Verizon: SD-WAN the 'Low-Hanging Fruit' of SDN/NFV Strategy

Security and SD-WAN have arisen as prime opportunities within Verizon’s Software Defined Networking and Network Functions Virtualization strategy.

James Anderson, Senior News Editor

September 28, 2016

2 Min Read
Verizon: SD-WAN the 'Low-Hanging Fruit' of SDN/NFV Strategy

Security and SD-WAN have arisen as prime opportunities within Verizon’s Software Defined Networking and Network Functions Virtualization strategy.

903e0f5c50934b31a247126a83dd378e.jpgExecutives from Verizon’s SDN/NFV group briefed the media on the state of the organization Wednesday.

Vickie Lonker, director of product management for MPLS, SDN and mobile private network, said that although the marketplace is evaluating SDN, “customers are moving to production.” And it usually begins with SD-WAN, she said.

“SD-WAN is really the low-hanging fruit because it’s available now,” she said. “It is proven to work, and an enterprise can really achieve immediate and real business outcomes.”

She added that Verizon has had success through its Software Defined Perimeter security service, which offers secure VPN access using cloud-based controllers and software-defined perimeters.

abcaaad742e0442d9a8c57fb0a68a6fe.jpg“SDN and NFV definitely open up more possibilities for security solutions than we’ve had before,” she said.

The SDN/NFV group announced in July that it was launching Virtual Network Services. Lonker told Channel Partners in an interview that the network is catching up to the data center in terms of virtualization.

“[Businesses] need efficient and resilient ways for their apps to safely get to multiple destinations that use multiple networks,” she said.

Shawn Hakl, vice president of product and new business innovation, told reporters the new technologies have helped reduce the time of deployment from 500 days to as few as 65 in some cases. And customers are benefitting, he said.

b094e130bfaa461689768f809a140eb8.jpg“We’re seeing them use it to react to big events, such as mergers and acquisitions, allowing them to integrate acquisitions on board faster and recognize merger synergies quicker. We see people using this to better manage cost,” he said. “You’re no longer designing your network to peak. You’re now designing it to average, flexing on demand, up and down to meet the demands of your business.”

Fred Oliveira, a fellow SDN/NFV/cloud architect at Verizon, said the company’s main competition in the area of virtual networking boils down to two main categories: SD-WAN and universal Customer Premises Equipment (uCPE). And the biggest threat to Verizon, he said, is a predictable rival.

“Essentially, right now the only the two folks that have the deployment and scale for this have really been AT&T and Verizon, both of which have launched products on the virtual networking side,” he said. “On the SD-WAN side, AT&T has not currently announced an officer. However, we have seen competition from British Telecom, and Telstra has some interesting offers. To be fair, Masergy, which is someone who doesn’t traditionally compete with Verizon on a large scale, has a really comprehensive end-to-end solution as well.”

Agents deliver Verizon’s virtual networking solutions as-a-service.

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About the Author

James Anderson

Senior News Editor, Channel Futures

James Anderson is a senior news editor for Channel Futures. He interned with Informa while working toward his degree in journalism from Arizona State University, then joined the company after graduating. He writes about SD-WAN, telecom and cablecos, technology services distributors and carriers. He has served as a moderator for multiple panels at Channel Partners events.

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