Preparing for the Journey to SASE | Juniper Global Summit
What is SASE exactly?
The Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) isn’t about a new technology, but rather the integration of existing security and networking technology to create a more reliable, modern cybersecurity architecture. Tune in as Samantha Madrid of Juniper Networks and Mauricio Sanchez of Dell’Oro Group discuss the emerging SASE market.
You’ll learn
How firewalls, secure web gateways, and SD-WAN technologies work together to form SASE solutions
What to expect in SASE over the next two years
The top strategic ideas organizations should keep in mind about SASE
Who is this for?
Host
Guest speakers
Transcript
0:02 [Music] hi mauricio thanks for joining us
0:10 hi samantha great to be here so we hear a lot about sassy and there's certainly
0:17 a lot to talk about what are you seeing and you know let's just start with how do you define it
0:23 that's a great question because we've seen the term since it came out in mid-2019 goal over
0:30 the map especially at rsa which was the last time we saw
0:35 many of each other and over the course of the last year it started to settle out and
0:42 here at the laurel we're taking a very pragmatic view in terms of how to define sassy we don't see it necessarily as a
0:48 completely new technology coming out of the blue we see it as an integration between a number of technologies that
0:54 have been around for a while in some instances uh but the
0:59 brass tacks is it it's the the combination of security technologies coming in from the firewall
1:05 side coming in from the secure web gate side coming together with a networking side
1:10 with the tip of the spear being a software defined wan so sd-wan and and these technologies coming
1:18 together in service of providing an integrated platform to provide an enterprise connectivity
1:26 and security on that top of that unified platform and so that's for us the the basis of of
1:33 of sassy and the emerging sassy market that we're starting to track no that makes totally that makes sense
1:40 and that's been what we and juniper kind of see it as as well right this this convergence
1:46 of existing technologies to to kind of give way to a new more extensible
1:51 architecture for customers so what are you hearing from your clients
1:56 when they call you talk to you about sassy what is driving their journey
2:03 great question again a year ago i was the one educating customers in terms of asking them
2:08 have you heard of sassy and probably eight out of ten times i was the person defining it for them
2:13 and telling them look this is the way the emerging technologies around sas here
2:19 are coming together that has changed substantially and the number one factor here has been
2:24 the pandemic and i hope you all are doing well in in this year in
2:30 and the pandemic has accelerated two enterprise trends that aren't necessarily new but really got to
2:36 kick with the arrival of the pandemic the first was the teleworking i don't know about
2:42 you but i've been here at home now for the last year and it's everyone has been at home right so enterprises had to pivot
2:49 from workforces in the office in a corporate setting to now having to support them somewhere
2:55 else predominantly at home so that that has really been the first inflection point about how to deal
3:02 with the uh this new uh style of of uh of corporate setting that as we
3:08 look towards the future it's really going to become the the new normal so the new term is hybrid work
3:13 and and being able to split between a corporate setting in a non-corporate setting and so sassy is one of those key
3:19 things that that has come into the conversation the second factor again going back to the pandemic has been the acceleration of
3:25 digitalization of the enterprise so going into the pandemic a fair number of the enterprises
3:30 were already far into their into their uh digitalization becoming fully digital mobile friendly
3:36 being able to do things on the internet and with the pandemic everything basically went online right so
3:42 everything had to be conducted online via zoom via mobile phones via an internet transaction
3:48 so that's been another um big kicker is now that the application infrastructures
3:54 as they move to the cloud it's really causing a re-thinking about well how does the networking and security
4:01 architectures need to evolve in support of now the internet being
4:06 part of the backbone being where the data lives where the applications live so those are the two factors that
4:11 have really kicked into gear why people are thinking about sassy and how that's now going to become part
4:17 of their long-term i.t um uh conversation and and samantha let me
4:22 let me uh from from now's perspective obviously i've given a pretty uh general
4:28 perspective but let me turn it turn it around and ask you the same question so you just you just gave your sassy
4:33 strategy in your keynote and i know juniper has a wide customer base that includes service providers
4:39 enterprising and in the cloud uh customers what are you hearing around sassy we'd love to
4:44 i'd love to hear what what uh your perspectives are well um okay i guess it's my turn to be in the hot seat um
4:51 so so you know what we're hearing a lot about transformation and i love that you use that word because that's really what
4:57 it's about and it's the transformation of an experience and for us when we're when we're talking
