Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 07 | Page 48

FEATURE: OPEN SOURCE Commercial software code bases are significantly more secure than open source (*Coverity Scan Open Source Report 2014) 78% of companies today run part or all of their operations on open source software (*Future of Open Source Survey, sponsored by Black Duck and North Bridge, 2015) GIVEN THE GROWING POPULARITY AND IMPORTANCE OF OPEN SOURCE, ONE COULD ARGUE THAT PARTNERS WITHOUT AN OPEN SOURCE PRACTICE ARE ALREADY AT A DISADVANTAGE, NOT TO MENTION LOSING OUT ON AN EXTREMELY LUCRATIVE REVENUE STREAM 48 INTELLIGENTCIO 88% of the 220 IT decision makers surveyed identified open source as a critical or significant enabler of their DevOps strategy (*Red Hat DevOps, Open Source and Business Agility (June 2015) model and switch from the traditional reseller approach to a consultative, service-oriented approach. While this is not an easy transition for most partners to make, those that do will not only have a competitive advantage, but more importantly will be able to capitalise on high margin service business and up/ cross selling opportunities. Specialise, specialise and then specialise some more While the (seemingly) obvious choice for any partner looking to build an open source practice appears to be to acquire expertise and skill-sets across all open source solutions, this approach is actually sub-optimal for the current business climate. Enterprises these days would rather work with partners that they consider ‘trusted advisors’ rather than ‘resellers’. This is even truer for open source solutions given that the concept is still foreign to many enterprises and that services are such a big part of expenditure. To that end, I wo