Cisco will buy Viptela, a privately held software-defined wide area network (SD-WAN) company based in San Jose, a move that will expand its portfolio.
Viptela CEO Praveen Akkiraju, a University of Madras and Harvard Business School alumnus, said the the company's fabric, as it relates to SD-WAN and cloud networking, "fits in as an important piece of Cisco's Enterprise Networking strategy which is driving an industry-wide transition to a software centric architecture and business model."
Cisco will buy Viptela for USD 610 million in cash and assumed equity awards and the acquisition were expected to close in the second half of 2017 after the completion of the customary closing conditions and regulatory review.
Cisco said managing the network is becoming more complex as applications move to the cloud, employees become more mobile and billions of Internet of Things (IoT) devices are added to the network.
"Customers are turning to SD-WAN solutions to help manage and orchestrate their WAN deployments, to cost effectively improve access to both the cloud and their corporate network," Cisco said in a statement.
The company said Viptela's network management, orchestration and overlay technologies make it easy to deploy and manage SD-WAN.
"Viptela's technology is cloud-first, with a focus on simplicity and ease of deployment while simultaneously providing a rich set of capabilities and scale. These principles are what today's customers demand," said Scott Harrell, senior vice president of product management forthe CiscoEnterprise Networking Group.
"With Viptela and Cisco, we will be able to deliver a comprehensive portfolio of comprehensive on-premises, hybrid, and cloud-based SD-WAN solutions," he said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
