July 12, 2018 By BlueAlly
Continually Evolving its Firewall-Native SD-WAN Features Based on Customer Feedback, Fortinet Provides Secure SD-WAN for Three Distinct Use Cases
SUNNYVALE, Calif., July 12, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --
John Maddison, SVP of products and solutions at Fortinet
“The enterprise branch is undergoing intense digital transformation and we’re seeing application consumption models rapidly move to the cloud. As our customers move toward direct internet access, they understand the growing need for next-generation firewall capabilities and high SSL inspection performance. To make sure customers realize the benefits of SD-WAN without compromising security, Fortinet has evolved our advanced SD-WAN features in the latest FortiOS releases. This focus on secure SD-WAN is clearly resonating with the hundreds of customers and partners who are taking advantage of Fortinet’s unique combination of next-generation firewall and SD-WAN in the same offering, managed through a single centralized controller.”
News Summary
Fortinet® (NASDAQ:FTNT), a global leader in broad, integrated and automated cybersecurity solutions, today announced it has gained significant traction in the SD-WAN marketplace by delivering a comprehensive
SD-WAN solution that provides both SD-WAN and security functionality in a single integrated offering for distributed enterprise branches.
The growing appeal of
SD-WAN technologies has caught the attention of the IT world and many are realizing the benefits of efficient cloud adoption, broad application visibility and lowered operating costs. But without the right solution, the speed and agility of SD-WAN can come at the expense of security. To respond to this pervasive industry challenge, Fortinet produced the industry’s first NGFW-centric approach to SD-WAN by tightly integrating SD-WAN functionality into the
FortiGate Next-Generation Firewall. This approach produces a compelling solution that combines the increased scalability, flexibility, simplicity and cost savings of SD-WAN with industry-leading security protection.
Hundreds of
customers from around the world have already chosen Fortinet for their secure SD-WAN solution. Amongst this group, Fortinet has seen three distinct use cases emerge that tackle the most difficult challenges in the distributed enterprise branch. In response to customer feedback, the latest updates to the FortiOS operating system have directly addressed these issues.
Use Case #1: Digital Transformation at Enterprise Branch
In the wake of digital transformation, enterprise branch customers face a unique set of security challenges as cloud adoption directly connects their network to the internet. In this environment, security becomes increasingly important but also increasingly challenging. To solve this issue, Fortinet’s secure SD-WAN solution combines security and SD-WAN cloud adoption features together in one solution on a single console to secure SaaS applications and multi-cloud access from the branch. In this environment, IT teams are able to map WAN resources directly to business function, making the network more efficient and responsive, but also making application awareness even more important for the health of the network. Recent updates to FortiOS allow IT professionals to choose from over 3,000 applications and easily see how many applications are supported, the prioritization of applications based on business criticality, and affords the ability to look deep into individual applications in order to set different policies for sub-applications. This level of granular insight helps enterprises to better allocate resources to increase productivity and reduce business costs.
Use Case #2: Reduce WAN OPEX Spending While Maintaining High Application Performance
As bandwidth requirements increase and OPEX budget requirements grow for IT, many customers are migrating away from MPLS and turning toward SD-WAN to reduce OPEX spending. As customers adopt low cost WAN connectivity, they often run into issues with application performance. To address this issue, automated multi-path intelligence, a key feature of FortiOS for SD-WAN, significantly reduces this time by selecting the most efficient route for SaaS, Voice over IP (VoIP) and other business-critical traffic through the tracking of granular WAN path information, such as latency, jitter and packet loss.
Use Case #3: Consolidation of Networking and Security
Without an integrated solution, IT staff is required to manage both SD-WAN optimization functions and security functions using two different interfaces. This separation of network and security operations is not only labor-intensive, it also makes it difficult to tie things like traditionally network-centric issues such as performance and functionality to critical security and data inspection. To solve this issue, Fortinet has simplified monitoring of SD-WAN deployments with a single-pane-of-glass view for centralized management, configuration and monitoring tools for both SD-WAN and security. As the leader in the enterprise firewall, as well as UTM market, Fortinet has a long history of understanding the needs of our customers from both a security and networking perspective. Fortinet is uniquely positioned to provide a comprehensive secure SD-WAN solution that consolidates several point products at the branch, including routing, WAN optimization, SD-WAN and security elements, into a single device.
Fortinet takes a customer- and partner-centric approach to improving its SD-WAN functionality and allowing customers to rapidly adopt cloud applications while keeping security a top priority. Through recent updates to the FortiOS operating system that make SD-WAN a native component of the
Fortinet Security Fabric and the
FortiGate Next-Generation Firewall, Fortinet gives customers the right tools for undergoing digital transformation without the security risks inherent in other solutions that don’t take a security-first approach. Three distinct use cases and hundreds of satisfied customers prove that Fortinet has the security and networking expertise to tackle the industry’s toughest challenges in implementing SD-WAN.