SHARE
Facebook X Pinterest WhatsApp

McAfee Wants to Make Its Partners Rich on Services

McAfee is adding a glut of service offerings to its portfolio and turning much of it over to its partners, in part to make them more profitable. Partners in the Authorized Partner Solutions Services program will be selling and/or delivering an expanded menu of service SKUs by January 2007, McAfee executives told The Channel Insider. […]

Written By
thumbnail John Hazard
John Hazard
Aug 8, 2006
Channel Insider content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More

McAfee is adding a glut of service offerings to its portfolio and turning much of it over to its partners, in part to make them more profitable.

Partners in the Authorized Partner Solutions Services program will be selling and/or delivering an expanded menu of service SKUs by January 2007, McAfee executives told The Channel Insider. Some SKUs are available already, but the bulk will launch after Jan. 1, 2007.

The plan is in part to enhance the value proposition for customers, but McAfee expects to make no profit on the offerings, said Alva Purvis, vice president of Worldwide Channel Enablement.

“We’re not looking at these as profit drivers, but cost recovery,” Purvis said. “Partners make the margins and make revenue. It’s not revenue producing for us, but it ensures their businesses grow.”

Purvis called the program part of McAfee’s commitment to partners and a move away from service delivery to product development, a process that began last year.

The vendor this year has launched programs, training and road maps outlining best practices for implementing and installing products to create a uniform delivery model. Pre-sales technical evaluations will be available by late this year.

The program, launched in April as a beta, is currently open to Elite partners only, but it will open to Premiere partners in January and to SMB partners by 2008.

Not all partners will be interested in the entire solution, Purvis said. Instead, some may only sell the service and some will only deliver it.

The commitment to partners comes after years of channel chiding that left partners upset, Purvis said.

“Partners were hostile,” she said. “There were too many false starts, too many things on the table that were taken back. I can still hear them clamoring.”

Since then, she said, the vendor has added improved deal registration, new service offerings, eased distribution availability, and cut much of the cost out of training and certification.

“All politics is local,” she said. “Make a commitment and make the expense… It’s the little things. They must be trained certified to give some preference to your product. That’s just the cost of doing business.”

Recommended for you...

Manny Rivelo on Evolving Channel & How MSPs Can Get Ahead
Victoria Durgin
Aug 20, 2025
Databricks Raises at $100B+ Valuation on AI Momentum
Allison Francis
Aug 20, 2025
Keepit Achieves SOC 2 Type 1 & Canadian Ingram Micro Deal
Jordan Smith
Aug 20, 2025
AI Customer Service Fails to Satisfy Consumer Needs: Verizon
Franklin Okeke
Aug 19, 2025
Channel Insider Logo

Channel Insider combines news and technology recommendations to keep channel partners, value-added resellers, IT solution providers, MSPs, and SaaS providers informed on the changing IT landscape. These resources provide product comparisons, in-depth analysis of vendors, and interviews with subject matter experts to provide vendors with critical information for their operations.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.