{
 "@context": "https://schema.org",
 "@type": "Article",
 "headline": "Palo Alto Networks' NextWave Overhaul Signals a New Era for Security Ecosystem Partners in 2026",
 "description": "Palo Alto Networks' 2026 NextWave overhaul shifts incentives from transaction volume to platformization, with new tiers, the Partner Development Fund, and AI-driven security outcomes.",
 "author": {
   "@type": "Organization",
   "name": "ELG Insider"
 },
 "publisher": {
   "@type": "Organization",
   "name": "ELG Insider",
   "url": "https://insider.crossbeam.com"
 },
 "datePublished": "2026-04-27",
 "url": "https://insider.crossbeam.com/entry/palo-alto-networks-nextwave-overhaul-signals-a-new-era-for-security-ecosystem-partners-in-2026",
 "mainEntityOfPage": "https://insider.crossbeam.com/entry/palo-alto-networks-nextwave-overhaul-signals-a-new-era-for-security-ecosystem-partners-in-2026",
 "about": {
   "@type": "Thing",
   "name": "Palo Alto Networks NextWave Partner Program"
 }
}

Nearbound Daily #481: 'Twas the Night Before a Partner Deal
Nearbound Weekend 12/23: It's a wonderful partner pro life
Howdy Partners #62 - The Nearbound Playbook: Proven Strategies for Success - Will Taylor & Isaac Morehouse
Friends with Benefits #27 - Building Trust and Adding Value in Partnership Programs - Bryan Williams
The nearbound email template hub
Nearbound Podcast #144 - The rise of the chief partner officer - Asher Mathew
Nearbound #477: Don't Get Blinded By The Shine 😵
Nearbound Daily #476: How to Find the Right Rumble 👂
Nearbound Weekend 12/16: Do We Have A New Funnel? 🎀
Nearbound Daily #475: Co-sell, Co-keep, Co-grow
Howdy Partners #61: How Partnerships Can Drive Customer Advocacy - Will Taylor
How to Measure Partnerships ROI
Nearbound Daily #474: Nearbound, Allbound, Glory-bound 🙌
Friends with Benefits #25 - Building Exceptional Relationships - Matt Quirie
Brandon Balan and McKenzie Jerman: We replaced our mid-market sales with Ecosystem-Led Growth. This is what happened. | Supernode 2023
Nearbound Podcast #143 - Cracking the Nearbound Code: Secrets to Successful Nearbound Plays - Isaac Morehouse and Will Taylor
Nearbound Daily #471: Uncover Your Shadow Partner Program
Nearbound Weekend 12/09: Fruit Ninja Influencer Drives 600k in Revenue
The Future of Revenue: What You Need to Know
Nearbound Daily #470: Yes, It Really Is That Easy
Nearbound Daily #469: No BS Guide to Revenue 💰
Nearbound Daily #468: Some triggering advice from Jason Lemkin 🤐
Key takeaways: The 2023 state of partner-led growth report
Nearbound Podcast #142 - The Kobe Bryant Approach to Partnerships: A Conversation with Rohan Batra
Nearbound Daily #467: Overcome partnerships negativity
Nearbound Daily #466: Ecosystem revenue times infinite 💰
Nearbound Weekend 12/02: Nearbound synergy 👩‍🔬
Howdy Partners #59: The Secret to Building a Successful Partnership Strategy - Katie Landaal
Friends with Benefits #23: The Power of Storytelling - Priya Sam
Nearbound Podcast #141 - Unleashing the Nearbound Mindset - Jared Fuller
Getting to "All In": Achieving Cross-Functional Buy-In for Your Ecosystem Strategy and Plan
Nearbound Podcast #140- - Revenue Over Relationships: How to Make Money in Every Partnership - Rasheité Calhoun
With ELG, Your Sales Team Needs Fewer Opportunities to Hit Quota
The Future of Revenue 2023
Nearbound Daily #454: Why your GTM determines co-sell strategy 💪
Nearbound Daily #453: TrustRadius on how buyers think and purchase 💰
Cold Outbound Isn’t Dead. Here’s What Sales Leaders Say are the Most Cost-Effective Sales Strategies in 2023
Nearbound Weekend 11/11: Good language produces results
Friends with Benefits #21: A Masterclass in Purposeful Networking - Scott Leese
Session two. Why Sales Teams Need Nearbound by Bobby Napiltonia and Jared Fuller
Session twelve. Phone a Friend: How Nearbound Social Warms Up Cold Calls by Daisy Chung, Avi Mesh, and Adam Sockel
Session three. When the Buzzword Meets the Road: Does Co-Selling Have to be So Hard? by Sam Yarborough, Stephanie Pennell, Xiaofei Zhang, and Rasheité Calhoun
Session thirteen. Beyond the Data: Henry Schuck’s Journey from Bootstrapped to Billions by Henry Schuck and Simon Bouchez
Session ten. Public Ecosystems and Private Ecosystems by Harbinder Khera, Theresa Caragol, and Kevin Linehan
Session six. Level Up Your 2024 Results: The Big Partner Bet by Judd Borakove
Session seven. Go To Network & The 3 Nearbound Sales Plays by Scott Leese
Session one. The Challenge for CROs Thinking Nearbound by Mark Roberge and Jill Rowley
Session nine. The Antidote to More: How Nearbound Rewrites the Better Together Story by Latané Conant
