Why You Need to Automate Your Business Operations

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Notice: This blog post was originally published on Indeni before its acquisition by BlueCat.

The content reflects the expertise and perspectives of the Indeni team at the time of writing. While some references may be outdated, the insights remain valuable. For the latest updates and solutions, explore the rest of our blog

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The article explains why automation of network and security operations is essential for modern businesses facing growing complexity, increased device counts, and higher traffic demands. It outlines business drivers—such as creating new revenue channels, expansion, cost reduction, and productivity gains—and IT project drivers like increased availability, security, compliance, maintenance, and reduced human error. Practical examples of automation-enabling products (next-generation firewalls, load balancers, and switches) and the importance of reusable, high-quality scripting to validate tasks and decrease attack surface are highlighted as key outcomes for successful automation initiatives.

What are the primary business and IT drivers motivating organizations to automate network and security operations?

The article identifies two categories of drivers. Business drivers include creating new revenue channels, business expansion, lowering operational costs, and increasing productivity. IT project drivers focus on technical and operational needs: increasing network availability, meeting security requirements, ensuring compliance, simplifying system maintenance, and reducing human error. Together these factors make automation critical to day-to-day operations, with a survey noting 58 percent of respondents view network and security automation as critical.

Which types of products does the article recommend considering for improving security and network automation?

The article suggests several product categories that can deliver productivity and automation gains alongside existing solutions. Next-generation firewalls and centralized management platforms (for example, R80 from Check Point and fabric approaches like Fortinet’s Panorama) help automate and coordinate security policies. Load balancers such as F5 BIG-IP LTM make traffic allocation decisions based on server availability and performance. High-end switches like Cisco’s Nexus series simplify management of distributed data center networks by providing centralized control in virtualized LAN environments.

What operational challenge related to scripting does the article highlight, and what is the recommended approach to address it?

The article highlights that disparate device architectures and different operating systems often lead to custom scripts that can impede automation rather than facilitate it. Poorly written, one-off scripts reduce reuse and increase maintenance burden. The recommended approach is to have a team that develops good quality, reusable scripts that work across devices; this improves task validation, enhances resource availability, and helps decrease the network attack surface—thereby increasing the chances of successful security automation.


Automation has been a buzzword in business circles for decades now, and with good reason. Organizations are looking to cut costs and increase efficiency in an increasingly competitive environment and moving away from manual operations has been proven to be a big help in achieving this. Indeed, automation can be critical to the very survival of any enterprise in a world where consumers are more informed than ever.

Across the different functions of an organization automation is a necessity. In the field of network and security, automation has been made a key priority.

There are several reasons why businesses are particularly keen on this area of automation. These can be divided into two categories: business drivers and IT projects.

Business drivers

  • Creating new revenue channels
  • Business expansion
  • Lowering operational costs
  • Increasing productivity

IT projects

Networked systems for most businesses steadily increase in size and complexity as they grow over the years. Applications have to process more data and more people will need to access them, which means more devices and more traffic on the network.

A recent survey showed that 58 percent feel that the automation of network and security tasks are critical to the day to day operations of the business. There are many products in the market that offer security professionals productivity gains. Here are a few to consider alongside your existing solutions:

Next generation firewalls

Load balancers

  • There are intelligent devices that make load balancing decisions based on data they receive from the servers connected to them. Local Traffic Manager, known as LTM, allocates traffic to servers based on their availability, performance and persistence. It is one of the modules available on the F5 Networks BIG-IP platform.

Switches

  • Cisco’s Nexus series of switches are preferred by many organizations for the management of networked data centres in different locations. They simplify the management of networking operations by offering a centralized control point for LANs in a virtualized environment.

Task validation

Network management and security devices often have disparate architecture and run on different OSs. This leads to the creation of scripts which, more often than not, hamper, rather than facilitate, automation of tasks. It is important to have team that can develop good quality scripts that can be reused across devices.

By decreasing the network attack surface, this system great enhances resource availability. Find out more about how organizations can enhance the chances of success of the automation of their security operations by downloading this survey.

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