Zeus Kerravala, Principal Analyst, ZK Research

ZKast with Sudheer Matta of Juniper Networks

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Zeus Kerravala Headshot
Image showing a cover slide with a picture of Zeus from ZK Research and Sudheer Matta, VP at Juniper Networks.

Zeus Kerravala sits down with Sudheer Matta, VP of Products, at Juniper Networks for a discussion on current market trends, including cloud adoption, where we are in the journey, and how the network needs to transform.

Sudheer talks explains how Mist works, cloud orchestration and the value it provides customers. He also discusses the new cloud native network access control (NAC).

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You’ll learn

  • Current market trends

  • The value Mist provides to customers

Who is this for?

Business Leaders Network Professionals

Host

Zeus Kerravala Headshot
Zeus Kerravala
Principal Analyst, ZK Research

Guest speakers

Sudheer Matta Headshot
Sudheer Matta
VP Products, Juniper Networks

Transcript

Introduction

0:00 [Music]

0:03 foreign

0:06 caraval from ZK research and I'm here in

0:10 person at Juniper's Enterprise analyst

0:13 and influencer Summit and I'm joined

0:15 today by Sadir Mata who's a group VP for

0:18 uh Juniper's Cloud product Mist right

0:21 yeah I do an Enterprise product yeah

0:22 yeah so just give a quick buy one to

0:25 yourself and tell us what you do here

0:26 first of all Aziz thank you so very much

The future of networking

0:28 for the opportunity and thank you for uh

0:30 being part of the uh Enterprise Summit

0:33 for us here at Juniper uh so hello

0:35 everybody severe Mata iron product

0:37 management for our AI driven Enterprise

0:39 portfolio which is Wireless switching

0:42 sd-van and soon to be announced uh our

0:45 Netflix access Assurance uh um product

0:47 portfolio as well that's a lot of stuff

0:49 it is so normally when I do these zcasts

0:51 I I interview the guest but we're going

0:54 to flip things around a little bit I

0:55 understand there's a few questions you

0:56 want to ask me first before we get going

0:58 that's right so fire away that's right

1:00 so Zs obviously you spoke you speak to a

1:03 lot of customers vendors partners and so

1:08 cloud is top of mind for a lot of them

1:10 it is so so talk about sort of you know

1:14 customers moving to the cloud where they

1:16 are in in especially when it comes to

1:18 network where they're in their journey

1:19 and and some of the challenges you think

1:21 yeah it's it's funny I always say if you

1:24 want to understand the future of

1:25 networking look what happened elsewhere

1:27 in I.T and that'll happen in networking

1:29 you know five six years later right and

1:30 I think I think that's planning out

1:32 again with Cloud obviously Cloud's been

1:34 a big part of Enterprise strategy for

1:36 the better part of what two decades uh

1:38 it's relatively new to networking last

1:41 half decade or so and I I'd say part of

1:43 that is just because of the relative

1:45 importance of the network right we don't

1:47 really get a second chance if if you

1:49 mess up the network so there's been a

1:50 lot of conservativism from Network

1:52 buyers but I think a lot of early

1:55 adopters did move and part of your

1:57 customer base is that but I think what

1:58 the the pandemic did was it ushered in

2:01 this new era of networking where if I

2:03 don't have uh my it Pros in the office I

2:06 know my users in the office and I'm

2:08 trying to manage This Global Network I

2:10 got to do things differently and so the

2:12 old way of sitting there and hunting and

2:13 pecking at a CLI while I'm directly

2:15 attached to the router the switch

2:17 doesn't work anymore right so I do think

2:19 it's uh it's something most customers

2:22 are looking at I think they're looking

2:23 to really change their operational model

2:28 and automate more and that's been a big

2:30 change too because frankly three four

2:32 years ago when I'd say automate to it

2:33 Pros they go whoa whoa whoa you're

2:35 taking our job but now they understand

2:36 automation is a tool with which you do

2:39 their job better but still in networking

2:41 it's it's less than half I'd say

2:43 probably under 30 percent of companies

2:46 have actually migrated their management

2:48 to the cloud yeah and and for those that

2:51 have not moved why do you think that is

2:54 I just think it's a lot of conservatism

2:56 and uh not wanted you know that

2:59 expression if it ain't fixed don't broke

3:01 it or any broke don't fix it but I think

3:04 in a lot of cases it is is broken they

3:06 just don't know it right if you look at

3:08 a lot of the the challenge run running

3:10 networks now human errors still accounts

3:12 for the number one cause of downtime

3:13 right so that's something we got to get

3:15 rid of uh you know here's another

3:17 interesting stat you know that three

Legacy infrastructure

3:19 quarters of trouble tickets are opened

3:21 by the user not the I.T department and

3:23 what that does is it puts us in reactive

3:25 firefighting mode right and then there's

3:28 just uh I I think there's a lot of

3:30 Legacy infrastructure out there right

3:32 and so that stuff's got to get removed

3:33 and modernized before we can actually

3:36 move to more of a modern Cloud

3:38 architecture you know for our Network