5:05 to customers when we're hearing from them what their care abouts are it's about how do i engage how can i
5:11 have a better experience for my customers let me give you a perfect example when you think about how we used to share
5:18 documents started off we shared documents with one another with a usb stick then it went to we started sharing it
5:25 over email and then it shifted to applications like dropbox and now we're using o650365
5:33 and using you know the google suite of applications and so the technology the idea of a
5:40 document hasn't changed it's how we interact with it it's how we exchange it and it's that
5:45 overall experience so for us you know one of the things that we hear most about is how do i manage this how do i
5:53 you know take this transformation um to throughout my organization and so for us
5:58 it's about anchoring it in that experience and that management experience specifically because we're not talking necessarily
6:05 about new technologies to your point right it's taking what's primarily been on premise and and delivering it to the
6:12 cloud but what needs to change and what must change what's guiding our strategy
6:17 is that experience is providing that bridge to what you've been doing currently and frankly will continue to
6:24 do in that hybrid world on premise and kind of bringing that together
6:29 with your transformation to how you are going to interact with your customers your users
6:35 and really that's what i'm seeing that's what i'm hearing and that's why i'm really excited about what we at juniper
6:41 can do for for our customers and partners um today and in the future so i'm gonna put you back in the hot
6:47 seat now [Laughter] i had a chuckle there samantha when you said that you used to share things over
6:54 usb see i'm old enough to share over floppies right so i'm not going to do punch cards but hey i i i
7:00 my first computer was floppy based and that's how i exchanged games with my friends at school it was a here's here's a set of floppy disks so
7:07 there you go i won't confirm or deny that that was also my first experience
7:12 but let's just say we'll start with usb okay very good fair enough um
7:19 okay so we know there's a transformation we know we are talking about how we interact
7:25 with it with the technologies so thinking about market adoption what should we be expecting
7:31 over the next 24 to 48 months in terms of sassy growth that's a billion dollar question and
7:37 literally is a billion dollar questions because of the fact that that in our modeling so here at the lower we love our our numbers
7:44 uh we see the opportunity growing very quickly here in terms of the integration
7:49 of those three sets of technology baskets that i enumerated so again firewall secure web
7:54 gateways and sd-wan networking technologies coming together to form a sassy solution or being able to
8:01 service assassin architecture so in the bigger scheme of things in 2019 those three markets
8:08 consisted about about 15 billion dollars and and that's what i tell my clients is
8:13 that well if these three technology baskets came to in service of unified network and security connectivity
8:19 we're looking at an opportunity at the at the top end of nearly 15 billion dollars but i think
8:25 uh the integration and the rate of adoption is a key factor in our modeling that is
8:30 tel as says to us or told us um and where we concluded that where
8:36 things will land in the next uh three to four years is probably a thirty to forty percent in
8:42 the um in that fifteen billion dollar figure so in terms of enterprises truly developing and
8:49 integrating and deploying an integrated networking and security solution we're probably looking
8:55 north of five billion so somewhere in that five to six billion dollar range is the value of the technology the
9:02 sassy solutions that will will get deployed and longer term the we expect consolidation
9:09 another question that comes up is do are all of these three technologies going to integrate and always and become into this massive
9:15 chassis market and the answer is is that i don't believe so right so there will still be some
9:20 some customers who may choose to not deploy sassy in this unified
9:26 networking and security style and so the sd-wan the firewall markets and secure webgate markets will
9:31 will continue to to exist perhaps in long-tail dynamics but in terms of sassy it's gonna it's
9:37 quite hot and growing from um the tens of millions to probably uh uh hundreds of millions and low
9:45 hundreds of millions today to north of uh five to six billion in the next uh several years yeah i can totally see
9:52 that i mean and i think there is going to be a phased approach and into your point right you're always going to have that that on premise
9:59 um instance it's not a it's not a one or the other it's it's definitely has to be an and that's
10:05 something we talk about here it's like it's an and strategy it's not an ore um so as we kind of think about what's to
10:12 come um in terms of this kind of convergence what are some of the uh
10:18 kind of strategic you know top of mind things i.t organizations should keep in mind uh
10:24 related to sassy well i think you hit at the top level
10:29 use the word that i want to reuse which is the the notion of transformation and and the fact that the workflows
10:36 are going to change and the way that different teams interact with with one another will need to change
10:42 because predicated and tasky is the fact that it's it's a much more uh user-centric
