Automation projects: A good time to switch vendors?

While they don’t generally do wholesale rip-and-replace, enterprises working on network automation initiatives confront factors that may result in choosing new equipment providers, at least for segments of the network

Credit: Dreamstime

Enterprise network automation initiatives often focus on automating brownfield infrastructure, and many commercial automation tools devote significant resources to communicating with network devices via legacy interfaces, especially proprietary command line interfaces (CLIs).

However, our research shows that network automation projects often lead enterprises to adopt new infrastructure from new vendors.

Most of this new vendor adoption is probably isolated to portions of the network, not a wide-scale rip-and-replace of existing infrastructure.

There is a variety of reasons why enterprises might adopt new infrastructure vendors during an automation project, three of which are reviewed here.

Network vendors sell proprietary automation tools

First, many network infrastructure vendors are developing automation technology aimed primarily, if not solely, at their own products, rather than multi-vendor environments.

While most enterprises use two or three different automation tools in their initiatives, 42 per cent say that an automation tool aimed at a single vendor is part of their strategy. In fact, 26 per cent said a single-vendor automation tool is the most important part of their automation technology strategy.

Thus, if a network team determines that a non-incumbent vendor is providing native automation capabilities that best address its requirements, a switch to that vendor may be inevitable, even if it requires an expensive replacement of an incumbent infrastructure vendor.

Embedded zero-touch provisioning

EMA’s research also found that much network hardware with embedded zero-touch-provisioning (ZTP) features are important to many network automation initiatives. Ninety-one per cent of surveyed IT professionals expressed interest in ZTP features, and 39 per cent said these features are critical to their automation initiatives.

The most important ZTP feature, according EMA’s survey, is software-image auto-updates and verifications. Many enterprises are also interested in being able to custom provision and configure devices via scripts and the ability to unify ZTP network provisioning with compute and storage infrastructure in data centres.

Not every network vendor offers embedded ZTP features on their platforms, and most only offer them on their latest generation products.

Enterprises with older equipment may switch to a new vendor during a refresh, and ZTP features may be a contributing or leading driver of that vendor switch.

Network-vendor device APIs

A third possible driver of new-vendor adoption is device APIs. Fifty-two percent of enterprises in EMA’s survey said that network-device APIs are critical to their network-automation initiative.

API quality can determine how well network-automation tools can drive change in network devices and extract important data from them. If an enterprise is building its own automation tools internally with Python scripts and open source software, good APIs become essential.

Unfortunately, 95 per cent of survey participants reported having difficulty with their network vendors’ device APIs. The biggest issue was cost; 33 per cent said their vendor was charging an additional license fee for API use. Twenty-eight per cent complained that APIs provided limited access to device data, and 27 per cent complained of poor or outdated API quality.

This is by no means an exhaustive list of reasons why an automation project might push an enterprise to work with a new network-infrastructure vendor, but it does offer some clues why it might be a good idea to do so.

There are many other factors to consider, including budget, automation business goals, and automation use cases. EMA does not necessarily endorse the idea of vendor replacement during an automation project.

In fact, such a change will probably make a project more expensive and riskier. However, it is something to keep in mind as one is researching technology strategies.

Enterprise Management Associates took a look at enterprise network automation initiatives and found that 89 per cent of them contribute to IT an organisation’s decision to purchase products from a new network infrastructure vendor.

This article by EMA’s research director for network management, Shamus McGillicuddy, reviews three reasons enterprises might do so based on EMA’s recent report Enterprise Network Automation for 2020 and Beyond.”

For the report, 250 IT professionals directly involved in a formal network-automation initiative were surveyed, and one-on-one interviews were conducted with six such stakeholders.

Join the newsletter!

Or

Sign up to gain exclusive access to email subscriptions, event invitations, competitions, giveaways, and much more.

Membership is free, and your security and privacy remain protected. View our privacy policy before signing up.

Error: Please check your email address.

Tags Networking

More about EnterpriseEnterprise Management Associates

Show Comments
[]