Sunday, May 18, 2025

SD-WAN: Threat or Opportunity for Telcos?

Why is SD-WAN so disruptive? As an overlay technology, it enables customers to rapidly and non-disruptively augment or replace their MPLS networks with any form of Internet connectivity.

It provides visibility into all applications, and the capability to centrally-control all WAN traffic. It ensures end-users are satisfied with consistent and enhanced application performance. Finally, it can dramatically lower connectivity, equipment and network administration costs by up to 90%.

But is SD-WAN a friend, or a foe, of the telco?

Doug Farndale
Doug Farndale

At first glance, it could easily be viewed as a competitive threat. After all, the objective of most implementations of an SD-WAN by enterprises is to offset the cost, rigidity and lack of control typically associated with MPLS. And, for most service providers, MPLS is a huge source of revenue.

However, if you look a bit closer, one could argue that SD-WAN could very well become the telco’s best friend. First, you start with reality. The rise of SD-WAN is already happening among global enterprises that want to leverage broadband Internet to augment or replace their existing MPLS connectivity.

Companies like memory products leader Kingston Technology and global manufacturer Interroll have already started to “broadband their WAN” with SD-WAN technology, and are now benefitting from a lower cost and more agile network for their operations in Asia and across the globe.

With most telcos continually looking to differentiate their business and provide value to their customer base, SD-WAN can be their new, differentiated solution, delivering SD-WAN as a managed solution or as part of a network functions virtualization (NFV) offering.

SD-WAN technology gives the telco a flexible software platform for delivering enterprise customers with a variety of virtualized network functions. By leveraging SD-WAN technology, telcos can offer these differentiated services to customers, maximize operational efficiencies, and introduce new revenue-generating services faster and easier than ever before. It can also set them apart from service providers who resist the SD-WAN trend or are trying to derail it.

If companies are already moving to an SD-WAN or possibly a hybrid WAN where they augment MPLS with broadband, which provider do you think has the advantage? The one who can deliver a solution that fits a need, or the one clinging to the old way of doing things and resisting the evolution of the market?

By adding SD-WAN to the mix, it can translate into building a customized WAN service portfolio that includes managed WAN optimization, virtual private networking (VPN), compression/de-duplication, and path conditioning services.

When leveraging the right, complete solution, an SD-WAN solution can provide automated licensing to help get new and innovative services to market quickly, which in turn means a faster time to revenue. Other benefits include per-instance tracking and metering of end-user customer usage to allow for easy and accurate billing.

The bottom line is that the rapid adoption of cloud technologies and software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications are leading enterprise customers to use network resources in new ways. For telcos looking to augment their existing business with new and innovative managed services, or NFV offerings, SD-WAN is a logical choice, not something to fear and/or resist.

 

Cat Yong
Cat Yong
Cat Yong is Editor-in-Chief of Enterprise IT News, a regional news website which began in Malaysia circa 2011. A common theme in all of her work - opinions, analysis, features and more - is how technology and innovation drives business and outcomes. A career tech journalist for 22 years, her work has evolved to also encompass narratives of tech powering human potential.

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