The first impression of this year’s judges for the Channel Awards was
probably shock at the sheer volume of the three large files containing this
year’s entries. There are a higher number of submissions for the 2007 awards
than in any of the previous 13 years, so the judges have their work cut out.
The three tomes of printed versions of the entry forms are substantial
documents.
Judge Bob Tarzey, services director at
Quocirca
remarked: “The volume of material suggests that plenty of supporting information
has been supplied. It will be interesting to see what catches the eye.”
It is the quality rather than the quantity of an entry, however, that will
impress the judges. Yet with quantity being prominent, their job this time
around looks to be even more difficult than before.
Sara Driscoll, editor of CRN feels that the standard of this year’s
entries seems to be better than ever. “My first impressions are that they are of
an incredibly high standard. It seems that everyone wants to win this year, but
it is important to remember that it is also down to voting,” she said.
While the judges will have the final word sometime in October, it is the votes
of CRN’s readers that have the biggest influence on who wins an award.
But first, the submitted entry must make a good enough impression on the judges
for them to shortlist it.
There has, in past years, been some disappointment among the judges due to the
standard of entries from some well-known companies or even the lack of entries
from vendors and distributors who supposedly value the channel and believe they
support it well.
Of course, if you do not enter you cannot make it onto the shortlist, but the
level of entries this year is such that only extremely high-standard entries
will be considered.
As they encompass so many different types of business, the Specialist Vendor and
Distributor categories are among those that attract the highest number of
entries and it is always difficult for the judges to pare down the list to a
final five or six names. But in all categories this year there is a very healthy
number of entrants.
Driscoll sees some of the vendor classes as being the most difficult to call as
there is such strong competition from all the leading names in the industry. “I
think the Systems Vendor and Networking categories will be very hotly contested,
with companies such as IBM entering for the first time.”
On first sight of the entries, chief executive of
the
Professional Computing Association, Keith Warburton, said: “Every year the
entries just get better and better.
“They are more professionally presented with real content that needs careful
evaluation meaning, of course, that the judges’ work becomes ever-more
demanding. I anticipate some heated debate when we sit down to analyse the
entries.”
Industry consultant and research expert Phillip Howells, agreed: “It is great to
see so many quality entries in each category. It shows just how highly the
awards are regarded and how important and highly rated they are to other
companies. That makes the judges work harder of course, but it is better to
have lots of interesting applications to judge.”
Keith Humphreys, consultant at
EuroLan,
is not so sure. He acknowledgess that at first glance the quality of entries
was impressive. But they also hold up a less than flattering mirror of the
market in his view.
“I have only looked at the Systems Distributor of the Year entries so far, but
found them a fair reflection of the industry. Logistics are getting slicker, but
we are still really lacking any innovation in distribution.
“I have read ‘we achieve 95 per cent accuracy on delivery’ so many times
already. Where is the innovation? Where is the ‘80 per cent of orders are placed
via the internet’ and where is ‘80 per cent of deliveries are dropped shipped
directly to the end user’?”
Distributors may well take issue with this view and argue that personal account
management and other aspects of their services are more or just as important as
streamlined, low-cost business processes but some of the other judges will
take issue with it too. With such a spread of individuals from across the media,
analysts and consultancy worlds, all entries are sure to get full and fair
consideration.
This includes the reseller entries and this year there is more competition than
ever for these awards with the Corporate Reseller and Systems Integrator
categories, in particular, attracting a lot of submissions.
“The record number of entries in 2007 demonstrates just how critical the channel
remains to the IT industry in the UK and underlines the important role resellers
play in helping British businesses stay competitive,” said Driscoll.
“The entries this year show exactly how important the channel is to everyone. If
anyone thought the channel was over, they are so wrong. These companies have
shown how vital resellers are to their business. Likewise, resellers have grown
up and are demonstrating the new and innovative ways that they are helping end
users,” she added.
Channel
Awards official web site




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