New business challenges and maturing technologies will offer plenty of
opportunities for the seaworthy, but stragglers and strugglers risk being
wrecked by the credit crunch, preyed on by takeover sharks, or their crews
jumping ship to join more buoyant enterprises during the next 12 months.
“We saw a lot of consolidation among distributors and VARs in 2007 and we’ll see
more in 2008,” said Nitin Joshi, director of
ChannelMoney.
“There’s still an appetite for good VARs.”
A strong customer base is attractive to would-be acquirers, said Joshi,
especially if there are support contracts guaranteeing ongoing revenues. Free
assets that can be used to finance growth are also appealing to acquirers, such
as a clean sales ledger that has not been factored or invoice discounted.
Innovative start-ups will attract larger players keen to boost their flat
revenues, claimed Alistair Forbes, chief technology officer at tools vendor
HoundDog.
Established but stagnating resellers could be snapped up by others looking for
economies of scale through increased buying power and efficiency gains in the
back office.
However, small resellers in commodity markets may suffer. “With an increasing
number of distributors selling directly to the end user, the channel will
continue to consolidate, with the big players getting bigger,” predicted Jon
Blows, chief executive at specialist memory distributor
Catalus.
Any VAR that is struggling could find itself at risk. “We’ve seen some resellers
and distributors getting into trouble only to be snapped up by those on the
acquisition trail, and I see no reason why this will not continue into 2008,
particularly if there is an economic downturn triggered by the credit crunch,
which many are predicting,” said Anthony Norman, business group director at
market research firm
GfK.
Norman said of communications convergence: “With many data and communications
resellers increasingly looking to offer total converged IT solutions there can
only be more activity in this area.”
However, Peter Titmus, managing director of network support services provider
Networks
First, believes there could be fewer niche markets as “good specialist
players are acquired by larger companies and the less good simply fold”.
Consolidation may be grim for those being consolidated, but it can have
advantages for customers. “One trend we’ve seen is that end users would like to
consolidate the number of vendors they deal with because it is expensive and
time intensive to manage multiple suppliers with different contracts,” said Mike
Chambers, UK managing director at independent reseller
PC-Ware.
“This makes merger and acquisition even more appealing in 2008.”
On the prospects for credit, opinions vary. “Credit is always an issue, but I
think the credit crunch is slightly overplayed,” said Joshi. “There’s a massive
percentage of unexploited credit available from distributors that VARs are not
using to the full.”
Credit where it is due
A credit squeeze among customers may force them down different routes, such as
virtualisation, software-as-a-service (SaaS) and open source, which could be
good for channel companies operating in these fields, said Dominic Sartorio,
president of the
Open
Solutions Alliance.
Other observers are less optimistic, however. “If anything, credit will become
an even more important topic throughout 2008, although it will not be a problem
for everyone,” said Lee Perkins, business unit director at distributor
Computacenter
Distribution.
“The resellers most likely to be hit are those dealing in over-distributed,
highly commoditised products. Competition is going to be fiercer than ever in
this space, and the availability of credit will become a pass-or-fail issue for
many, especially as the cost of borrowing for some is likely to become higher
while they continue to have to compete on price.”
“We will see more implications of credit limits being reduced,” said Blows.
“While this can open up opportunities for some bigger players who can use it as
a tool, smaller companies will over-trade. This will inevitably result in
insolvencies.”
Joshi believes channel insolvencies will continue in 2008. “We saw about a dozen
quite high-profile VARs go down in 2007 and I think we will see a similar or
marginally higher level in 2008.”
Joshi also expects at least one well-established distributor to fail.
Resellers most at risk will be straight box shifters trading on wafer-thin
margins, such as system builders and web-based dealers, Joshi believes. The
‘nerd’ market of high-end PCs and components could be difficult and all eyes
will be on systems integrators after some high-profile failures in 2007. In
distribution, broadliners will be fairly safe, Joshi anticipates, but those with
weak franchises or in low-margin niches such as consumables will find life
tough.
David Hobson, managing director of security integrator and consultants
Global
Secure Systems, thinks the market will be toughest for mid-market VARs.
“Small players should be able to cut overheads and survive in their niche, and
the larger players will be favoured by the enterprises, but the guys in the
middle could be squeezed.”





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