Managed Security Services portfolio trimmed by security vendor

In what Symantec describes as a consolidation of its existing managed security services, the security giant quietly shuttered its Managed Firewall Service and its Managed Endpoint Protection service this summer.

Symantec didn't make a public announcement of the change. The company said it discontinued the two services on July 1 and at that time contacted its customers and partners of the services. "Symantec MSS Managed Firewall and Managed Endpoint Protection were discontinued for sale and have not been available since July 1, 2013. We communicated the changes to impacted customers and partners in July," the company said in a statement in response to a Dark Reading inquiry about the possible sun-setting of the services.

"Symantec Managed Security Services (MSS) is a key component of Symantec's Information Security portfolio and we are committed to our MSS offerings moving forward," the company said. "As we align with our new offering strategy and efforts to streamline our product range to provide fewer, more integrated solutions for our customers, Symantec made the decision to retire the Managed Firewall and Managed Endpoint Protection service offerings from its Managed Protection Services portfolio. This decision does not include Intrusion Detection/Prevention solutions nor impact MSS Security Monitoring. Existing customers will have use of the retired Managed Firewall and Managed Endpoint Protection services until the end of their annual service period. We are firmly committed to helping our partners and customers successfully navigate this process."

Symantec's Managed Security Services Web page currently lists three offerings: Security Monitoring Service, Intrusion Detection/Prevention Solution with Sourcefire, and its DeepSight Intelligence Services.

The move appears to be a standard business decision, says Mike Rothman, president of Securosis. "It's a necessary pruning process as they focus their business. That means some offerings won't meet the threshold for installed base, growth, and/or strategic value to the bigger story, and are therefore either sold off, if possible, or shut down," Rothman says. "Standard stuff for companies doing a strategic review."

Word of this latest service offering retirement comes on the heels of Symantec's announcement last week that it was dropping its cloud-based backup and recovery service, Backup Exec.cloud. Meanwhile, Symantec's president of products and services, Francis deSouza, left the company earlier this month to take the helm as president of Illumina. Symantec's products and services leadership team currently reports to Symantec president and CEO Steve Bennett.

J.J. Thompson, managing director and CEO of Rook Security, an Indianapolis-based security process integration provider, says this could indicate signs of trouble for other Symantec managed security services. "I find it interesting that Symantec continues to pull key components of its security offering. First it was security consulting services. Now they are moving onto their MSS, shortly after killing cloud backup. Our shared clients are very concerned with the message this sends -- is Symantec able to sustain their MSS offering or are they having to cut off their foot to save their leg?"

He contends that the move by Symantec won't better integrate its services. "They're pulling a key component of security program management out of their client portfolio for clients who selected Symantec as a 'full service' security partner," Thompson says. "It's becoming more clear to end user companies that where some of these traditional brands succeeded in the past, they are not able to keep up with more agile competitors who have business models that fit in line with today's strategic business drivers."

Meantime, the MSS global market is looking healthy going forward, according to new data from Transparency Market Research: It's estimated to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 15.4 percent through 2019. The MSS market worldwide was valued at $9.24 billion in 2012, the research firm says.

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About the Author(s)

Kelly Jackson Higgins, Editor-in-Chief, Dark Reading

Kelly Jackson Higgins is the Editor-in-Chief of Dark Reading. She is an award-winning veteran technology and business journalist with more than two decades of experience in reporting and editing for various publications, including Network Computing, Secure Enterprise Magazine, Virginia Business magazine, and other major media properties. Jackson Higgins was recently selected as one of the Top 10 Cybersecurity Journalists in the US, and named as one of Folio's 2019 Top Women in Media. She began her career as a sports writer in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, and earned her BA at William & Mary. Follow her on Twitter @kjhiggins.

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