Session fourteen. 30 Minutes to President's Club LIVE at the Nearbound Summit by Nick Cegelski and Armand Farrokh
Session four. Operational Rigor in the Nearbound Era by Cindy Zu and Graham Younger
Session five. When Partner Attach Goes Wrong and How to Coach Your Way Out of It by Aaron McGarry and Cory Bray
Session eleven. Turning Your Company’s Network Into Pipeline by Joshua Perk
Session eight. Real Templates You Can Use to Run Nearbound Sales Today by Will Allred and Jared Fuller
Nearbound Daily #448: 👊 A never-before-seen lineup of top marketers
Session two. Nearbound Surround: How to Reach Buyers in the 'Who' Economy by Isaac Morehouse
Session twelve. The 3 Best Event Types for Driving Revenue by Kate Hammitt and Emily Wilkes
Session thirteen. The Future of ABM: How to Elevate Your GTM Strategy with Intent Data & AI by Deeksha Taneja and Yiz Segall
Session ten. How People-First GTM and Nearbound Will Forever Change How You Grow Pipeline and Revenue by Mark Kilens and Nick Bennett
Session seven. Event Led Growth: Partner Events at Scale by Justin Zimmerman
Session one. The End of the Demand Waterfall bySidney Waterfall
Session nine. The Data is In: It's About 'Who' not 'How' by Vinay Bhagat
Session fourteen. LIVE Freestyle Performance by Harry Mack
Session four. People Trust People: How to Drive Pipeline with Personalities by Adam Ryan and Daniel Murray
Session five. How To Scale Revenue Through Pay-For-Performance Partnerships by Michael Cole and Adam Glazer
Session eleven. What is Nearbound Social? by Logan Lyles
Session fifteen. Marketing Against the Grain LIVE at the Nearbound Summit by Kipp Bodnar and Kieran Flanagan
Session eight. Revenue Renaissance: Why Marketing & Partnerships Will Lead Revenue in 2024 by Tyler Calder
Session two. How Our Product Team Is Thinking About Partnerships in 2024 by Simon Bouchez
Session two. Bringing Champions Into Your Nearbound GTM by Jeff Reekers
Session three. Empty Platform Promises: Delivering on 1+1 = 3 by Chris Trudeau and Russell Dwyer
Session seven. An Ecosystem Strategy to Evolve from a Product to a Platform by Kenny Browne and Cody Sunkel
Session one. Unleashing the Power of Partnerships: Driving Product Innovation and Performance by Katie Landaal and Sophie Cheng
Session one. You Work for the Customer: Remembering the 'Why' of Partnerships by Jill Rowley and Jared Fuller
Session four. Partner Led Product Strategy by Bryan Williams and Ben Wright
Session four. How to Attach Partners to Customers so Everyone Wins by Jen Spencer and Rich Gardner
Session eight. Platform Vs. Product: How Product and Partner Teams Can Shape the Future of an Ecosystem by Karen Ng and Kelly Sarabyn
Building Successful Partnerships with Phil McKennan from Qualtrics
Chapter 2: Nearbound Defined
Session two. GTM Unplugged: 5 Easy-to-Use Frameworks That Make GTM Simple by Sangram Vajre and Lindsay Cordell
Session twelve. The Top 10 Biggest Mistakes I See Revenue Leaders Making in 2023/2024 by Jason Lemkin
Session three. Alliances: Becoming a Number 1 App Partner as a Startup by Mike Stocker, Marc Ginsberg, and Madelyn Wing
Session ten. Play Bigger with Nearbound: A Conversation with the Best Selling Author of "Play Bigger" by Kevin Maney and Isaac Morehouse
Session six. Venture Capital Through the Nearbound Lens by Justin Gray, Josh Wagner, and Sean kester
Session nine. Collaborative Growth: Building a Fast-Growth, High Margin Business Through Partnerships by Peter Caputa
Session four. Nearbound Starts with You: Why Personal Networks are the Backbone of the 'Who' Economy by Mac Reddin
Session five. Build, Buy, or Partner: How to Navigate Strategic Growth Decisions by Laura Padilla, R.J. Filipski, and Iris Ng
Session eleven. How Far are We into the 'Decade of Ecosystems'? by Jay McBain
Nearbound Daily #445: The Summit keynote breakdown 😎
Howdy Partners #58: Navigating Big-Fish Small-Fish Partnerships - Juraj Pal
Leverage AI to Build Your Partner Program
Download the PartnerHacker Handbook
Don’t Waste Your Prospect’s Time on Discovery. Speed Up the Sales Qualification Process With Partners.
Nearbound Daily #440: All aboard the influence train 🚂
Howdy partners #56: Unleashing partner tech- Greg Portnoy
The Official 2023 ‘Boundie Award Nominees!
You've Got a Friend in Crossbeam: Tips for Finding Your Next Best Partner
The Perfect Storm: The Demise of “Growth At All Cost” & The Rise Of Ecosystem-Led Growth
Roadmap Review: See What's New and Upcoming at Crossbeam
Playbook: How Twilio 8x’d Partner-Sourced Pipeline with a Single Partner
Playbook: How Everflow’s Ecosystem-Led Referral Marketing Wins 37% More Customers in 2023
Ecosystem Content