10:48 application data centric model to be able to deploy networking and security and so that means that that the the
10:54 teams uh the networking teams the application teams and the data teams and the security teams will have to
11:00 collaborate in in new ways that that perhaps um they haven't historically had to work together so as enterprises
11:09 jump into this into thinking about sassy they need to be thinking about well how is it that then my workflows
11:15 and my teams are going to be able to uh are going to interact to be able then to as you pointed out be able to deliver
11:23 that experience the outcome that that or we're looking to to
11:28 to provide with the sassy to be able to support users and applications that may be
11:33 anywhere distributed across the internet and be able then to create this virtual corporate
11:39 set of controls to provide connectivity and security so that's what i would say is to to any
11:46 organization is is think ahead and think holistically as you approach the question since there will
11:53 be a lot of ripple effect across the teams and to the workflows wholeheartedly agree well thank you for
12:00 joining us um marito it's always a pleasure uh for you know the discussion and continuing on the topic of sassy i do
12:07 want to turn it over to you though and introduce a couple customers that we have joining us today
12:13 i have dennis doing from the city of philadelphia welcome dennis and we have
12:19 jason philp from beeline both of our customers here would love to get their
12:24 perspectives as well and so i'll turn it over to you hi dennis hi jason thank you for joining me today to talk about
12:30 your own journeys as they may be unfolding around sassy
12:36 i've got a couple questions to be able to go through and be able to hit on hot topics that i
12:41 think our audience would like to hear about as you uh are on this journey starting with you
12:48 dennis i'd like to ask you what's driving your journey to sassy and why is it that you're
12:54 looking to make this transition now sure it's a great question the pandemic
12:59 over the last 12 months has really pushed us to think about
13:05 what services we can provide to remote users that are not necessarily connected to our network all the time
13:11 and we're not in a position today to have an always-on vpn with the roughly 30 000 users that we have currently
13:18 working so for us you know we have a immediate need for a cloud proxy solution so we can
13:26 have not only an auditing trail but also provide you know endpoint protection to what
13:31 these individuals are doing uh remotely while they're working on city-owned hardware and could be
13:36 interfacing with city networks that you know are essentially applications that are not tied directly back over the vpn but
13:42 are are cloud-facing that is our main concern right now i see
13:48 so definitely pandemic has kicked everything into gear how about jason how about you jason how
13:53 about on your side what's what has been driving you to uh embrace and start this uh sassy journey and why
14:00 now sure i mean pandemic was obviously a pretty big one for us
14:06 but on top of that we seem to be growing a lot more internationally so it's that ability to get the end user
14:14 exactly what they need that similar experience from being within an office uh when they're working at home or
14:20 internationally or or pretty much wherever um that's what's really been most important to us
14:28 i see well both since it seems like a pandemic uh kicked things into gear and i'm sure you
14:33 both did heroics at the beginning as things overnight shifted dramatically
14:39 at least what i hear now is that people are coming up to to um for breather and being able to
14:45 think about the long term and so i'd like to ask a question and again starting with you dennis what's your time frame
14:52 right i'm sure that you know you're thinking about what's the long-term implication what's this journey uh look like and so help us understand
14:58 what's your timeline and how long do you estimate that it'll take you to get to the end state sure
15:04 realistically we have a need today so our goal is to have
15:10 these solutions rolled out to majority of our remote workforce hopefully within the next six months and ideally we would
15:16 like to transition as much as we can within 12 months to you know provide these better services
15:23 i see so that's the full 30 dollar or not thirty thousand dollars but thirty thousand um count employees that uh are
15:31 uh on this part of this journey in the next year yes wow that's a that's a that's amazing
15:38 to go on that accelerated pace and i guess uh switching to you
15:43 jason what does end state success look like for you and and what are the roadblocks you see
15:50 that need to be overcome i wish i could tell you what the end state fully looked like at this
15:55 point right um i think uh right now it's primarily about feature parity
16:01 um you know how do we get that same feature set uh that we offer to our users in the
16:07 office wherever they are um be it ids inspection data loss protection that
16:13 sort of thing things that we've taken for granted for a year because somebody's always sitting in a in a single seat um has now kind of been
16:21 hooked on its end and and pushed out to the end user where we don't have that same sort of control as
16:28 we would in an office definitely some of the roadblocks we're running into is is sort of finding that those pieces
