Category Archives for "Managed Services News"

Nov 15

The Channel Partners Expo Hall, Exhibitors T-Z

By | Managed Services News

What a showcase! It was the biggest Channel Partners expo hall ever.

Nothing was going to stop you from getting back together at the Channel Partners Conference & Expo, Nov. 1-4. After two years away from the world’s largest independent channel event, you returned in droves. And so did the exhibitors in the expo hall.

Not only did our overall attendance match our pre-pandemic record from 2019, we broke a sponsor-exhibitor milestone. In all, more than 320 companies set up shop in the expo hall or sponsored something associated with the big channel event.

The expo hall, of course, is the biggest showcase of products, networking and business handshakes at Channel Partners every year. Moreover, with the co-located MSP Summit this year, there was even more of all of that to go around.

We were so impressed with all of the booths this year that we ventured to take pictures of all of them. Our slideshow above features the biggest and best booths and expo hall attractions we could find. Our editors made an attempt to get to them all, but if we missed one, don’t hesitate to help us out. Send your booth pic to editorial director Craig Galbraith and we will add you to this showcase.

Furthermore, with so many industry suppliers and more making an appearance, we had to divide it into four sections. This gallery features booths companies T-Z.

Nov 15

The Channel Partners Expo Hall, Exhibitors M-S

By | Managed Services News

The showcase from exhibitors in the expo hall was the biggest and best we’ve ever seen.

Nothing was going to stop you from getting back together at the Channel Partners Conference & Expo, Nov. 1-4. After two years away from the world’s largest independent channel event, you returned in droves. And so did the exhibitors in the expo hall.

Not only did our overall attendance match our pre-pandemic record from 2019, we broke a sponsor-exhibitor milestone. In all, more than 320 companies set up shop in the expo hall or sponsored something associated with the big channel event.

The expo hall, of course, is the biggest showcase of products, networking and business handshakes at Channel Partners every year. Moreover, with the co-located MSP Summit this year, there was even more of all of that to go around.

We were so impressed with all of the booths this year that we ventured to take pictures of all of them. Our slideshow above features the biggest and best booths and expo hall attractions we could find. Our editors made an attempt to get to them all, but if we missed one, don’t hesitate to help us out. Send your booth pic to editorial director Craig Galbraith and we will add you to this showcase.

Furthermore, with so many industry suppliers and more making an appearance, we had to divide it into four sections. This gallery features booths from companies M-S.

Nov 15

The Channel Partners Expo Hall, Exhibitors D-L

By | Managed Services News

Channel Partners broke a record for sponsors and exhibitors in the expo hall.

Nothing was going to stop you from getting back together at the Channel Partners Conference & Expo, Nov. 1-4. After two years away from the world’s largest independent channel event, you returned in droves. And so did the exhibitors in the expo hall.

Not only did our overall attendance match our pre-pandemic record from 2019, we broke a sponsor-exhibitor milestone. In all, more than 320 companies set up shop in the expo hall or sponsored something associated with the big channel event.

The expo hall, of course, is the biggest showcase of products, networking and business handshakes at Channel Partners every year. Moreover, with the co-located MSP Summit this year, there was even more of all of that to go around.

We were so impressed with all of the booths this year that we ventured to take pictures of all of them. Our slideshow above features the biggest and best booths and expo hall attractions we could find. Our editors made an attempt to get to them all, but if we missed one, don’t hesitate to help us out. Send your booth pic to editorial director Craig Galbraith and we will add you to this showcase.

Furthermore, with so many industry suppliers and more making an appearance, we had to divide it into four sections. This gallery features booths from companies D-L.

Nov 15

The Channel Partners Expo Hall, Exhibitors A-C

By | Managed Services News

Channel Partners broke a record for sponsors and exhibitors in the expo hall.

Nothing was going to stop you from getting back together at the Channel Partners Conference & Expo, Nov. 1-4. After two years away from the world’s largest independent channel event, you returned in droves. And so did the exhibitors in the expo hall.

Not only did our overall attendance match our pre-pandemic record from 2019, we broke a sponsor-exhibitor milestone. In all, more than 320 companies set up shop in the expo hall or sponsored something associated with the big channel event.

