UK IT Channel News | IT Channel Oxygen
  • News
  • Topics
    • Vendor
    • Distributor
    • Partner
    • Indepth
    • Sustainability
    • M&A
    • People Moves
    • AI
    • Tech trends
  • Pulsant Zone
  • About Us
  • Partner with us
Members
Must-Know Distributors
Oxygen 250
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Topics
    • Vendor
    • Distributor
    • Partner
    • Indepth
    • Sustainability
    • M&A
    • People Moves
    • AI
    • Tech trends
  • Pulsant Zone
  • About Us
  • Partner with us
No Result
View All Result
UK IT Channel News | IT Channel Oxygen
No Result
View All Result
Home Cybersecurity

CrowdStrike CBO on the 4 technologies that will make its partners the most money in 2025

Daniel Bernard also calls NVIDIA validation a “big moment” as CrowdStrike kicks off EMEA partner summit

Doug Woodburn by Doug Woodburn
20 May 2025
in Cybersecurity, News, Vendor
Daniel Bernard, CrowdStrike

Daniel Bernard, CrowdStrike

Share on LinkedinShare on Twitter

CrowdStrike has revealed the four technologies it believes will make its partners the most money this year as it kicked off its EMEA Partner Symposium 2025.

The endpoint security vendor yesterday received a boost as NVIDIA announced it has integrated CrowdStrike’s Falcon Platform into its Validated Design Architecture.

Talking to IT Channel Oxygen ahead of its Budapest event – which kicks off today – Chief Business Officer Daniel Bernard characterised it as a “big moment” for the Austin-based vendor.

“They’ve published the definitive blueprint of what an AI architecture actually looks like, and the definitive technology to secure the AI era is CrowdStrike,” Bernard said.

“It’s a very strong statement and great for our ecosystem.”

CrowdStrike will use the event to highlight the four technologies it believes will bring home the bacon for partners in 2025.

This includes its next-generation SIEM product and Falcon Cloud Security, which Bernard said is designed to help customers “consolidate the alphabet soup of various point product cloud security vendors”.

Bernard highlighted CrowdStrike’s exposure management solution, which is designed to help customers move away from legacy vulnerability management vendors that are “kind of in stagnation”, as a third red-hot technology.

With 80% of breaches shown to involve identity in some form, CrowdStrike sees its identity security technology as the final core technology for 2025, Bernard said.

“We have 30 children in total – and we love them all – but these are the ones that are going to help them make the most money this year,” he said.

Marketplace momentum

CrowdStrike is a “partner-first” vendor, with 60% of ACV for its new platform coming from this path, Bernard stressed.

An increasing chunk of its business is generated via hyperscaler marketplaces, with CrowdStrike recently announcing it sold $1bn via AWS Marketplace in 2024 alone (having taken over six years to reach its first $1bn through the platform).

Presidio last month became the first reseller to publicly announce it had generated over $1bn sales via AWS Marketplace, with UK partners like Softcat, Bytes and Computacenter all busy honing their cloud marketplace strategies.

“When AWS first debuted the idea of a cloud marketplace, a lot of the ecosystem was frightened, angry or upset, and it was positioned as adversarial – an either-or,” Bernard said.

“What we’ve done with AWS and Google – and we continue to work with some of the other ones in the wings – is we talk about hyperscalers right away in the discussion, because it unlocks so much value for the customer to adopt more of our technology.

“We’ve cracked the code, and our goal is to make sure that every single person in the audience knows how to benefit. There’s no detriment – it’s all benefit from hyperscale marketplaces.”

John Taylor, CrowdStrike
John Taylor

John Taylor, VP Channels & Alliances, Europe & Israel at CrowdStrike, added: “I don’t think I go to any executive meetings with partners where we aren’t asked for advice on marketplace. We’re definitely seen as a leader in that space, and the partners are interested in terms of how they make use of that relationship.”

On the distribution front, CrowdStrike is also extending its partnership with Ignition beyond the UK and Nordics and into Benelux, France, Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece.

