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Can SD-WAN help overcome IT skills shortages?


Johannesburg, 11 Jul 2019

A recent survey conducted by Uptime Institute showed that data centre IT skills shortages will intensify as most operators continue to struggle with staffing issues.

Interestingly, the primary driver cited was an aging worker pool and the overwhelming male makeup of this sector.

According to the survey results, other factors contributing to skill shortages include a lack of hybrid IT skills; a lack of new skills (like managing SLAs for off-premises workloads); a lack of software skills with adoption of software-defined technologies; and fewer young men and women entering the field. Anton Jacobsz, CEO at Networks Unlimited Africa, the distributor for software-defined wide area network (SD-WAN) solution provider, Silver Peak in Sub-Saharan Africa, says the data centre IT skills shortage is spilling over from the data centre to the management administration of branch office infrastructure.

“The two go hand in hand as most skills are leveraged across both areas, and brand office networks are merely a ‘miniature architecture’ of the data centre network. In a blog discussing this shortage, Silver Peak’s Rami Rammaha said branch office networks typically include switches, routers, WAN optimisation appliances, firewalls and other networking gear that all require similar IT knowledge and skills as the data centre.

“As enterprises embrace digital transformation initiatives and leverage a cloud-first strategy to accelerate the transformation, new and hybrid IT skills are fast becoming critical to success.”  Rammaha delves into the top three IT skill shortages and offers guidance around how SD-WAN can bridge the gap:

1. Hybrid IT skills

As more organisations embrace a cloud-first model, IT must support applications running on-premises and in public clouds as well as SaaS applications and IaaS services. IT has full control of on-premises infrastructure and is fully familiar with the tools to manage it. For public clouds, IT must adhere to the cloud providers’ offerings and constraints. This challenge is amplified if the organisation embraces multiple cloud providers.

“SD-WAN can help in that it provides a holistic view and centralised orchestration and automation of business-intent policies,” says Rammaha. “This simplifies operations for IT and minimises the learning curve cycle.”

It also improves and simplifies the connectivity between on-premises and off-premises infrastructure. With an SD-WAN, IT no longer needs to manually configure and provision VPN tunnels.

2. Managing SLAs for off-premises workloads

Rammaha says it is estimated that 80% of enterprises have adopted hybrid or multi-cloud architectures (source: RightScale 2018 State of the Cloud Report). Therefore, managing SLAs regardless of where the application resides can be a daunting challenge for IT.

SD-WAN defines QOS and security policies easily for workloads from a centralised orchestrator across all branches without the need to manually programme each branch separately, simplifying overall management.

“Once SLAs are defined, an SD-WAN monitors link performance and automatically corrects for unforeseen impairments such as packet loss, latency or jitter without IT intervention,” he says.

3. Software skills with the adoption of software-defined technologies

One aspect of software-defined technologies is the move away from manual device-by-device configuration and management, often employing a CLI. Another is the ability to integrate with third-party orchestration systems, collectors, etc, with open APIs.

Here, SD-WAN provides restful APIs that can easily integrate with other systems as well as templates that can accelerate the integration process

“New technologies like SD-WANs are intended to increase business agility and help IT to complete tasks with greater ease, efficiency and effectiveness,” says Rammah. “The business-driven Unity EdgeConnect SD-WAN edge platform from Silver Peak can greatly improve the efficiency of managing the WAN edge, helping organisations assuage the IT shortage gap and overcome this challenge.”

Networks Unlimited’s Jacobsz concurs, saying an SD-WAN's architecture has been designed from the ground up to support cloud-first initiatives.

“Some of the more advanced offerings, such as the Silver Peak Unity EdgeConnect SD-WAN edge platform, were also designed to be ‘business-driven’, which means the network enables the business, rather than the business conforming to the constraints of the network,” he says.

“Instead of being a constraint, the WAN becomes a business accelerant that is fully automated and continuous, giving every application the resources it truly needs, while delivering 10x the bandwidth for the same budget – equating to increased productivity and simplicity.”

For more information, please contact Michelle Naidoo at michelle.naidoo@nu.co.za.

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Silver Peak

Silver Peak, the global SD-WAN leader, delivers the transformational promise of the cloud with a business-first networking model. The Unity EdgeConnect™ self-driving wide area network platform liberates enterprises from conventional WAN approaches to transform the network from a constraint to a business accelerant. Thousands of globally distributed enterprises have deployed Silver Peak WAN solutions across 100 countries. Learn more at silver-peak.com.

Networks Unlimited Africa

Networks Unlimited Africa is a value-added distributor, offering the best and latest solutions within the converged technology, data centre, networking, and security landscapes. The company distributes best-of-breed products, including Attivo Networks, Cofense, Carbon Black, Fortinet, F5, Hypergrid, Mellanox Technologies, NETSCOUT, NETSCOUT ARBOR, ProLabs, RSA, Rubrik, SevOne, Silver Peak, Thales and Uplogix. The product portfolio provides solutions from the edge to the data centre, and addresses key areas such as cloud networking and integration, WAN optimisation, application performance management, application delivery networking, Wi-Fi-, mobile- and networking security, load balancing, data centre in-a-box, and storage for virtual machines.

Since its formation in 1994, Networks Unlimited Africa has continually adapted to today's progressively competitive and evolving marketplace, and has reaped the benefits by being a leading value-added distributor (VAD) within the Sub-Saharan Africa market.