Defining Self-Serve Networking: What, Why, & How
For modern businesses, network ecosystems that support agile operations, flexible technology decisions, and efficient automation are non-negotiable. Organizations are looking for ways to move faster, do more, and unify the experiences they deliver to end users, even as the underlying infrastructure grows more complex and sprawls across more physical and virtual domains.
Thus, network and application teams alike are looking at self-serve networking. Inspired by the public cloud experience, where a user selects a service from a catalog and sees it instantly delivered, self-serve networking describes an operating model where automations for on-premises and virtual networks are exposed directly to end users for their consumption. By bridging the gap between network and application development teams, greatly accelerating collaboration while decreasing friction and workloads, self-serve networking promises significant efficiency gains for those who can successfully implement it.
What Is Self-Serve Networking?
The concept is simple: expose internal network services for self-service consumption by end users. But let’s dive a little deeper. Here’s what’s required to be able to successfully deliver self-serve network automations:
Self-serve networking aims to make internal network services as easy to consume as public cloud services. It’s a proven operating model that allows both network and development teams to interact with network services effortlessly.
From a network team’s perspective, it marks a shift from a reactive approach, where you’re just trying to keep up with the high volume of change requests that come in, to a proactive one where automated network services are packaged like products and deployed, handing back time to manage and optimize the network more deeply. From a developer’s point of view, self-serve networking unifies the experience between requesting cloud services and everything else. That accelerates development work, reduces friction between teams, and can lead to greater flexibility and agility across the entire business.
Primary Drivers for Implementing Self-Serve
For Network Teams:
The sheer size and complexity of modern network infrastructure has left network teams struggling to stay ahead of the never-ending backlog of change requests. Most turn to automation to solve this challenge, but without a self-serve model, the manual work required can still pile up. If a request from an application team comes in and a human needs to respond to it, automation is not saving as much time or effort as it could. Self-serve networking allows network teams to deliver their automations as products that can be safely consumed with no further manual input required.
Network teams who successfully adopt a self-serve networking model can:
For Application Development Teams:
Traditionally, while cloud services might be available through a catalog for instant delivery, a service request for a traditional network change will take longer to fulfill. That means when a developer requires network changes for an application, they might wait hours, days, and sometimes even weeks before they can move past that dependency and continue. This can be frustrating. There should not be any burden on developers to track which services rely on cloud infrastructure and which rely on internal or physical network infrastructure. Therefore, a self-serve model is the ideal, allowing developers to focus on development and request any network services they need and see them fulfilled instantly.
At organizations who have successfully implemented self-serve networking, application developers can:
领英推荐
Key Business Outcomes:
Self-serve networking saves time for both network engineers and application developers, streamlining collaboration to accelerate innovation and improve business agility. The benefits don’t stop at the individual teams involved — self-serve networking tends to have a significant impact across the entire organization, as evidenced in, among other examples, this case study.
To translate that promise into tangible business benefits, self-serve networking enables organizations to:
Seamless Self-Serve With Itential
Itential is designed to make self-serve networking easy to implement. Key capabilities such as our API-first approach to integration, the ability to bundle up drag-and-drop workflows to publish as automation assets, and exposure of a unified network API northbound enable our customers to automate network services end-to-end and offer a cloud-like experience to their end users.
Itential enables you to expose a unified network API that makes your automations accessible, enabling external applications, systems, users, and pipelines to call network services. This seamless integration into existing platforms like ServiceNow, DevOps pipelines, and internal platforms increases convenience. When network services are more convenient to consume, then developers will consume them more often, creating almost a feedback loop of efficiency.
In addition, you can set up different triggers for published automations, such as scheduled intervals and events driven by changes on integrated systems. And, you can include integrations with messaging services like Teams or Slack in a published automation workflow, so that any time a user makes a self-serve request, there’s an update to relevant stakeholders when it’s complete. That’s the power of self-serve networking — it’s not just delivering network automation, it’s delivering the entirety of a network change process and everything that comes along with that, with the convenience of a public cloud service.
To learn more about Itential’s self-serve capabilities click here or to watch a demo of how it works click here.
This blog was originally published on itential.com.?
More Network Automation Resources from Itential?
Automate LinkedIn Engagement with HEET.AI – FREE 7-Day Trial (Link in Bio)
1 年Self-serve networking is a game-changer for organizations, enabling efficient and seamless network service delivery, but successful adoption requires strong leadership and team collaboration. What strategies have you seen work well when implementing self-serve networking?