Fortinet
has been accused of operating an inconsistent distribution strategy after making
another tweak to its UK line-up.
After reviewing business plans from incumbents
Noxs
and VCW and four other distributors, the
unified threat management (UTM) vendor has served a notice of termination to
Noxs and has confirmed that it will appoint Juniper distributor
Sphinx.
The move comes after Fortinet unveiled former Juniper honcho Paul Judd as its
new UK and Ireland country manager.
Judd told CRN: “Noxs was bringing on more and more product lines and we were
getting less and less mindshare. Sphinx is a very good fit with what we are
trying to achieve.”
However, onlookers have been quick to point out that Noxs is not the first
distributor to have been axed by Fortinet since it entered the UK market in
2002. Other casualties have included Ideal Hardware, Wick Hill, Norwood Adams,
Unipalm and Westcon.
Dave Ellis, director of e-security at distributor
Computerlinks
(formerly Unipalm), said: “Building channels is all about long-term
relationships, and you cannot achieve that with the amount of changes Fortinet
has made in the UK.”
Manny Pinon, sales director at Fortinet Silver partner
Ampito
Group, said: “As an integrator, you do not want to be confronted with a new
distributor every six months.
“If Fortinet wants to attract the larger integrators it must stick with one of
the big guys and not keep chopping and changing.”
Judd stressed he will not be encouraging Sphinx to “cannibalise” its base of
Juniper resellers.
However, he added: “Juniper is telling a unified threat management story, but in
reality it is just selling firewalls. I am familiar with its base of partners
and know what works for them and what does not.”
Fortinet
parts with Westcon




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