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SearchSecurity.com recently interviewed IT professionals whose security tools passed from one vendor to another to see if they're still happy with the products. Some are pleased with the end result, while others say they're frustrated by a drop-off in quality and support. One unhappy customer is Farhad Karampour, an IT engineer with Newton, Mass.-based MIS Alliance Corp., which provides IT management services to small- and mid-sized businesses. Many of his clients use Symantec Corp.'s Backup Exec, a network-enabled backup product the Cupertino, Calif.-based antivirus giant acquired when it purchased storage company Veritas Software Corp. in late 2004. Before Symantec took over, Karampour had no trouble renewing his clients' support licenses and found that the people working for Veritas' help desk could almost always help him resolve a problem. It's been the opposite scenario under Symantec, he said.
"The technicians handling calls regarding Symantec Backup Exec don't seem to be as knowledgeable as when this software was supported by Veritas," he said. "It takes an average of 45 minutes or more to get a support technician on the phone." One day, after waiting 45 minutes and then getting a technician who couldn't help him address his problem, Karampour asked to speak to a manager. He said he was disconnected after spending about a minute on hold. He said it's been a nightmare trying to resolve the licensing issues, including the process for accessing the product installation keys. "To receive the license key for some of our clients, I have spent hours without any resolutions and the final answer during the support call is for Symantec to follow up and send an email with the requested information," he said. "The software continues to do a good job. The problem is the service." Karampour believes Symantec bit off more than it could chew when it took over the product and that its technicians were not properly trained to deal with Veritas-related questions. Symantec acknowledges problems
"As expected with an infrastructure change of this magnitude, we are working through a period of transition with our partners and customers," she said. In some cases, she said the problems are more cultural in that customers need to learn new procedures or processes to use the merged systems. In other cases, customers are running into technical problems on Symantec's end. "However, Symantec has continued to process orders throughout this transition, and processed more orders in the month after the merger than were processed the month before or in the same month last year," she said. She said Symantec is taking specific steps to resolve all issues. This includes increasing the capacity of its customer support lines and keeping in touch with the community via the company's Web sites, outbound emails and account-specific calls. The company is also working to resolve invoicing and reporting issues on an individual basis and is giving customers more time to make the transition. "We have corrected the most serious issues already and are working with our partners to reconcile reports to ensure that processed orders were properly shipped, fulfilled and invoiced," she said. A smoother transition
Franklin Warlick said he was initially terrified to learn that his messaging security vendor, CipherTrust Inc., was being acquired by Secure Computing Corp., a San Jose-Calif.-based provider of security appliances, firewalls, and programs for identity and access management and content management and filtering. "CipherTrust was a huge success story here," said Warlick, senior messaging systems administrator for Cox Communications, a multi-service broadband communications company with approximately 6 million customers across the United States. "Support was good. We had no complaints. When I heard of the acquisition, I was worried about whether talent would be depleted and whether service would wither." His concerns proved to be unfounded, and today he happily uses Secure Computing's IronMail product to keep spam and other malicious content out of the company's 30,000 email inboxes. A few weeks after the acquisition was announced, Secure Computing invited Warlick and other customers to a roundtable discussion where he was able to meet the CEO and get a better idea of the company's intentions. "I saw they were keeping a lot of CipherTrust people at top levels," he said. "Once I saw it wasn't just about buying the product and releasing the people I quickly relaxed." He said his product has not changed since the acquisition, though he's optimistic the company will add functionality to help enterprises combat Web-based image spam. He has also used the customer support system two or three times since the merger without incident. Looking ahead, Warlick hopes Secure Computing will add more reporting capabilities to the product. "A better interface for customer reporting is something we hope for, and I was told it's coming," he said. Too soon to tell
Bryan Sowell, authentication services engineer for a large Fortune 500 company, is an RSA Security customer who has seen no change since the company was acquired by storage giant EMC last summer. He said it's probably too soon to tell what the overall impact will be, but for now he's cautiously optimistic. "I haven't seen any change in the service or effectiveness of the RSA solutions," he said. "EMC did not have any competing products with RSA, though, so there were none of the traditional issues associated with acquisitions." |
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