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A hybrid workforce demands a modernized WAN strategy

The workforce has changed dramatically in just a few years. We went from working in offices, to working from home, to a hybrid workforce – and lifestyle – where we work from anywhere. Has your infrastructure kept up with the changes, or are you still operating with legacy systems? Have your security policies kept up? Are you spending more time holding things together than you are focusing on strategy? These are questions that need answers. I’ll focus here on the Wide Area Network (WAN) which is a key piece of your infrastructure that’s easy to overlook with so many moving parts of the business today.

In some ways, this rapid evolution of work reminds me of the old days of browsing the web on your big-screen TV. Today, we have Smart TVs with internet connections, browsers and apps. But, it didn’t start that way. Consumers drove this sea change in the living room by trotting our computers out of the den and hooking them up to the TV with whatever connection and cable were available. It was cumbersome and often just cobbled together. But if you wanted to share something on the big screen, that was what you had to work with.

Since then, most of us have modernized our consumer infrastructure with smart TVs, advanced sound systems and the like. Often, that’s the way technologies evolve. People work with what they have to achieve their goals. Then technology comes along to make it better, more convenient and more scalable into the future.

And I think we’re at that kind of transition point in enterprise connectivity as hybrid workforces evolve out of the pandemic scramble.

Modernizing the WAN for the hybrid workforce

The hybrid workforce is more complicated from a service and security standpoint than the work from home era. It is not simply that some employees are at home, and some are in the office. The whole definition of remote access has changed and the workhorse security technology of the past – the Virtual Private Network (VPN) – might not be enough. It’s more like hooking up the notebook to the TV, than the Smart TV.

Modern approaches such as Secure Access Services Edge (SASE) and Zero Trust Architecture have emerged for this new world. They allow you to build profiles for people, places and devices so you know who is on your network and what they’re doing. If they do something they’re not authorized to do you can shut down access quickly. Or, if you don’t want them connecting from an airport public Wi-Fi you can deny or restrict access all together.

When I talk to customers, I ask these questions to help me understand the complexity of their environment:

Answering these questions can easily fill a whiteboard and the picture that emerges can look quite complicated. How do you simplify it? Modernize the architecture. It’s the equivalent of leaving the notebook in the den and putting in a Smart TV.

By using these new methods in your network today, you can grow for the future. This helps you adapt to technology and threats more easily. It’s all part of software-defined networking for the WAN–a strategy that lets you avoid sinking capital dollars into hardware that will be out of date in a couple years.

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Author

Callahan Krivanek

Callahan is a Sr. Lead Marketing Manager at Lumen focused on IP and security solutions. With previous expertise in market analysis, product positioning, and go-to-market strategy, Callahan is dedicated to helping Lumen stay ahead of the curve in today’s rapidly evolving digital landscape. Callahan received a BA in Business Administration from the University of St. Thomas and an MBA in Marketing from the University of Minnesota.