Whatever your sector, the size of your company or your function, it's unlikely that your day-to-day business doesn't depend at least in part on an Internet connection.
If you're like most companies, you have separate networks to connect your various departments: a first network dedicated to telephony, a second for employee connectivity, a third for visitor WiFi, and perhaps others for cameras, VSEs, access to sensitive resources, and so on.
For each service, a deployment site must be organized. You need to synchronize with the various technicians, and the service may be temporarily unavailable, multiplying the risk of incidents.
For each service, new equipment must be deployed. Connected equipment will have to be purchased and produced, needlessly using rare minerals whose extraction is particularly harmful to the environment.
Between €10K and €50K savings per site.
The problems associated with supplier relations have multiplied. Administrative procedures, quality assessment, negotiations, dispute management... The multiplication of suppliers makes it more complex to identify the right people to take responsibility in the event of an incident.
The complexity of management is compounded by the diversity of interfaces to be used, increasing the risk of mishandling and forcing your teams to upgrade their skills with each new service.
Intelligent integration of different services is impossible: for example, you can't use the WiFi network for VoIP. Worse still, WiFi and IoT frequencies find themselves in a situation of unsupervised competition, inevitably generating interference and a degraded signal.
No more ping-ponging of responsibilities between suppliers
By multiplying network infrastructures, you inevitably multiply energy consumption and needlessly increaseyour organization's carbon footprint.
With equipment consumption on the rise, compounded by ever-increasing energy costs, your network's energy bill can no longer be considered anecdotal.