UK IT Channel News | IT Channel Oxygen
  • News
  • Topics
    • Vendor
    • Distributor
    • Partner
    • Indepth
    • Sustainability
    • M&A
    • People Moves
    • AI
    • Tech trends
  • 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
  • About Us
  • Partner with us
No Result
View All Result
UK IT Channel News | IT Channel Oxygen
No Result
View All Result
Home Big Interview

‘We believe we’ll be the market leader’ – HALO CEO on why it’s slashing prices

Paul Hamilton claims partners have gone from “ghosting” HALO to “all wanting a piece of the pie”

Doug Woodburn by Doug Woodburn
5 February 2026
in Big Interview, Indepth, News, Vendor
Paul Hamilton, HALO 2026

Paul Hamilton, HALO

Share on LinkedinShare on Twitter

HALO will be the “market leader” within a decade, its CEO has asserted as he revealed why it just committed to continuously cutting prices in line with its growth.

Talking to IT Channel Oxygen, Paul Hamilton also gave an update on the Suffolk-based enterprise software vendor’s channel push, claiming partners have gone from “ghosting” HALO to “all wanting a piece of the pie”.

HALO this month unveiled ‘ARR Milestones’, which sees it commit to progressively reducing its licensing prices in line with its growth.

It launches at around £100m ARR with a 5% licence reduction, with further 5% increments set to kick in at £250m, £500m, £750m and £1bn.

The move comes as HALO prepares to up sticks to a new HQ in Ipswich, after outgrowing its current Stowmarket hub.

“We believe we’ll be the market leader,” Hamilton said.

“Roll forward ten years, we believe every company of more than 500 people will be using HALO technology in some shape or form.”

“Why is it okay to raise prices?”

ARR Milestones goes against the grain in an enterprise software industry typically associated with raising rather than reducing prices over time, Hamilton claimed.

“I would challenge anyone and ask, ‘why does anyone think it’s okay to raise the price?’” he said.

The two main costs involved in producing software – namely infrastructure and engineering costs – will naturally fall per customer as HALO grows, Hamilton said.

HALO’s infrastructure costs currently stand at 17% and are about to fall to 13.5%, Hamilton said.

As its revenues progress towards £1bn, HALO will unlock discounts of up to 30% with its infrastructure provider AWS, he added.

HALO’s software engineering costs currently stand at around 3%, and will also fall per customer due to Brooks Law (which states that “adding manpower to a late software project makes it later”), according to Hamilton.

“We stopped recruiting software engineers about two years ago,” Hamilton said.

“We thought, ‘do you know what? We’re actually at that sweet spot where we’re already out-developing the competition’.”

HALO has always been profitable, meaning it does not need to cover losses sustained in previous years, Hamilton added.

“When it was just me developing, I’d make enough for my livelihood. And then I’d think, ‘I’ve got enough to hire someone’,” he said.

“The profit margin used to be about 70%. It’s probably 40% after tax in terms of EBITDA now, but it’s always been profitable.”

Suffolk’s “sexiest” employer

Despite characterising it as “the best thing we’ve ever done”, Hamilton conceded his decision to set up shop in rural Suffolk was a “fluke”.

“I was flying around the world, here, there and everywhere, installing help desks, and I just needed a laptop for the internet,” he recalled.

“That’s when I started working out of my mother-in-law’s spare bedroom in Cedars Park in Stowmarket.”

Paul Hamilton, HALO, Ipswich
Paul Hamilton, HALO, Ipswich

But HALO is now doubling down on the East Anglian county, this month inking a deal to move into the Norman Foster-designed Willis Building in Ipswich during 2026. It could house as many as 1,000 graduates by 2030, Hamilton claimed.

“We’re the opposite of herd mentality,” he said.

“The best thing [about Suffolk] as an employer, is that there’s no competition. If you’re a graduate in Suffolk, and you want to stay in Suffolk and work for one of the world’s most progressive companies, there’s only one option.

“It might have been BT 20 years in Adastral Park. Now it’s HALO.

“I think we’ve taken that mantle as being Suffolk’s number-one sexiest employer.”

“I was absolutely ghosted”

HALO’s channel revenues have doubled over the last 12 months, Hamilton claimed, although he conceded it has made swifter inroads among VARs and MSPs than the GSIs that will land it the very largest enterprise deals.

“Over 20% of revenue is via the channel, but there’s still so much potential for that to grow,” he said.

“The GSIs only work with market leaders. Your Accentures, Deloittes and EYs will continue offering Salesforce and ServiceNow for a while to come – we’re under no illusion that we’re just going to start doing hundreds of millions of business with them.

“But if you start to go below that, we’ve got some real momentum.

“We had a big partner event in September 2023 and tried to get a load of partners to come along. I was sending messages and just being absolutely ghosted.

“Now, they all want a piece of the pie.”

Doug Woodburn
Website |  + postsBio

Doug Woodburn is editor of IT Channel Oxygen

  • Doug Woodburn
    Flotek CEO on ‘retiring’ at 35, £100m aspirations, and most-respected competitor
  • Doug Woodburn
    ‘A natural bolt-on’ – Brigantia MD on Zen Software acquisition
  • Doug Woodburn
    ‘Customers know what it means’ – Opus Technology on 3-year B Corp journey
  • Doug Woodburn
    Will the memory crisis fuel a second-user boom?
Tags: featuredHALO
Previous Post

‘As good as new’ – Converge Technology Solutions bags BSI remanufactured badge

Next Post

Insight CEO ‘very, very excited’ about new tailwind, predicts 10-25% price rises

Related Posts

Jay Ball, Flotek
Big Interview

Flotek CEO on ‘retiring’ at 35, £100m aspirations, and most-respected competitor

2 April 2026
Tara Allison and Sabrina Harris, Advania UK
People Moves

Double hire pushes Advania UK’s top team to 40% female

2 April 2026
The 50 fastest-growing UK channel partners revealed
Market data

The 50 fastest-growing UK channel partners revealed

1 April 2026
Angus Shaw (second from right) with Elovade board
M&A

‘A natural bolt-on’ – Brigantia MD on Zen Software acquisition

31 March 2026
Melissa Mulholland, Crayon
Partner

‘Scale matters’ – SoftwareOne Co-CEO says growth will accelerate after Crayon merger

31 March 2026
Cyber retains golden status as channel pockets 92% of sales
Cybersecurity

Cyber retains golden status as channel pockets 92% of sales

30 March 2026
‘Customers know what it means’ – Opus Technology on 3-year B Corp journey
Sustainability

‘Customers know what it means’ – Opus Technology on 3-year B Corp journey

27 March 2026
Sherweb
Distributor

Microsoft distributor Sherweb bags $125m investment

26 March 2026
Next Post
Joyce Mullen, Insight

Insight CEO 'very, very excited' about new tailwind, predicts 10-25% price rises

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)

© 2026 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
  • News
  • Indepth
  • About
  • Partner with us

© 2026 IT Channel Oxygen