The expo hall, of course, is the biggest showcase of products, networking and business handshakes at Channel Partners every year. Moreover, with the co-located MSP Summit this year, there was even more of all of that to go around.

We were so impressed with all of the booths this year that we ventured to take pictures of all of them. Our slideshow above features the biggest and best booths and expo hall attractions we could find. Our editors made an attempt to get to them all, but if we missed one, don’t hesitate to help us out. Send your booth pic to editorial director Craig Galbraith and we will add you to this showcase.

Furthermore, with so many industry suppliers and more making an appearance, we had to divide it into four sections. This gallery features booths companies starting with A-C.

Nov 15

How Partners Can Grow Revenue with 5G and Wireless WAN Solutions

By | Managed Services News

Embrace the flexibility of #WirelessWAN and #5G to move your business forward.

Cradlepoint's Eric Purcell

Eric Purcell

For resellers and their customers, the world around them is quickly changing. As the pandemic has further accelerated the need to connect people, places and things, the traditional network of rigid wires and limited performance is giving way to a wireless-enabled future and a transforming edge network overall.

This means resellers find themselves at a critical moment, one that presents a new opportunity to grow revenue and their businesses – but only if done in the right way.

To better serve their customers, resellers and managed service providers (MSPs) need to recognize the importance of a rapidly growing market – that of wireless wide area networks (wireless WAN) – and understand where this idea fits into growing a customer’s business. They also must understand the opportunities ahead in the era of 5G, whether it’s with public 5G networks, private 5G or a combination of the two.

Recognizing the Importance of Wireless WAN

What exactly is wireless WAN? It’s the next wave of network transformation, enabling connectivity with greater simplicity, agility and security. As cloud applications, mobility and Internet of Things (IoT) devices continue to proliferate, the wireless WAN enables a flexible and unified approach to connecting people, places and things anywhere.

Digital transformation was already a strategic goal for enterprises, but the pandemic has caused enterprises to take a step further, including the re-examination of how they run operations and deliver new innovations to the market and customers. For this, wireless is key.

And businesses are catching on. In fact, 78% of IT decision makers are using or considering using LTE or 5G as the only WAN link in their branch locations. Additionally, IDC’s Future of Connectedness Survey found that 40% of enterprises want to improve their competitive position through speed and flexibility with 5G, SD-WAN and Wi-Fi 6 over the next 12-24 months, while nearly 35% have the goal of investing in technology that helps connect people, things, processes, and applications.

This means that for channel companies, there’s a prime opportunity to take advantage of this wireless age.

Understanding the Pathway to Grow a Customer’s Business

Not every customer’s wireless pathway will be the same, and certainly, most won’t go all-in on wireless overnight. Seeing, in many cases, is believing for customers, and resellers must keep this in mind throughout the process.

For example, most organizations will start their journey with a failover use case for their branch, or pop-up solutions for temporary job sites like seasonal stores or medical testing centers. As they gain more confidence in wireless WAN, they will naturally take another step.

The second step is often employing wireless broadband as an active link to continue to use for failover but also supplement their wired bandwidth. There are many benefits of wireless broadband as an active link, including greater mobility, flexibility and consolidated nationwide billing, not to mention the …

Nov 15

Gartner: ‘No Business Strategy Without a Cloud Strategy’

By | Managed Services News

If any channel partners remain reluctant about cloud computing, these numbers might be the right reality check.

Partners take note: Revenue from organizations’ pursuit of a cloud strategy will surge by $66 billion next year — from $408 billion in 2021 to $474 billion. That’s according to Gartner. And within a few years, cloud revenue will eclipse its non-cloud counterparts, the research firm predicts.

All that activity comes thanks to cloud, which represents the centerpiece of new digital experiences. These services that have grown imperative amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. So that makes cloud indispensable.

Gartner's Milind Govekar

Gartner’s Milind Govekar

“There is no business strategy without a cloud strategy,” said Milind Govekar, distinguished vice president at Gartner. “The adoption and interest in public cloud continues unabated as organizations pursue a ‘cloud-first’ policy for onboarding new workloads.”