Palo Alto Networks' NextWave Overhaul Signals a New Era for Security Ecosystem Partners in 2026

by
Andrea Vallejo
SHARE THIS

Palo Alto Networks' revamped NextWave program moves from volume-based incentives to platform-centric profitability — rewarding partners who build AI-driven security practices across network, cloud, and SOC, not just move product.

by
Andrea Vallejo
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

Subscribe to ELG Insider to get the latest content delivered to your inbox weekly.

On February 5, 2026, Palo Alto Networks announced the next generation of its NextWave Partner Program — the most significant restructuring of its partner ecosystem incentives in years. 

The announcement, made via press release and accompanied by a wave of partner-facing blog posts, signaled an explicit strategic pivot: away from rewarding sales volume, toward rewarding partners who help customers achieve “total, AI-driven resilience” through platform consolidation.

For the global network of security partners, Managed Security Service Provider (MSSPs), and technology integrators that work with Palo Alto Networks, the change has immediate implications. 

Incentive structures are shifting. 

New funding vehicles are coming online. 

And for the first time, the program formally categorizes partners by depth of platform engagement rather than just revenue.

For companies already thinking about their Ecosystem-Led Growth (ELG) strategy, this is a signal worth understanding — because how Palo Alto Networks pays its partners in 2026 will reshape which co-sell motions generate margin, and which become commoditized.

What is happening?

Palo Alto Networks’ partner program had long been structured around a traditional reseller model — tiers based primarily on revenue volume, with incentives flowing from deal registration, margin protection, and Market development funds (MDF) pools tied to pipeline targets. But as the cybersecurity market matured and enterprise buyers began demanding consolidated security platforms rather than best-of-breed point products, that model started to show cracks.

The company had been telegraphing a shift. Its “platformization” thesis — the idea that enterprises should consolidate their security stack across Palo Alto’s Prisma Cloud, Cortex, and SASE platform — became a central theme in earnings calls throughout 2024 and 2025. The question for partners was: when would the incentive structure catch up to the strategy?

The February 2026 announcement answered it. 

“Today, the world is moving faster, and cybersecurity is no longer an afterthought—it is the heartbeat of every company’s strategy. It is a fundamental necessity that allows organizations to scale safely. As bad actors leverage AI to exfiltrate data in minutes rather than weeks, our platform approach is the only way to provide true end-to-end security. We need an ecosystem that aligns with this mission — securing customers from the Network to the Cloud and the SOC, with human, machine, and AI identity at the forefront.” — Michael Khoury, VP of Global Ecosystem Programs at Palo Alto Networks

According to coverage from ChannelE2E and Channel Insider, the revamp had been in development for over a year, driven by direct feedback from the global partner community seeking a program that was “simpler to engage with, more predictable in how it rewards impact.”

What actually changed?

The revamped NextWave Partner Program is structured around four tiers — Registered, Innovator, Platinum, and Diamond — with advancement driven by specialization depth rather than pure revenue volume. Partners unlock higher tiers through a combination of certified technical and sales resources, sustained customer engagement, and proficiency across Palo Alto Networks’ platform areas.

Three guiding principles frame the program:

  • Predictability: Consistent expectations and program structures that support long-term planning
  • Repeatability: Enablement and tools that help partners scale practices with confidence
  • Profitability: Incentives, rebates, and routes to growth tied directly to customer value delivered

A new Partner Development Fund (PDF) replaces more traditional MDF arrangements, reinvesting earned rebates directly back into partner-led demand generation, training, and solution development. MSSPs gain access to predictable, tiered pricing models specifically designed to support high-margin managed services.

Palo Alto Networks’ Chief Partnerships Officer, Simone Gammeri, shared the following in their official February press release

“Our partner ecosystem is more critical than ever in addressing the demand for AI-driven security platforms. Unlike transactional programs, the NextWave Partner Program rewards 'platformization' over transactions, so we are empowering our partners to dismantle the complexity that leaves customers vulnerable. This program isn't just about selling software; it's about ensuring customers achieve total, AI-driven resilience with a single, unified defense."

