The chief executive of internet security vendor
Panda
Security is keen to grab significant market share in the enterprise space
and is looking to the channel to help fulfil its goals.
Jorge Dinares, joined the vendor on 1 June from business process management
vendor BMC where he was vice president of worldwide growth and emerging markets.
At the same time as Dinares’ appointment, Panda announced a
multimillion-dollar cash injection from private equity firms Investindustrial
and Gala Capital to drive international expansion and invest in the development
of new technologies.
As revealed by CRN, the vendor recently changed its name from Panda
Software to Panda Security to reflect its increased corporate focus.
Speaking to CRN, Dinares said: “We really want to go to the next
step and continue growing faster and stronger than the competition. We have a
very important growth strategy and that is focused on improving our presence in
the international market and on the enterprise side.”
He said the vendor has not traditionally been active in the enterprise space,
but has been more focused on the SME and retail sectors.
“We have a very strong offering now, especially with all the technology we
are going to be launching to the market, and we want to make sure that we win
some large accounts.”
However, Dinares stressed that the channel was key to Panda’s success.
“We will continue to work with the channel in all areas,” he said, “both in
the retail and SME sectors, and with the larger accounts. In the UK, we are
building a specific channel to cover the enterprise market and are focusing on
ensuring partners are kept up to speed in terms of training and sales.”
The anti-malware market has changed significantly Dinares said, and vendors
need to change with it.
“It is no longer about bad kids going out there to make a name for themselves
– it is about gaining financial advantage. Over the past year, we have detected
more malware than the previous 16 years put together and this coming year we
expect that figure to be even higher,” he said.
Dinares said the vendor is launching two product concepts. One is centred
around the idea of ‘mega-detection’, based on Panda’s flagship TruPrevent
technology, which he claimed would find more malware than any previous version.
The second one is based around ‘collective intelligence’ – again centred on
TruPrevent technology – where instead of every PC acting individually to fight
threats, they work together joined by a single platform.
The technology will be launched to the UK consumer market later this month
and the corporate versions will be available in September.
He stressed the name change was purely to reflect Panda’s evolving role in
the security market.
“We have used the word security to show we are totally committed to the
security market, are not going to do anything else, and because we are no longer
just about software – our mission is to deliver security to customers, it
doesn’t matter if this is hardware, software or services,” he said.
The firm also intends to strike up more third-party agreements with vendors
to embed its technology in their offerings and reach a wider market.
“I don’t see why this is something we should approach alone. We need to be
open and to engage with other companies to grow,” he said.
Dinares also said the vendor would not rule out acquisitions to add meat to
its growth plans.
“We plan to be more aggressive in extending our offering and that is not
necessarily going to be through our own developments,” he added. “However, we
want to consolidate our position in other areas so we can make a big impact in a
short period of time. We will certainly be keeping our eyes open [for potential
targets] in the market.”
Bob Tarzey, service director at analyst firm
Quocirca,
said the vendor has a challenge ahead of it.
“The internet security/anti-virus market is very highly penetrated and it is
usually a case of vendors that are strong in the enterprise market looking to
penetrate the SME market, not the other way round,” he said.
“A lot of vendors get traction through embedding their technology in other
vendors’, so this is a wise approach by Panda. To get ahead in this market firms
need to have bleeding-edge technology and stay ahead of the changing market
place.”
Panda
prepares channel scheme
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