16:34 and how they fit together and interoperate with each other and a single source or maybe
16:41 one or two different sources that work well together within the industry and that will be
16:46 compatible as we move forward with things i see i see and that mirrors uh what
16:52 i've been hearing from some of my conversations with and customers the the end users of this
16:58 technology is how do you go from something that may be of on-prem and that
17:03 you can touch and feel and i call it the sheet metal era to now it being kind of knobs and levers that
17:08 are on the website that may feel very foreign to the network administrators that uh again coming from
17:15 the era of being able to um touch the equipment be able to manipulate the
17:20 knobs and leverage and get a lot of rich functionality so i don't think you should count yourself being an exception to this and
17:28 more so part of the larger group um next question again um for you jason
17:34 is how do you ensure that your applications are as secure as possible as you as you
17:40 move to the cloud you noted that that some of the challenges that you'll receive and and so what's the strategy
17:46 that that you've been embracing the scale to scale out uh on that cloud-based architecture and to make sure that
17:52 that uh you know the security and and all the trends on the connectivity to those applications
17:58 are preserved yeah you know it's really uh a matter of picking off
18:06 uh small enough chunks that we can digest in in kind of one bite right be it uh you know one day we might
18:13 be well we we'd be looking at an idea solution um and then you know the parity between
18:20 is this going to be the same when you're dealing with a data center versus cloud is also important to us
18:26 um so we've been shifting a lot of things from a traditional centralized point out to one or multiple
18:33 clouds to provide these services and you know some of the challenges we've run into
18:39 around that is where is the data actually stored within a cloud because when you're working with
18:45 the decentralization of it a user in the united kingdom needs the same services
18:50 but that data can't necessarily come back to the united states and then back out to the internet and
18:55 vice versa in order to to make that happen it has to stay regionally in a lot of cases
19:02 you're absolutely right that adds a whole new level of complexity to that that uh almost a pandora's boxing some
19:09 regards from a regulatory compliancy perspective and and the sovereignty rules that may
19:14 come and come into play so again very echoing a lot of the things that i've been um hearing that
19:22 people have overcome them so i don't want folks that i don't think i think even you would say that that uh slowly
19:28 but surely like you said it's incrementally and this being a journey
19:33 that it's not going to be us it's not a slam dunk it's not a question that that you can go from
19:39 overnight addressing all the all the all the things that need to come into play
19:44 um switching back to to you dennis and uh i'd like to understand how you
19:50 planning to address the unified policy management for both the networking and security and
19:56 how is it going to work across cloud and in the on-prem environments sure ideally with um security director
20:03 being in the cloud we could import all our existing infrastructure even some of
20:08 the firewalls that we necessarily didn't have a security director import them all in also intertwine that
20:15 with our jims environment so that we have you know the authentication not only based
20:20 off you know the old-school source and destination but we can tie everything back to active directory and then also have the advanced services
20:26 like skytp and ips and for us possible corsair is key in trying to run that all for one
20:32 centralized location so it brings everything together so we have true visibility into everything that's going across the
20:39 wire well great answer and i say that great answer because you hit on a number of
20:45 things that that were under the hood to when i when sam samantha was asking me about the changes
20:52 and the prerequisites for um assassin's deployment so you hit on the fact that it is
20:58 unified policy the fact that the identity side needs to be thought of and being able to stitch these various
21:05 walls together that may have not been stitched in the way that they need to in order in service of a this distributed
21:10 disaggregated environments that we find ourselves in so kudos to you that you're
21:16 on you're on the tip of the sphere on uh on figuring things out uh
21:21 now let me switch it here a little bit to uh the vendor side and and being able to
21:28 find that part right because i think i think when people enterprises undertake these sorts of of
21:34 journeys they lean heavily on their vendor base and so uh i'd like to ask both of you
21:41 starting with you dennis how do you find an assassin provider to partner with you on the sassy journey
21:47 sure it's not a great question for us our relationships are key and we already have a great relationship
21:54 with with juniper not only from you know the the harbor side but also from professional services
22:01 and support side now i can't really think of any instances where they haven't you know
22:06 gone above it and beyond you know our needs so that's really important and i have a great relationship with my