The program also introduces expanded capacity for Authorized Support Centers (ASC) and Authorized Professional Services (APS), and improved quoting tools and API-driven automation for a simpler partner experience.

What does it mean for partners?

The NextWave revamp isn't just a program update; it's a fundamental change in the rules of engagement. Partners who understand what's actually shifting and adapt quickly will capture an outsized co-sell opportunity. 

Partners who don't will find their economics quietly deteriorating over the next 12–18 months. 

Here's what matters most:

Implication 1: Certification depth is now the currency of access. The move from volume-based to proficiency-based incentives means that partners who have built specialization in Palo Alto Networks’ platform areas — particularly around Cortex, Prisma Cloud, and SASE — will see that investment directly rewarded. Partners who have relied on volume relationships without building certified capability will find their margins increasingly compressed.

Implication 2: The MSSP opportunity has never been better structured. The introduction of predictable, tiered pricing specifically for managed services is a meaningful unlock. For technology partners building managed security offerings, this creates a clearer path to sustainable margin and a stronger reason to align service delivery around Palo Alto Networks’ platform. See the full NextWave Managed Services Program for details.

Implication 3: Ecosystem data becomes a competitive advantage. As the program rewards “sustained customer engagement” and platform-centric outcomes, the partners who can demonstrate overlap between their customer base and the Palo Alto Networks ecosystem — and act on that data to drive co-sell — will be better positioned to move up tiers. This is precisely the insight that Crossbeam enables through account mapping and partner overlap data.

Why Palo Alto Networks is restructuring its partner program around Ecosystem-Led Growth?

The NextWave revamp is a textbook example of a leading technology vendor aligning its partner program with the principles of Ecosystem-Led Growth

By tying incentives to platform adoption and customer outcomes rather than transactional volume, Palo Alto Networks is encoding ELG logic into the program structure itself: the partners who win are those who build deep, data-driven relationships with customers inside the Palo Alto platform.

For partners already connected to Crossbeam, the revamp creates a specific opportunity: understanding which of your accounts overlap with the Palo Alto Networks’ ecosystem — or which are already running their platform gives you the targeting intelligence to build the co-sell motions that NextWave now explicitly rewards. Account-mapping data becomes the input to the platformization conversations that move partners up the tier ladder.

Industry analysts have noted the broader pattern. Techaisle, reviewing the NextWave program following the February announcement, noted that while the profitability emphasis represents a meaningful opportunity, it also “raises the bar for partners who have historically relied on volume relationships rather than platform depth.” Channel Insider framed the shift as part of a broader industry trend: the days of rewarding partners simply for moving product are giving way to programs that demand real enablement investment and measurable customer outcomes.

What to watch next?

Several signals will indicate how the NextWave revamp plays out. Watch for whether partner program enrollment at higher tiers accelerates — Palo Alto Networks has made advanced specializations more accessible, but partners still need to invest in certifications to unlock them. 

Watch for competitive responses from CrowdStrike, Microsoft, and other major security platform vendors, all of which are navigating similar pressure to move from volume-based to outcome-based partner incentives.

Finally, watch for how the Partner Development Fund performs. If the PDF delivers measurably better ROI on demand generation than traditional MDF structures, it will become a template that other vendors adopt.

Ready to act on this shift? Sign up for Crossbeam for free to see how Ecosystem Intelligence can help you identify your highest-value co-sell targets in the Palo Alto Networks ecosystem and build the platform-centric motions that NextWave now rewards.

Frequently asked questions

What are the four tiers of Palo Alto Networks’ NextWave partner program?

A: The four tiers are Registered, Innovator, Platinum, and Diamond. Advancement through tiers is now based on specialization depth, certified resources, and sustained customer engagement — not just revenue volume.

What is the Partner Development Fund (PDF) in the NextWave program?

A: The PDF reinvests partners’ earned rebates directly into partner-led demand generation, training, and solution development. It replaces traditional MDF structures and keeps investment flowing toward activities that drive platform adoption and customer outcomes.

How does the NextWave revamp affect MSSPs specifically?

A: MSSPs gain access to predictable, tiered pricing models designed to support high-margin managed security services. This removes the pricing unpredictability that had historically made it difficult to model MSSP economics on the Palo Alto Networks platform.

When did the new NextWave program go live?

A: The next generation NextWave Partner Program was announced on February 5, 2026 and became available to partners at that time.

You’ll also be interested in these

How Palo Alto Networks Rebuilt Its Partner GTM Around Platform Outcomes — and What It Means for Co-Sell
The 2026 Playbook for Partnering with Palo Alto Networks: From Cortex Marketplace to Co-Sell Pipeline