Incite Redux: Day 3 - Best of Breed DOA
Good Morning:
Is it Wednesday already? Maybe for you. I'm writing this from the past,
and that's one of the amazing things about technology. I can stack up
10 posts before I leave and like a clock, you'll get your daily dose of
babbling. So let's all do a prayer of thanks to the Technology Gods.
But the reality is that I am in fact writing this post, so at some
point I had to get out of my normal schedule to get ahead of my
publishing schedule.
My business still needs me to run, and that is an inherent limitation. It's also something that I'm planning on addressing in the very near term. No, I can't talk about it yet - but I've got some super-secret projects underway and hopefully it will contribute to being able to really take time off, as opposed to just paying my work forward.
So that brings up the inevitable question: when you are out of the office, who is holding down the fort? Can they do your job? If not, what do you have to do to get them there? No one is indispensable, and you don't want to be. So think about it. And have a great day.
Incite #3: Best of Breed DOA
As security
matures as an
industry, the concept of “best of breed” goes the
way of
the dodo bird. Mature technologies such as firewalls, IPS, and
anti-virus get subsumed and integrated into bigger
“suites”
making the individual performance and feature set of a specific
function less important. Emerging functions still stand-alone, but not
for long as the innovation/consolidation cycle accelerates. Security
management offerings also consolidate, driven by the fact that most
customers don’t have time to deal with one management
hierarchy,
certainly not 2 or 10. This continues to reinforce the “big
is
the new small” trend that has predominated security buying
for
the past 2 years.
Read the original Days of Incite post on this topic.
6-month grade: A
I got a great question from one of my channel contacts a few weeks ago.
They asked if they could still get a stand-alone firewall anymore.
They'd been looking a bit, but it seemed that every device that was out
there was "more" than just a firewall. Some went the UTM route, others
have focused on applications, but you actually have to look hard for
just a firewall. Clearly this kind of consolidation of functionality is
happening and it's what "big is the new small" is all about. But is
this good or bad?
Basically, it's neither. I
answered the question to my contact by reminding her that UTM devices
are still firewalls. You just turn off all that other stuff and run it
as a firewall. Yes, kind of like using a Swiss Army Knife as a cork
screw. And given the cost economics of the technology business, that's
not a bad thing to do as you are migrating from one perimeter platform
to another. You incrementally get there and then when you are ready,
you turn on more functionality in the UTM box and turn off the
stand-alone device.
The same thing is happening in the endpoint security game. Everyone has
an AV engine nowadays, if only to take that objection off the table.
You know, why go with just an anti-spyware agent when I also need AV?
You don't. You buy a suite that includes all this stuff. And
it seems there is no end to the bundling. Symantec is adding backup
features (as you'd expect) and Microsoft is bundling Office with
OneCare as a subscription. Yep, security is something we all need and
something that will be a checkmark or free add-on to something else you
are buying.
I kind of laughed 5 years ago when my new PC (yes, when I still bought and used PCs) came with a full license of CA anti-virus. I used it diligently until that machine croaked. Why would I pay for something else? And that's exactly the point. You'll see the endpoint security folks continue to focus on bundling as their main path to market.
Security management is also playing out as I projected. Pretty
much all the SIM players have a log management offering and vice-versa.
You are now seeing integration with the identity management folks,
which makes sense because you want to get down to managing a user's
activity - not just a nameless, faceless IP address.
Those companies that still have stand-alone solutions have some
strategic decisions to make. It's increasingly clear that having just
an IPS or just a secure switch, or just a set of security utilities is
not a way to find long term sustainability. But with the macro-economic
environment being pretty crappy, you won't see a lot of deals over the
next 12 months, unless they are deals done under duress (yes, fire
sales). The privately-held category leaders will likely wait for better
valuations, which they figure will come back when the stock market
strength returns.
This Incite is rather obvious, but still pretty accurate - so
I'll bestow an A on it at this half-way point.
Photo credit: "French
Army Knife" originally uploaded by Simon
Davison


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