OpenSRS: Reseller Friendly since 1999
 

Posts Tagged ‘SSL Service’

Free Webinar: "Understanding How to Effectively Sell SSL Certificates"

vslogo_med_cmykjpgLast month we significantly expanded our SSL Certificates lineup to include more of the Internet’s leading SSL brands, and a full range of SSL certificates including code signing certs and Extended Validation (EV) certs. With 16 different options, you might be wondering what the best approach is to achieve the best results when selling these SSL products.

To help you out, we’ve arranged a free webinar with Jay Schiavo, Senior Manager, Product Management for VeriSign titled, “Understanding How to Effectively Sell SSL Certificates.” Jay has a very good understanding of the specific needs of OpenSRS resellers and during the session he’ll help you make sense of it all, explaining how to position and sell multiple brands and types to your customers.

We’ll see you there!

Details:

REGISTRATION IS FREE
What:Understanding How to Effectively Sell SSL Certificates
When: Thursday, June 4th, 2009 at 11:00 A.M. EDT

registernow

And don’t forget about the other free webinar announced last week and coming up on Thursday, May 21st, 2009 – Web Hosting Solutions that Work for ISPs.

Free Webinar: “Understanding How to Effectively Sell SSL Certificates”

vslogo_med_cmykjpgLast month we significantly expanded our SSL Certificates lineup to include more of the Internet’s leading SSL brands, and a full range of SSL certificates including code signing certs and Extended Validation (EV) certs. With 16 different options, you might be wondering what the best approach is to achieve the best results when selling these SSL products.

To help you out, we’ve arranged a free webinar with Jay Schiavo, Senior Manager, Product Management for VeriSign titled, “Understanding How to Effectively Sell SSL Certificates.” Jay has a very good understanding of the specific needs of OpenSRS resellers and during the session he’ll help you make sense of it all, explaining how to position and sell multiple brands and types to your customers.

We’ll see you there!

Details:

REGISTRATION IS FREE
What:Understanding How to Effectively Sell SSL Certificates
When: Thursday, June 4th, 2009 at 11:00 A.M. EDT

registernow

And don’t forget about the other free webinar announced last week and coming up on Thursday, May 21st, 2009 – Web Hosting Solutions that Work for ISPs.

Announcing New SSL Certificate Brands and Types

padlockGeoTrust, thawte, VeriSign brands and Extended Validation and Code-signing certs added

Starting today, OpenSRS Resellers can now sell 16 different SSL certificates from three of the world’s leading SSL certificate providers. We’ve added a range of products from both thawte and VeriSign in addition to the GeoTrust-branded products you could sell through us until now.

On top of the new brands, we’re also adding some new types of SSL certificates, including Extended Validation (EV) and code-signing certs to the mix. Full details and pricing is available on our website. As with our GeoTrust products, Resellers can take advantage of the super pricing we’ve negotiated with these certificate providers.

Are you Selling SSL Certificates?

If you aren’t yet selling SSL certificates, now is a great time to add them to your product lineup. These days security is top of mind with businesses and consumers alike, and SSL certificates bring that peace of mind to consumers, allowing them to complete transactions and share personal information with confidence.

A long-standing misconception around SSL certificates is that they are only really needed where financial information is being passed between computer and webserver. But the reality is that an SSL certificate is a must in any application where valuable data is being passed. That includes everything from forum logins, to email servers, to ecommerce and control panels. If the data on the other side of the login has value (and it probably does, or it wouldn’t be protected by a login), then that data should be encrypted and protected by an SSL connection.

Reseller Webinar

We’re planning a webinar for our Resellers in the next month or two with our friends at VeriSign. They’ll be bringing you some great information on how you can integrate SSL certificates into your product lineup and how you can maximize your sales. Expect to hear more about that shortly.

How SSL Digital Certificates Work

Along with domain names and email, all OpenSRS Resellers are able to sell a range of GeoTrust SSL Digital Certificates through OpenSRS. Many, but not all, of our Resellers are taking advantage of the opportunity that selling SSL provides. I thought it would be worthwhile to provide a primer on how SSL Certificates work in advance of some pretty big news that we’re hoping to be able to talk about later this week and early next week. You’ll want to keep an eye on this blog and your inbox.

ssl_certA lot of what follows comes from Verisign (who own GeoTrust, our current SSL provider). Both the Verisign and GeoTrust websites have extensive information available for you to better understand, and therefore sell SSL Certificates.

What SSL Certificates Do:

Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) technology protect websites and make it easy for visitors to trust websites in three essential ways:

  1. An SSL Certificate enables encryption of sensitive information during online transactions.
  2. Each SSL Certificate contains unique, authenticated information about the certificate owner.
  3. A Certificate Authority verifies the identity of the certificate owner when it is issued.

