IT Brief New Zealand - Technology news for CIOs & IT decision-makers
Story image
Wise Group selects Kordia for 54 site SD-WAN rollout
Mon, 11th Jun 2018
FYI, this story is more than a year old

Wise Group, one of the largest providers of mental health and wellbeing services in New Zealand, has selected mission-critical technology solutions provider, Kordia, to roll out its new software-defined wide area networks (SD-WAN) throughout New Zealand.

A long-time user of Kordia's connectivity services, Wise Group is implementing SD-WAN to simplify the management and operation of its wide area network (WAN) across the organisation's 54 New Zealand sites, as well as to reduce its wide area networking costs by up to 50%.

SD-WAN will also increase the overall flexibility, performance and capabilities of Wise Group's Internet-based applications and services – something its team is highly reliant on in order to provide much-needed support to those in need.

Kordia head of product Murray Goodman says SD-WAN appeals to companies with distributed operations and mobile workers.

He states, “We've followed the development of SD-WAN for some time and for companies that have embraced the cloud, such as Wise Group, this is a very good fit.

Wise Group's SD-WAN is based on Cisco Meraki equipment, which is installed at the company's premises around the country.

Goodman says the rollout will happen rapidly, with devices either installed by Kordia technicians or if preferred, by the customer's own IT staff backed by Kordia's on-call expertise.

He explains, “There are a number of options for the SD-WAN, including fully-owned and managed, partially self-managed, and fully outsourced. Wise Group, with a mature IT department, has opted for partially self-managed, with our engineers providing additional expertise as and when required.

With ‘in-house' management of the SD-WAN, Wise GM Mark Thorn points out that changes can be made rapidly, without a formal change control process being logged with Kordia as was previously necessary with SecureWAN.

Thorn states, “Along with a concurrent rollout of UFB access, our users are seeing massive gains in the performance and responsiveness of their applications.

“The beauty of the SD-WAN is that it is a lightweight, lower-cost service; previously, users had a convoluted pipe to get through to head office applications, which added latency and affected speed. Now they get a nice fast internet connection with easy inter-branch connectivity as required.

“This, in turn, means our people can focus on what they do best – and that's making a difference in our community."