Crowdstrike Meltdown Didn't Dent Its Market Dominance … Yet
Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:
CrowdStrike's major meltdown a month ago doesn't look like affecting the cyber security vendor's market dominance anytime soon, based on its earnings reported Wednesday.
CrowdStrike's faulty Falcon sensor update in July bricked 8.5 million Windows machines, grounding thousands of flights worldwide, delaying medical services and downing some US states' 911 emergency services. Nonetheless, it reported better-than-expected revenue for the second quarter of fiscal year 2025.
[...] Moving forward, these new customers signing CrowdStrike contracts will be key to watch - and a good indicator if the July 19 fiasco will have any lasting impact on the security vendor, said IDC Group VP of security and trust Frank Dickson.
"When you look at the impact, the only think you're really going to be able to impact is new consideration, new customers evaluating security vendors," Dickson told The Register. "Net-new companies may look at this and say 'I don't know.' But that isn't going to start showing its head in the earnings for another quarter or two."
Existing customers - especially those who have gone all in with CrowdStrike's security products - aren't likely to go anywhere, despite any lingering frustrations about the flawed update.
CrowdStrike, along with some of its competitors, calls its separate products "modules," and all 28 of CrowdStrike's modules connect to its central Falcon platform.
[...] This is where CrowdStrike finds the bulk of its business. "If you only have one service from CrowdStrike, it's a lot easier to cancel," Dickson explained. "If you are a company with four, five, and six modules, it's going to be a lot harder to change. If you were so angry at CrowdStrike that you wanted to rip and replace everything, that's a herculean effort."
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