Who needs an SSL Certificate?

If you, or your customers fit into any of the following categories, then an SSL Certificate is a must:

  • Operate an online store or accept online orders and credit cards
  • Offer a login or sign in on your site
  • Process sensitive data such as address, birth date, license, or ID numbers
  • Require compliance with privacy and security requirements
  • Value privacy and expect others to trust you.

How SSL Encryption Works

Imagine sending mail through the postal system in a clear envelope. Anyone with access to it can see the data. If it looks valuable, they might take it or change it. An SSL Certificate establishes a private communication channel between the browser and web server enabling encryption of the data during transmission. Encryption scrambles the data, essentially creating an envelope for message privacy.

Each SSL Certificate consists of a public key and a private key. The public key is used to encrypt information and the private key is used to decipher it. When a Web browser points to a secured domain, a Secure Sockets Layer handshake authenticates the server (the website) and the client (the web browser). An encryption method is established with a unique session key and secure transmission can begin. True 128-bit SSL Certificates enable every site visitor to experience the strongest SSL encryption available to them.

How Authentication Works

Imagine receiving an envelope with no return address and a form asking for your bank account number. In the case of organization- or Extended-validation certificates, every SSL Certificate is created for a particular server in a specific domain for a verified business entity. The validation process for EV certificates is quite extensive and provides fuller information about the website owner than a standard certificate. When the SSL handshake occurs, the browser requires authentication information from the server. By clicking the closed padlock in the browser window or certain SSL trust marks (such as the VeriSign Secured Seal or GeoTrust True Site Seal), the website visitor sees the authenticated organization name. In high-security browsers (IE7/8, Firefox 3.0+, Safari 3.2+, Chrome and Opera 9.2+), the authenticated organization name is prominently displayed and the address bar turns green when an Extended Validation SSL Certificate is detected. If the information does not match or the certificate has expired, the browser displays an error message or warning.

A Matter of Trust

At the end of the day, SSL Certificates are all about trust. If you want to develop and instill a sense of trust with website visitors, an SSL Certificate is the way to do it. An SSL-protected site gives users the confidence to share personal information without having to worry about whether that data is safe as it travels around the Internet. And, the SSL Certificate provides further peace of mind to web users by offering verification that those in control of the web server are who the web surfer thinks they are.

If trust is important to the end users of your customers – and I’d venture a guess that it is – then they need to know that one of the best ways to build that trust is to secure their websites with an SSL Certificate along with a prominently displayed site seal that end users recognize and trust.

Are you selling SSL certificates?

A few weeks back, I blogged about the presentation that Bob Angus, from Verisign gave at WebhostingDay in Germany. Bob had some great tips for how to drive sales through SSL digital certificates.

ssl_geotrustFor Resellers who are already selling SSL certificates through OpenSRS, there was some great information that you can use to drive sales in your customer base. For Resellers not selling SSL certificates yet, have a look at that post and then ask yourself why you haven’t offered them to your customers yet.

What an SSL Certificate Does

You may be under the impression that SSL certificates are only for ecommerce sites, or banks and your customers aren’t Bank of America or eBay so you don’t need to offer SSL certificates. That kind of thinking can lead to you overlooking a huge potential market for SSL certificates that’s just waiting to be tapped.

SSL certificates really do two things:

  • First, an SSL certificate provides security by encrypting the data between the browser and the web server. Obviously, data encryption is important for financial transactions or other situations where websites are requesting sensitive data from visitors. Without that SSL certificate, and the little lock icon in the browser, most web surfers won’t provide that data.
  • Second, SSL also provides identity verification, primarily through the new Extended Validation (EV) certificates. You’ve probably seen EV in action – sites with an EV certificate will cause the address bar on Firefox, or IE to turn green, and you are able to view information about the website that will help you to confirm that you are dealing with who you think you are dealing with. I’ve grabbed a screenshot of GeoTrust’s EV certificate in action on Firefox that’s shown above.

Applications Where Encryption Matters

Think about that first use for SSL certificates for a minute – encrypting and protecting data – and then start thinking about all the cases where you, and especially your customers, might want to have an encrypted connection between the browser and the server. I’m thinking about web forums, blogging platforms, webmail, web server control panels, company intranets, corporate wikis, VPNs, customer portals, etc.

The list of potential applications for SSL certificates is nearly endless. Now ask yourself this: “Do my customers do any of those things?” The answer is most likely, “Yes.” Now ask yourself again “Why haven’t I offered them SSL certificates yet?”

By the way, you’ll want to keep an eye on the blog over the next few weeks. We’ll be talking a bit more about SSL certificates and why now might be a very good time to start selling through OpenSRS if you aren’t already.

Become a Reseller

Sign Up Now
 
 
Subscription Options
Archive