Americas

  • United States

QoS, visibility and reporting are hot optimization techniques, users say

Opinion
Nov 17, 20052 mins
NetworkingWAN

* Survey respondents rely on WAN optimization techniques

Last time, we cited a recent survey in which we interviewed IT professionals on their company’s use of network management in general, and their use of WAN application optimization techniques in particular. This newsletter will focus on what the survey respondents and interviewees had to say about WAN and application optimization.

Last time, we cited a recent survey in which we interviewed IT professionals on their company’s use of network management in general, and their use of WAN application optimization techniques in particular. This newsletter will focus on what the survey respondents and interviewees had to say about WAN and application optimization. 

The survey respondents were asked to indicate which optimization techniques their company’s IT organization had already deployed, and whether or not those techniques had been deployed broadly. Their responses clearly showed that QoS as well as visibility and reporting are hot. In particular, these optimization techniques have the broadest current deployment, as well as the least number of companies with no plans to deploy them in the future. TCP acceleration is also hot. This technique has the largest percentage of companies that have not yet deployed it, but which plan to deploy it. Wide-area file services (WAFS) was not hot. This technique has the narrowest current deployment as well as the highest number of companies with no plans to deploy it.

Part of the conventional wisdom that surrounds WAN and application optimization products is that companies only deploy these products in a narrow and reactive fashion. That conventional wisdom may need to change. When asked about their deployment of WAN and application optimization products, two-thirds of the survey respondents indicated that their company’s overall approach was proactive which was defined to mean that their company’s deployment of these products was planned in advance as part of an overall strategy.

The next newsletter will discuss the difficulty associated with implementing and managing WAN and application optimization products.

Jim has a broad background in the IT industry. This includes serving as a software engineer, an engineering manager for high-speed data services for a major network service provider, a product manager for network hardware, a network manager at two Fortune 500 companies, and the principal of a consulting organization. In addition, Jim has created software tools for designing customer networks for a major network service provider and directed and performed market research at a major industry analyst firm. Jim’s current interests include both cloud networking and application and service delivery. Jim has a Ph.D. in Mathematics from Boston University.

More from this author