Network Security

Stop Comparing Features. Start Demanding Outcomes.

by Michael Crean

Protection isn't installed once. It's delivered every day. 

As featured in ChannelPro Network: We recently discussed how misconfiguration has become one of the most overlooked drivers of breaches for MSPs and the SMBs they serve. Below, we go deeper into what this means in practice and how partners can proactively prevent risk before it turns into impact.

Let’s start with a simple analogy.

If you bought the most advanced home security system on the market but never locked the doors, never armed the alarm and ignored every alert on your phone, would you feel protected?

Of course not.

Yet that is exactly how many businesses approach cybersecurity today.

They invest in powerful tools. Firewalls. Endpoint protection. Email security. Cloud controls. The dashboard lights up. The reports look impressive. Everyone feels good.

Until something slips through.

The Illusion of Coverage

The cybersecurity industry has trained buyers to think in features.

They think to themselves, ‘How many capabilities does it have? Does it use AI? Is it next generation?’

Those questions are not wrong. Not that capabilities and tools aren’t important, but the solution isn’t the product. 

A product can be technically impressive and operationally ineffective at the same time. Especially in small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs) where IT teams are lean and priorities compete for attention.

Security fails most often in the gaps:

  • A policy that was never updated
  • A configuration that drifted over time
  • An alert that no one investigated
  • A patch delayed for operational reasons

The technology was there. The protection was not. That gap between capability and outcome is where real risk lives.

What Protection Actually Looks Like

For most businesses, security is not a technical discussion. It is a business one.

They want to know:

  • Will we avoid a breach that shuts us down?
  • If we are attacked, will we stay operational?
  • Can we pass audits and satisfy customers?
  • Are we reducing risk or just adding tools?

Protection means prevention, resilience and proof.

Prevention means stopping threats before they disrupt operations. Resilience means maintaining uptime even when something goes wrong. Proof means being able to demonstrate to regulators, insurers and customers that security is actively managed.

That requires more than a feature set.

It requires outcomes and a delivery model that work together.

Where SonicWall Fits

At SonicWall, we’re focusing on building security that performs in real environments.

Our firewalls are built to inspect encrypted traffic, stop ransomware and enforce policy across distributed networks. Our cloud and endpoint solutions extend protection to users wherever they work. Our centralized management tools provide visibility across locations and devices.

But here’s the critical part.

The goal is not to ship more features. The goal is to make protection achievable and sustainable for SMBs and the partners who support them.

That means simplifying deployment. Reducing configuration risk. Enabling centralized control. Supporting managed services models that turn installed technology into actively delivered security.

Because a well-managed environment is exponentially more secure than a powerful but neglected one.

The Partner Advantage

For prospective partners, this is the opportunity.

Businesses are no longer satisfied with product recommendations. They want accountability. They want someone who can say, with confidence, that their environment is monitored, tuned and maintained.

When you combine a strong technology foundation with active management and clear reporting, you move from selling hardware to delivering outcomes.

SonicWall is designed to support that model. Our solutions integrate into managed service workflows. They enable recurring value. They provide the visibility partners need to prevent misconfigurations and respond quickly.

That is how you differentiate in a crowded market.

A Better Standard

If you are evaluating security today, here is a better lens. Do not ask what the product can do.

Ask:

  • How is it managed over time?
  • How are configuration errors prevented?
  • How is protection measured?
  • Who is accountable if something goes wrong?

If those questions do not have clear answers, you’re buying potential, not protection.

Cyber threats are not slowing down. Attackers are automating. Environments are becoming more distributed. Complexity is increasing.

The response cannot simply be adding more tools.

It has to be delivering better outcomes.

Protection is not a spec sheet.
It’s not a marketing claim.
It’s not a one-time installation.

It is a continuous discipline.

And when the right platform and the right partner come together, that discipline becomes a competitive advantage.

If you’re a partner looking to build a stronger managed security practice, or a business ready to move beyond feature comparisons, it may be time to rethink what you’re really buying.

Security is important.

But protection is what keeps the doors open.

Share This Article

An Article By

Michael Crean

Executive Vice President, Managed Security Services
Michael Crean currently leads the Managed Security Services team at SonicWall, where he came aboard following SonicWall’s acquisition of leading MSSP Solutions Granted Inc. Crean, a U.S. Army combat veteran, founded Solutions Granted Inc. in 2001. He saw the need to bridge the gap between IT and IS with solid security offerings and strong, cost-effective solutions. His relentless commitment to providing security that met corporate goals and compliance standards caused immediate growth; at the time of its acquisition, Solutions Granted provided managed security offerings to thousands of customers worldwide. He is now helping to empower MSP partners with managed detection and response (MDR) and other solutions.

Related Articles

  • SonicOS 8.2.0: Better Security Outcomes, Zero Extra Cost
    Read More
  • Saving the Weekend: How the SonicSentry SOC Stopped a Saturday Night Cyberattack
    Read More