22:12 upper management so when we when we make a recommendation or i want to introduce a new technology or a new
22:18 platform you know the proof is in the pudding right they already have you know the experience from our current
22:24 vendors and see how well they perform and how we were able to mitigate some you know risks in the past or some
22:30 vulnerabilities and you know specifically what policy force or what that's done for us so it's not difficult for me to uh convince
22:37 management that this is the direction we should go and they usually buy in pretty quickly i see i see
22:45 and um what about you jason what what's what's your thoughts on how do you or have you selected a
22:51 assassin provider to help you on your sassy journey you know we kind of echo what uh dennis
22:57 said um with the addition that what we find with the vendor is it's very important
23:04 uh that they're willing to work with us and listen to kind of the issues we're running into within our deployment
23:12 right it seems like there's always somebody that's got something different happening and and to be able to have
23:18 that back and forth that we have with juniper has been a huge advantage um the willingness to
23:27 acknowledge that a feature is necessary and and many often times we'll see it in
23:33 probably a few weeks to a couple months that'll be rolled into one of the releases
23:40 that's great to hear so that that definitely echoes what uh leadership vendors need to do which is listening to customers right
23:46 and i i don't think vendors who uh force um their technologies and solutions on
23:52 their customers necessarily when in in the long haul it's the people who listen and interact and treat their
23:58 customers as as true partners so that's good to hear um let me shift it yet again
24:06 to a more of a technology almost philosophical question in terms of organizational structure and
24:13 and this question is for you dennis is in um i'm sure that sassy is starting to um
24:20 feel like change in your organization and they may be facing uh obstacles and people
24:27 refusing to embrace that change so what is it that you're doing to evangelize the shift away from a static perimeter
24:36 which has been with us for decades and the and the architectures relying on
24:42 a heavy branch to go into this new style that is much more cloud-centric more much more
24:48 amorphous distributed and what are the what are the key things that you've been undertaking to to make this change
24:53 sure so operationally um consolidation and integration into more of the cloud
25:01 service that can touch more of our environment more easily more accessible and also for these remote users
25:08 for us it saves a lot of time so know operationally instead of us
25:14 having to touch individual devices or knowing the different environments you know having that one centralized location not only for
25:20 you know configuration and policy management but also for auditing you know and then integration back into our existing sim
25:27 you know it just makes us more streamlined so we can be more uh proactive instead of reactive all the
25:33 time and you know my team being you know the network side and the security side and
25:38 inner workings between them now you know you don't have to jump between multiple paint and glass
25:43 everything's in a single point so you know the information is more readily available to us when we actually need to you know look at something
25:50 i see so it feels like it boils down to a um almost a productivity
25:57 argument that the it teams become more productive
26:02 and so you with the same set of resources you could do more and be able to address a larger um
26:09 environment and so i guess that has been the primary
26:15 way have there been any other things that that come to mind beyond the the
26:20 um the productivity argument uh or has it been primarily just that no and it's
26:27 it's also you know the feature set so you know there are products there or services are available to us today
26:33 with these you know sassy platforms that we didn't have you know yesterday or six months or a year ago right we didn't
26:39 have that ability to touch and control some of these remote endpoints without having other
26:44 infrastructure in place so ultimately you know budgetary-wise we're going to be able to provide better
26:50 services for less money which is always you know key tougher management yes
26:55 and again it all goes back to how do you raise the bar in that user experience and make sure that at the same time it's a it's a win-win
27:02 if you're able to reduce costs right and and do more with less capital or
27:10 other expenditures i guess same question for you jason is that then i i i assume that you've been facing the
27:17 same sort of of headwinds if i can call him that that dennis has so how is it that you've been
27:22 able to get by and from your management and across your organization
27:27 you know pandemic did a lot to removing a lot of those roadblocks for us um there's obviously a
27:35 financial aspect to it right um we are seeing cost savings and increased feature sets
27:42 similar to dennis one of the problems we're actually having is uh slowing things down slightly
27:49 because of the demand to move so quickly and to get everything out there at once um we have
27:55 big concerns within the organization um that things will get missed and
28:01 sort of that uh rapid uh deployment uh and that maybe a feature that was
28:07 critical to a subset of users won't exist right so we have concerns such as those i know i