“It made us stronger as a company”

After last summer’s CrowdStrike-induced Windows meltdown wiped 40% off its market cap, CrowdStrike is back in favour with Wall Street (its share price is now around a fifth higher than pre-incident).

Its revenues leapt 29% last year to reach $3.95bn.

But how much is the notorious incident – that was estimated to have affected 8.5 million Windows devices – still weighing on the minds of the CrowdStrike partners gathered today in the Hungarian capital?

“I think the only folks still talking about it are the customers praising how we responded and the partners praising how we’ve responded,” Bernard responded.

“We’ve continued to not only take the resilient steps that we said we would – and we did that ahead of our timescales – but also grow our business and do so ahead of the schedule too.

“If anything, it made us a stronger company. It brought our team closer together, it brought us closer to our customers, and it brought us closer to our partners.

“Our business has done one thing since that last summer, which is grow.”

Doug Woodburn
Website |  + postsBio

Doug Woodburn is editor of IT Channel Oxygen

  • Doug Woodburn
    Viadex ‘going back to what we’re known for’ as it splits from Fulcrum
  • Doug Woodburn
    Cameo lures 100 Agilitas customers, and 12 former staff
  • Doug Woodburn
    Sword sharpens M&A focus as it tops £100m
  • Doug Woodburn
    Exclusive Networks’ UK boss says next acquisition ‘may not be a distributor’
  • Doug Woodburn
    “Utter shock” as Exertis UK proposes to cut over 1,000 staff
  • Doug Woodburn
    ‘The industry’s in this really weird place’ – Jamie Brothwell on going solo
  • Doug Woodburn
    O2 Daisy moves to reassure partners as it terminates Babble
  • Doug Woodburn
    Arrow ECS UK boss on its ‘next evolution’ as he reveals 2026 priorities
  • Doug Woodburn
    7 key questions as Exertis UK ‘rightsizes’
  • Doug Woodburn
    Exertis UK puts staff at risk in specialist push
Tags: CrowdstrikefeaturedmemberNVIDIA
Previous Post

Which IT channel doyens made the Sunday Times Rich List?

Next Post

Return to office is happening, and candidates must compromise

Related Posts

Alex Phillips, Northamber
Business

Northamber’s annual losses widen amid ‘deliberate transition’

24 December 2025
Westcon-Comstor HQ, Dave Stevinson, QBS Software, Patrick Zammit, TD Synnex, Ingram Micro HQ
Distributor

Meet the DSOR dozen as AWS Marketplace tightens distie embrace

23 December 2025
Russell Brown, SCC
People Moves

Exclusive: SCC snags Computacenter veteran as new UK CEO

19 December 2025
Dino Cooper, Viadex
M&A

Viadex ‘going back to what we’re known for’ as it splits from Fulcrum

19 December 2025
Exertis Enterprise stalwarts Browne and Croucher exiting for rival
People Moves

VMware UK channel boss heading for exit – partner sources

18 December 2025
The UK IT channel’s 9 biggest stories of 2025
Tech trends

The UK IT channel’s 9 biggest stories of 2025

18 December 2025
Pax8 Beyond
Distributor

Pax8’s MIP tip as UK revenues pip £130m

18 December 2025
Softcat Dublin
Careers & Skills

Dublin down? Softcat ticks fifth city off office upgrade list

17 December 2025
Next Post
Zoe Chatley, The Channel Recruiter

Return to office is happening, and candidates must compromise

Follow Us

IT Channel Oxygen keeps you informed on the UK IT channel and its sustainable transformation. Learn more

  • About
  • Our Team
  • Partner with us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • News
  • Cookie Policy (UK)

© 2025 IT Channel Oxygen

Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}
No Result
View All Result
  • Oxygen 250
  • Must-Know Distributors
  • Member area
  • Big Interview
  • Pulsant Zone
  • News
  • Indepth
  • About
  • Partner with us

© 2025 IT Channel Oxygen