is not the first time a product vendor has delved into the managed services market via acquisition. In 2004-2005, Cisco Systems and Sun Microsystems also tried to enter the managed services business via acquisitions of NetSolve and Sevenspace respectively, with limited success. Both were stymied by a combination of internal cultural and external channel issues.

    Despite these challenges, Dell's acquisition of SilverBack is further validation of the fundamental transformation of the IT industry. It is also another indication that IT vendors must shift their strategies from product to service differentiation in order to meet the changing needs of their customers.

    Kaplan is managing director of THINKstrategies, a consultancy in Wellesley, Mass. He is also the founder of the Managed Services Showplace, www.msp-showplace.com, the largest vendor-independent online directory of managed services and insights. He can be reached at jkaplan@thinkstrategies.com.



    Discuss Dell Enters the Managed Services Business
     
    >>> Be the FIRST to comment on this article!
     

     
     
    >>> More Commentary Articles          >>> More By Jeff Kaplan
     


     

    SIGN UP FOR CHANNEL INSIDER NEWSLETTERS
    Reliable, timely information on the business of technology. Sign up now.

    RSS SUBSCRIPTIONS
    XML
    Add Channel News, Product Reviews, Trends and Analysis to your RSS newsreader or My Yahoo!

     


    CHANNEL RESOURCE CENTER
     
     
    Best Free Antivirus Apps
    Microsoft isn’t the first vendor to offer free antivirus software to consumers and small businesses. Several vendors have free general available versions of their malware protection suites. Their strategy: get customers interested and open opportunity to partners. Here are few worth free AV packages worth considering.
    View Slideshow

    Top 10 Most Profitable Vendor Certifications
    Solution providers that invest in vendor technical certifications are more profitable, sell more complex systems and have better relationships with their customers, according to the new Channel Insider/Amazon Consulting certification study. But not all vendor certifications have the same ROI. The following vendors have the best certifications for return on their partners’ investment.
    View Slideshow
    The IT industry is in the midst of a mass metamorphosis. Lines are blurring between networking technologies, storage, servers, software and telephony. Vendors that represent the tried and true establishment in one discipline are now making hard-right turns into new, largely unfamiliar and often competitive markets. Read on to see just a few of the major convergence plays of the last year.
    View Slideshow