28:12 brought up sort of the data protection concerns right here um there's you know different legal and
28:18 contractual issues around compliance are are kind of always at the top and the forefront of uh everyone's minds
28:25 but you know to to sell it to say hey we need to do this um you know it's kind of selling itself
28:31 right now yes i i heard the other day a great tagline that uh
28:37 no one should let the crisis go to waste right so the pandemic's clearly a crisis that has
28:43 provided uh air cover to uh be able to infect a lot of change that
28:48 everyone's probably been or a lot of people have been thinking about but now it's perfect time to to embrace this change
28:55 and so continuing this theme of change and changing the organization i
29:00 want to get a little more tactical and question to you dennis isn't uh are there particular things that you're
29:06 doing to prepare the team for this transition and and can you hit on anything that that
29:12 uh you're doing to to make this easier for the team yeah i think that the um integration of
29:20 more of our devices into security director is definitely assisting and uh you know when we make
29:26 that transition to put it in the cloud it just be more streamlined so it's really getting the the network team
29:33 to more work with the security guys uh just to get a better understanding of where
29:39 things need to be you know restricted and uh you know i always felt that the the best security people were network
29:45 people first so now there's a little bit of cross training going on so both guys are getting
29:51 a little bit of experience on you know what the other teams are up to so it just at the end of the day it's going to
29:56 provide a better experience for our constituents and our users i see i see no i'm just laughing because
30:03 at least i i've been in networking 20 years and most of those in security and i would say to myself or
30:08 introduce myself as being the networking geek with a security bent right because like you i think a lot of people
30:15 that i run across in the industry did do networking at some point in their career and then pivoted to
30:20 to um jason same question for you in terms of preparing the teams
30:25 your teams uh what are you doing to prepare for this transition
30:30 oh we we throw our teams under the bus pretty quickly right um yeah you know they're always
30:36 kind of chomping at the bit to improve and make their own lives easier um so they're willing to
30:42 to take that sort of guinea pig role in the transition and and really deep
30:48 dive into the technology and learn what it's about i find it helps a lot even when we're rolling it to the end users afterwards
30:56 um because uh you know my team's familiar with the underpinnings and how things are actually working the networking firewall
31:03 sites um so being able to have that that confidence as a team
31:08 to explain it to uh who's who's actually receiving and using the
31:13 technology as part of the rollout uh really assists in making things go
31:18 smoothly i see i know i think that's a very good approach to to be able to eat your own dog food
31:25 before you um and get it get all the kinks worked out before you push it out to the wider
31:30 community next question is for you dennis and i'd
31:36 like to understand this how do you see your sas implementation affecting the user experience
31:41 for administrators and end users sure i i think that for the the users on my
31:47 teams uh operation things will be a lot easier because it will be centralized there's this one you know
31:54 pane of glass that they have to access for a majority of tools that today are for the most part separate and maybe not
32:00 the same vendor uh proceeds for example ultimately the the better we can do our job is going to
32:06 make the constitutional life easier uh specifically for the you know i keep going back to the webber
32:13 cloud-based proxy today our environment is a mix right we have some legacy
32:19 gear from a different vendor and then we have our ewf and uwf works fantastic but again you have to be dependent for
32:25 that to function right and a lot of the complaints we have from individuals are you know when they connect to our vpn
32:32 yeah maybe the pac file's not working correctly or something else somebody on checks you know the proxy so they
32:38 have to toggle back and forth when everybody is on the same platform you know uniformly across the enterprise
32:44 then that goes away so ultimately they have a better experience and you know the advanced features like dlp and stuff that will come in the
32:51 future we just provide a safer environment so at the end of the day you know our data that we have to meet these
32:57 compliance standards for we feel better to safer and ultimately you know we're just providing you know
33:02 services to the constituents or you know assistance so that anything we can do to streamline
33:07 our operations provides a better product for them i see no that that uh that makes sense
33:14 and and i think you would agree that the last thing you want is people figuring out that if they dislike
33:20 the solution how to get around it right and so that being able to get to a user experience that
33:25 that meets our expectations while at the same time meeting corporate networking and security policies is
33:32 paramount um jason the next question i have is uh how do
33:39 you plan to deploy a sassy strategy while attempting to remove complexity from your environment