Examples of those new workloads include mobile payment systems where banks have invested in startups; energy companies using cloud to improve customers’ retail experiences; and car companies launching new personalization services for customer’s safety and infotainment, Govekar said.

As such trends lead the way, Gartner analysts expect more than 85% of organizations to have a cloud-first ethos by 2025. However, that doesn’t mean they’ll be fully enabled with cloud technologies. In fact, these organizations won’t be able to execute their digital strategies without a cloud-native approach, Gartner says. (This is where partners come in really handy.)

“Adopting cloud-native platforms means that digital or product teams will use architectural principles and capabilities to take advantage of the inherent capabilities within the cloud environment,” said Govekar. “New workloads deployed in a cloud-native environment will be pervasive, not just popular, and anything non-cloud will be considered legacy.”

To that point, Gartner estimates that more than 95% of new digital workloads will reside on cloud-native platforms by 2025. That represents a 30% jump from 2021. This shift also is going to lead to a product-oriented operating model, Gartner says — business and IT will align by products. As a result, expect the creation of new roles such as site reliability engineers or product managers. Furthermore, depending on the circumstances, channel partners could fill these roles on a third-party basis.

Other Outcomes from an All-Cloud Strategy

The benefits of cloud capabilities will simplify organizations’ processes, too, per Gartner. For example, the firm projects the use of low-code and no-code technologies to almost triple by 2025. That’s going to democratize application development within organizations, letting the teams that use the software program it to meet specific needs.

“The technological and organizational silos of application development, automation, integration and governance will become obsolete,” said Govekar.

In this instance, channel partners can serve as sounding boards and advisers, offering best practices insight and even hands-on help as customers develop their applications.

Finally, remember that any cloud strategy requires connectivity. And these days, said connectivity has to be speedy and secure. That’s why, when it comes to networking and security, cloud-delivered secure access service edge (SASE) presents the fastest growth opportunity, Gartner says. That’s a boon for partners selling these services, for sure. Gartner analysts say the reason for the increase goes back to the cloud: As most traffic from branches and edge computing locations will not go to an enterprise data center, CIOs and IT leaders will rely on SASE to secure the anywhere and anytime access needs from users and devices.

Gartner estimates that in 2022, end-user spending on SASE will total $6.8 billion, up from $4.8 billion in 2021. In addition, by 2025, more than one-half of organizations will have explicit strategies to adopt SASE, up from less than 5% in 2020.

“CIOs and IT leaders must bring security to the sessions, instead of bringing sessions to the security,” said Govekar.

 

Nov 15

Study: 90% of IT Decision Makers Believe Organizations Compromise on Cybersecurity in Lieu of Other Goals

By | Managed Services News

The Trend Micro study reveals pressing need for new way to discuss business risk.

Approximately 90% of IT decision makers claim their businesses would be willing to compromise on cybersecurity in favor of digital transformation, productivity or other goals. This is according to research conducted by cybersecurity software company Trend Micro. The company also commissioned Sapio Research to interview 5,321 IT and business professionals from enterprises larger than 250 employees across 26 countries.

The study found 82% of decision makers have felt pressured to downplay cyber risks to their board.

Bharat Mistry is U.K. technical director for Trend Micro.

Trend Micro’s Bharat Mistry

“IT leaders are self-censoring in front of their boards for fear of appearing repetitive or too negative,” Mistry said. “This will only perpetuate a vicious cycle where the C-suite remains ignorant of its true risk exposure.”

Almost a third of decision makers claim self-censoring is a constant pressure, he said.

Organizations need to discuss risk in a way that frames cybersecurity as a fundamental driver of business growth. Additionally, they need to bring together IT and business leaders who are willing to fight for the same cause.

Reframing Cyber Risks

Phil Gough is head of information security and assurance at Nuffield Health, the U.K.’s largest health care charity.

“IT decision makers should never have to downplay the severity of cyber risks to the board. But they may need to modify their language so both sides understand each other,” Gough said. “That’s the first step to aligning business — cybersecurity strategy, and it’s a crucial one. Articulating cyber risks in business terms will get them the attention they deserve.”

