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How a WAN can Enable Commercial Strategy Execution
Kristian Thyregod, Vice President, Europe, Middle East and Africa region for Silver Peak


Kristian Thyregod, Vice President, Europe, Middle East and Africa region for Silver Peak
Role of SD-WAN
Generally speaking, most business strategies entail continuously adopting leaner workflows, transitioning to smarter applications (increasingly SaaS-based), utilising always-on collaboration tools and connecting seamlessly with colleagues, clients, customers, partners etc.
The bigger picture? If a part of a strategy includes acquisition of (companies) points-of-presence across local, regional, national or even international markets, then the speed at which these operations can be up and running will directly correlate to success.
The faster a business can connect newly acquired staff to critical workloads/applications and to one another, and the faster these acquisitions can be aligned seamlessly with a parent company and standard operating procedures, the faster a business will capitalise on opportunities to fuel growth.
Or, if acquisitions are operating in a particularly forward-thinking way, then the faster it can transition workflows without stalling operations and the better the outcomes will be.
The fine print? The job of connecting users to applications makes a WAN critically important to near and long-term success. So consider whether the WAN is every bit as agile and flexible as it needs to be.
If it isn’t, then how assertive should management be in making sure that it is? Equally importantly – how can they make sure it will continue to be so, even when subjected to all the usual machinations that strategy execution entails?
What if IT could centrally orchestrate and manage the WAN in accordance with the company’s business intent? Well it’s possible - an application-driven WAN architecture can apply business intent across a WAN to deliver agility and flexibility.
What value would management attribute to being able to specify the level of agility and flexibility, when connecting people to workflows, applications, networks and locations? If you this can be done in alignment with business intent, would it make strategy execution more efficient and effective?
With an advanced software-defined WAN (SD-WAN) solution, this is the reality today and the fortunately management do not need to be technologists or have IT staff at every location to align their WAN to business intent.
While discussing service levels can become a highly technical and complicated matter, an SD-WAN solution offers the ability to centrally orchestrate and manage the WAN in accordance with business intent, using an intuitive approach that enables business connectivity requirements and technology capabilities to converge. This also assures consistency, enabling management to assure compliance across the organisation.
Consider this: management can articulate the productivity levels they need from their various teams, and an SD-WAN provider can translate that into how the company’s connectivity is orchestrated, automated and managed.
Finally, when assessing strategy execution readiness, there is a compelling argument to make an equally rigorous assessment of the existing WAN.
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