33:45 or trying to introduce even more change right so what are the what are the things that that you're undertaking
33:52 yeah so when we uh select a specific piece to migrate it usually is based on uh
34:00 can we take two or three divergent products uh that we're using now and make that consolidation on on the cloud
34:07 platform and then from that aspect you know what are we gaining with that consolidation are we just consolidating because
34:14 uh you know it's a single point of failure or or support or you know are we actually
34:20 gaining additional features and i think kind of what we found um most recently with our deployment of a
34:25 lot of the miss solution is with the the deployment of the centralized management and the cloud
34:31 solution we can get our help desk and and service people into those systems and get them that
34:37 visibility that they need as part of the deployment um kind of bring them in up front with
34:43 what's what traditionally has been a networking role within the organization and then they're
34:49 able to service the the users the customers and the clients much quicker without having to
34:55 necessarily escalate every issue up to the network team or the security team for investigation initially
35:01 so we're really seeing that that improvement of ticket quality uh information and
35:09 time to resolution as part of the transition process wow so it almost sounds like then this
35:15 change is having that benefit in making your your environment and like
35:20 you said meantime the resolution is improving those those metrics so
35:26 that's quite impressive that it's already having that positive side effect because usually i think when a lot of enterprises
35:33 embrace new technologies or new workflows it usually has the opposite effect right is that that all of a sudden you find
35:38 yourself um chasing bugs and and your ticket time start to get quite quite long so um kudos to
35:46 you as well to being able to to uh knock two birds with one one stone uh so we're getting here to uh the final
35:53 question and the end of our time together and and the final question starting with with you dennis is
35:59 um do you have current investments that you're looking to leverage as part of this transition
36:04 and are you taking inventory of your current network before making a sassy investment
36:09 absolutely yeah so yeah our full plan is to utilize our existing security products
36:15 so you know our 300 so srx's that are deployed and then you know also intertwining that with um
36:22 our national issue and moving that policy out to the other cloud you know using the srx's
36:28 as you know the enforcement point for the network and um yeah absolutely and uh it should
36:34 just help us provide a better service to our customer let's see and same question for for you
36:40 uh jason are you do you have current investments and uh that you're going to leverage and
36:45 are you taking current stock of your environment before making an investment
36:51 yeah absolutely and uh you know we made the decision a while ago to go primarily juniper for
36:56 our edge uh within our data centers and offices so it's really made that sort of transition
37:02 to the sd-wan pieces a lot easier on us just because of the the capabilities and
37:09 such that are built into the platform we're also you know looking as dennis is to start moving some of our
37:15 uh like security director pieces and such into that cloud management
37:21 to sort of centralize that or you know in a way decentralize it out of a single data center or multiple data centers
37:28 into the cloud solution um help with that availability and logging and such
37:35 i see and and i think both of you are echoing that there's a lot of technology that's
37:40 already deployed that in in the um ideal cases to take advantage of as you move into
37:47 these new architectures in the sassy style i think that's a very prudent and pragmatic move
37:52 because the last thing that your management probably wants to hear is like we need to do a forklift upgrade and rip
37:58 and replace and everything that we deployed isn't going to get used it tends to not go down well
38:04 with the uh financial folks let alone your um the the the ceos uh so kudos to give to you guys
38:10 that uh already thinking about how to take advantage of what's what you have there and being able to bring it into this new
38:15 style of of architecture and and networking and security connectivity
38:21 uh well with that i want to thank you for um taking my questions and uh hopefully
38:28 you will have good luck in continuing your sassy journey and we hope to again see you here before long to get an update about
38:34 where you are and and uh how things have gone so thank you again so i too want to thank
38:40 uh dennis and jason for joining us today for your candor for you know just being open and
38:45 transparent with us about how you are viewing the sassy journey what challenges and how you're thinking
38:50 about things moving forward i certainly um learned a lot from from your discussion and maurizio thank you
38:57 uh for facilitating the discussion i think you're touching on all the right questions i
39:02 know that i'm hearing from customers as well and and you know just from our conversations that you and
39:07 i have had previously so again thank you everybody and i hope everybody tuning in gain a little insight as well and we
39:14 look forward to continuing the conversation with all of you