For today’s digital businesses, cloud-first transformation is in full effect. I think it’s obvious why this is happening—a cloud-first mindset enables unlimited scalability, agility, efficiency and more. This also goes hand-in-hand with the constant need for mobility and enabling employees, customers, and other users to be connected anywhere and anytime.
Let’s focus on the keyword “connected” for a minute. Think about all of those connection requirements and demands that come with a cloud-first and mobile world! What is it that makes all those connections? Well, it’s the corporate network.
Businesses need to move fast to keep up with digital-era demands, but legacy networking becomes a roadblock to obtaining greater agility. And even if you solve that problem, IT needs to ensure users and resources remain secure. That leaves you consistently trying to find a balance between ensuring agility and security at the same time. However, traditional approaches to networking make this balancing act impossible to manage, forcing tradeoffs between agility, efficiency, performance, and security.
Traditional, hub-and-spoke approaches to designing and managing the network are just not going to cut it anymore! Such approaches and technology were designed for decades-old architectures and are unable to scale and support today’s cloud-first world. That’s because legacy networks:
In addition, securing today’s distributed networks can introduce similar complexity and compromise. Today, the public Internet has become the de-facto means that connects users to their apps and also to one another. But how are enterprises protecting a network they no longer fully control?
One approach is building perimeters and deploying security appliances in every business location, but this creates appliance sprawl, extra costs, and increased management challenges. On the other hand, backhauling all Internet- or cloud-destined traffic to a central location (e.g., a data center), may simplify management, but results in degraded application performance for cloud apps and subpar user experiences.
Clearly, the shift to cloud and mobile has put new demands and pressures on legacy networks. With outdated architectures coupled with the need to maintain tighter network security it is clear you need to rethink your existing approaches to master the balancing act game. Otherwise, the attractive benefits that come with cloud and mobile adoption are being compromised.
In summary:
Published with permission from Riverbed.