Why White Labeling May Be The Right Approach For Selling Digital Signage Solutions

January 20, 2020 by guest author, sixteenninewpadmin

Guest Post: Balaji Kamineni, Zeetaminds

Balaji Kamineni

AV companies and integrators deal with a lot of products and digital signage is just a small part of their over all business. However, with digital signage growing at a CAGR of 7.3% and the need to increase their margins, vendors are keen on adding their own flavour to digital signage and that’s where white-labeling comes in.

What is a White Labeled Solution?

White-labelling is essentially having a product on your brand name, without actually building it from scratch. Have you ever wondered why there are so many different brands for electronic accessories? It’s possible that most of these accessories are manufactured in a factory in China and only the packaging and the branding changes. To the end-customer, it appears as if the brand created the product.

The same is applicable for digital signage software – where a solutions provider can offer a content management solution that is branded as their own, but was built and supported by a third party behind the scenes.

Why can’t I build my own signage software?

Most AV Integrators and resellers would have had the thought of having digital signage software on their brand name let alone develop one from scratch. I have seen few AV vendors who went into that cycle of developing the software, but were unable to sustain active development. The signage software was obsolete in no time.

It is not easy to build a robust yet scalable digital signage CMS software. It takes a decent amount of time and money to realize a stable product. Even then, a stable product is not necessarily a competitive product, unless it has innovations that no one can match.

If sales is your strength, not software development, white-labeling a software solution likely makes more sense.

What do I get from white-labeling?

You get your own CMS, under your web URL, your brand name and brand logo. Typically, there will not be a trace of the actual software provider anywhere in the CMS. Sometimes, a software company selling white label options may try to slip “Powered by …” into a line in the footers of pages.

White-labeling is awesome in may ways because:

White-labeling is not for everyone because:

To conclude, go ahead with a white-labeled software if you are well known AV company in your area, can get decent leads on your own and have established trust.

However, selecting the right software for white-labeling is very important, as it is more of a long-term partnership and the stickiness factor is high. Choose to be a reseller partner if you want the flexibility of having multiple digital signage software providers in your portfolio or would like to capitalize on the brand and the marketing abilities of the original software provider.

Main points to consider for choosing the right white-label partner

Stability of the Software: Validate and test if the software can efficiently manage 1,000’s of displays and yet remain rock-solid at the same time.

Multi-Platforms Support: Digital signage software which supports multiple platforms like Windows, Android, LG webOS, etc will give you an edge over others, as the range of supported hardware is wider.

Active Development Cycle: Know about the next list of features the signage provider is working on and its development cycle. This helps ensure the software will stay relevant in the long run.

Digital Signage Experience: A good amount of experience is essential for a digital signage software to be shortlisted for white-labelling. Experience counts as several iterations and improvements would have happened over time. In some cases, reviews on software listings website indicate how long the company has been in business, and how the product improved over time.

  1. Chris Stone says:

    While white labelling can work well for many organizations you must make sure there is end user support. These days many companies no longer wish to maintain new solutions with their own in house support and are looking for solutions that also include ongoing support of the software being implemented. A white label solution must include support through the developer or the integrator at a level that is acceptable to the end user. White label solutions often fall down in this area because the integrator is not able to support the solution adequately, the integrator does not want direct contact from his client to the developer (hence choosing a white label solution) or the developer has limited support in place to service the end user requirements.

  2. Can’t agree more. Great point Chris.

    One solution I could think of is if the developer could offer email support with generic mail-id like support@genericname.com (not the developer name) or phone support specifically for the customers of Integrators. This way the end-user is happy and the integrator is happy as the end-user still can’t identify the developer but support is delivered on time.

    We haven’t tried this approach until now but may start proposing this to integrators.

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