Your company has grown to the point where you have employees working from remote offices or home, executives and sales people who work while they're on the road, and collaborative partners who are working with you to develop or provide products and services. All of these people need a way to securely access resources on your network from off-site locations.
You know you need to implement a virtual private network (VPN) solution, but you're confused by all the options. Should you set up Windows VPN servers, buy a dedicated VPN appliance or use a firewall-integrated VPN solution? Which tunneling protocol(s) should you use? Your VPN needs are still relatively light, but the company is growing fast, and you don't want to have to "rip and re-do" in a couple of years, so scalability is an important factor.
Accessing your Needs
The best choice for a VPN solution will depend on your current business model and how you expect the company to evolve in the future. If you anticipate a large corporate facility located in one or a few geographic areas, you'll want to go with a high-end solution that can support fast throughput and a large number of users, and you'll want them to be easily integrated with your firewalls, authentication servers, routers, and other components. If your business will follow a more distributed path, with many branch offices, you'll need multiple VPN boxes, but they'll need to be compatible with each other for site-to-site implementation and you'll also want to maintain centralized management. If you anticipate many telecommuters and traveling users (remote access), you'll want client compatibility and expandability as the number of remote access users increases.
Our Whiacs Dedicated Servers are offering all the facilities you need.
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