McAfee Lays Off 200 Employees, Americas Sales Leader Exits: Report

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McAfee has laid off 200 employees across a wide range of departments and has seen several senior sales executives leave the company, according to media reports.

The job cuts come along with news of the departure of SVP of Sales for the Americas Bill McAlister, who has been with the company for more than 13 years. The layoffs were first reported by The Information, and a source has told CRN the moves are part of an effort to prepare the company for an initial public offering or sale to another private equity firm.

"Their ratio for costs for people was out of whack with sales and margins," the source told CRN. "I understand what they're doing and why they're doing it."

[Related: Sources: McAfee Global Channel Chief Steranka Out As Part Of Broader Set Of Layoffs]

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McAfee declined to comment on-the-record about McAlister's status or the number of employees affected by the layoff. The Information said roughly 4 percent of McAfee's workforce was affected by the layoffs.

“To accelerate our device-to-cloud cybersecurity strategy, McAfee is investing in growth areas and optimizing processes to put the customer at the core of everything we do," McAfee said in a statement. "As we make changes, we are balancing the needs of the business with those of our workforce, approaching these decisions thoughtfully and with care for impacted employees.”

McAfee has failed to fill open positions in its channel organization, but the source told CRN they haven't heard of any channel personnel being directly affected by the layoffs. In addition to the 200 layoffs, The Information reported that hundreds of open positions at McAfee have been eliminated.

The Information reported that the layoffs affected departments such as sales, engineering, finance, and human resources. The source told CRN the layoffs have significantly impacted McAfee's direct sales staff, inside sales management team, and vertical sales management team.

The source has interacted with McAlister for many years, and characterized him as a people person who excels at working with customers and internal employees in a humble and straightforward manner and without any hidden agenda.

"I liked Bill. I knew him personally," the source said. "I'm sad to see him go."

However, the source said McAfee decided to shuffle its sales management team after McAlister failed to hit his numbers last year. McAlister did not respond to requests for comment.

The source also told CRN that McAfee has reduced its vertical market management teams from three people to two people, meaning that managers will be able to provide less day-to-day coverage. Although managers will be stuck doing more work and will only be available for "flash coverage," the source doesn't anticipate the vertical market cuts will make much of a difference to partners.

"The business happens at the field level with the sales reps helping the customers," the source said.

This is the second round of job cuts McAfee has seen in recent months, with CRN reporting in July that global channel chief Richard Steranka had left the company as part of a broader set of layoffs. Five months later, CNBC reported that minority stakeholder Thoma Bravo had entered into discussions about buying all of McAfee from Intel and majority owner TPG.

From a channel perspective, the source said McAfee has been cutting budgets across the board from programs and financial incentives that support partners. As margins on McAfee products erode, the source said other vendors such as CrowdStrike, Cylance and FireEye have done a better job protecting margins for solution providers.

"McAfee has gotten pretty cheap with MDF [market development funds]," the source said. "It's gone down three years in a row."

A McAfee spokesperson said the amount of MDF the company assigns is based on recommendations from industry analysts, adding that the percentage has remained consistent over the last several years.

On the other hand, the source said McAfee has put tons of money behind its recent acquisition of cloud access security broker (CASB) Skyhigh Networks. McAfee's subsequent offerings around cloud security have been well-received by customers, said the source, who expects the company to enjoy good growth in that space in 2019.

Overall, though, McAfee has been suffering from low single-digit revenue growth, the source said, which has created issues around how many employees the company can reasonably have in each territory. The Information reported that McAfee's year-over-over revenue grew by a mid-single-digit percentage in 2018.

Emerging endpoint security vendors such as Cylance, CrowdStrike, and Tanium have captured significant market share from Symantec and McAfee, the source told CRN, adding to challenges for the legacy vendors.

"You can't save your way to prosperity," the source said. "You have to spend your way there."