Nuffield Health’s Phil Gough

It will help the C-suite recognize security as a growth enabler, not be a block to innovation, he added.

The research reveals that just half of IT leaders and slightly more than one-third (38%) of business decision makers believe the C-suite completely understands cyber risks. However, some think this is because the topic is complex and constantly changing. Many believe the C-suite either doesn’t try hard enough (26%) or doesn’t want (20%) to understand.

Moreover, the pandemic adds to this complexity, making companies more vulnerable to cybersecurity threats.

Claiming Responsibility

There’s also disagreement between IT and business leaders over who’s ultimately responsible for managing and mitigating risk. IT leaders are nearly twice as likely as business leaders to point to IT teams and the CISO. Respondents (49%) claim that cyber risks are still being treated as an IT problem rather than a business risk.

Furthermore, this friction causes potentially serious issues. Approximately one-half (52%) of respondents agree that their organization’s attitude toward cyber risk is inconsistent and varies from month to month.

However, about one-third (31%) of Trend Micro survey respondents believe cybersecurity is the biggest business risk today. And two-thirds (66%) claim it has the highest cost impact of any business risk. The study’s authors say this is a seemingly conflicting opinion given the overall willingness to compromise on security.

There are three primary ways respondents believe the C-suite will sit up and take notice of cyber risk.

  • Sixty-two percent think it would take a breach of their organization.
  • Sixty-two percent say it would help if they could better report on and more easily explain the business risk of cyber threats.
  • Sixty-one percent say it would make an impact if customers start demanding more sophisticated security credentials.

Marc Walsh is enterprise security architect at Coillte, an Ireland-based commercial forestry business.

Coillte’s Marc Walsh

“To make cybersecurity a board-level issue, the C-suite must come to view it as a true business enabler,” Walsh said. “This will prompt IT and security leaders to articulate their challenges to the board in the language of business risk. And it will require prioritized, proactive investments from the boardroom — not just band-aid solutions following a breach.”

Nov 15

Cybersecurity, M&A, DE&I Take the Stage at IT Nation Connect 2021

By | Managed Services News

Here are five key takeaways from the first full day of the event.

CONNECTWISE IT NATION CONNECT — IT Nation Connect is back in full force after the void of 2020, pulling in an impressive number of MSPs and vendors from all over the globe. Thursday’s sessions covered a broad range of topics, from the “great resignation” to the future of RMM. They also touched on the path to M&A and security best practices.

Furthermore, some big players made key news announcements at the show. Unsurprisingly, they centered largely around partnerships and security-related boosts.

​​Click through our slideshow above to check out the highlights from the first full day of IT Nation Connect 2021.

Nov 15

Cybersecurity, M&A, DE&I Take the Stage at IT Nation Connect 2021

By | Managed Services News

Here are five key takeaways from the first full day of the event.

CONNECTWISE IT NATION CONNECT — IT Nation Connect is back in full force after the void of 2020, pulling in an impressive number of MSPs and vendors from all over the globe. Thursday’s sessions covered a broad range of topics, from the “great resignation” to the future of RMM. They also touched on the path to M&A and security best practices.

Furthermore, some big players made key news announcements at the show. Unsurprisingly, they centered largely around partnerships and security-related boosts.

​​Click through our slideshow above to check out the highlights from the first full day of IT Nation Connect 2021.

Nov 15

Cybersecurity, M&A, DE&I Take the Stage at IT Nation Connect 2021

By | Managed Services News

Here are five key takeaways from the first full day of the event.

CONNECTWISE IT NATION CONNECT — IT Nation Connect is back in full force after the void of 2020, pulling in an impressive number of MSPs and vendors from all over the globe. Thursday’s sessions covered a broad range of topics, from the “great resignation” to the future of RMM. They also touched on the path to M&A and security best practices.

Furthermore, some big players made key news announcements at the show. Unsurprisingly, they centered largely around partnerships and security-related boosts.

​​Click through our slideshow above to check out the highlights from the first full day of IT Nation Connect 2021.

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