3:40 yeah so so you pretty much sort of

3:42 summarized

3:44 um sort of our premise that the network

3:46 is going to move to the cloud and so

3:47 that's how we started so I'll let you

3:49 actually now carry on with your part of

3:52 the interview and the questions yeah so

3:54 uh Juniper missed right it's a lot of

3:57 momentum for you guys in fact when I

3:58 watch your earnings calls Enterprise is

4:00 growing like crazy for you right it's

4:02 now uh uh I think bigger than it's our

4:04 number one word yeah which is which is

4:06 amazing I would never have thought that

4:08 for Juniper years ago so but talk about

4:10 Mist in the cloud architecture and how

4:12 it works yeah so so thank you so so

4:15 um for those of you that that may not

4:16 know what a mist is uh mist is a company

4:19 that got founded in 2014 uh by sujay

4:22 hajela Bob Friday we get started on uh

4:25 in Wi-Fi and then when we merged with

Mist

4:28 juniper uh we became the Enterprise

4:30 portfolio of juniper so now you know we

4:33 came in with Wi-Fi then added switching

4:35 SD van and now you know access Assurance

4:38 which is the NAC portfolio that we just

4:40 launched and so uh this is the portfolio

4:43 all you know the founding principle of

4:47 mist was we're going to be Cloud native

4:49 and AI driven from day one right

4:51 everything we do Cloud native using the

4:54 elastic sort of scalable public Cloud

4:56 architecture and so that's what uh

4:59 that's why this is the our Enterprise uh

5:02 business unit internally we call it AI

5:04 driven Enterprise we just we want it to

5:07 be ingrained within our name that we are

5:10 AI driven Cloud native and that's what

5:12 that's what the portfolio is yeah and

5:14 you know one of the reasons uh one of

5:16 the things I liked about Miss was that

5:17 you did start with Wi-Fi and I've always

5:19 said that within the confines of

5:21 Enterprise networking there is nothing

5:23 harder than Wi-Fi troubleshooting right

5:26 in fact I've talked to some

5:27 organizations where they have Engineers

5:29 that spend you know a full day a week

5:32 doing nothing but Wi-Fi troubleshooting

5:33 right so if you can solve that problem

5:35 yeah you can solve a lot of the other

5:37 ones and so I'll give you a simple

5:39 example on that I used to run a school

5:42 district Network for my local school

5:44 district with the IIT team when I was at

5:46 Cisco and you know they were having

5:49 issues students not able to connect and

5:51 so they said hey can you come and

5:52 troubleshoot literally we took eight

5:54 Engineers from the partner you know four

5:56 of us from Cisco four from uh the

5:58 customer you know a massive team of

6:01 people we went classroom to classroom

6:02 opening laptops or you know trying to

6:04 capture Why students can't get on the

6:06 network

6:07 and no one knows and nobody knows

6:09 because obviously what happens when you

6:11 go to the doctor it works right and so

6:13 whenever whichever classroom we went the

6:15 laptops were working fine so anyway long

6:17 story short we are essentially from that

6:21 experience uh essentially you know a few

6:24 days later that that I quit Cisco and

6:26 joined Miss because I like wow there's a

6:28 better way to build networks than people

6:29 going to classrooms opening laptops out

6:32 of that experience came a feature we

6:34 call Dynamic packet capture so never

Cloud management

6:37 ever do you have to send 15 St you know

6:39 people to classrooms trying to you know

6:42 figure out what what is happening so it

6:45 truly cloud enabled a way to capture

6:48 failures in the Network store them if

6:52 you need them but maybe even react and

6:54 fix the network uh as you see it yeah

6:57 and that's great for chronic problems

6:58 because those are the ones that seems

7:00 networking you know I'm a former network

7:01 engineer myself and Wi-Fi you could you

7:03 just hope it went away that's right

7:05 that's right so now there are a lot of

7:06 cloud management tools today I mean

7:09 Cloud management is not unique to

7:11 Juniper so how do you feel you're

7:13 differentiated in amongst this ocean of

7:15 many Cloud management tools great

7:17 question so so uh you know uh in the in

7:20 the networking space you know Meraki was

7:22 definitely the one that started first uh

7:25 you know with a with a cloud driven

7:26 architecture then came a Ruba and then a

7:29 bunch of other folks but really missed

7:31 had a clean sheet of paper opportunity

7:32 so the difference fundamentally is you

7:37 know Meraki was basically a set of

7:39 servers in A Shard running in private

7:42 data centers right because Meraki was

7:44 founded before the iPhone was invented

7:46 yeah and so it was it was Private data

7:48 center based right and then a bunch of

7:50 other companies tried to move their

7:52 controllers to the cloud and all this

7:53 kind we had you know born in 2014 we had

7:57 the the wind in the sale of us of AWS

8:00 and Azure and gcp and so we use the

8:03 elastic scalable public Cloud so number

8:06 one elastic scale availability right our

8:09 largest customer today has a hundred and

8:12 eighty thousand access points in one

8:14 instance that's a big Network and and

8:16 then they doubled down and bought 25 000

8:19 switches adding another 30 000 switches

8:21 this year right there isn't a Meraki

8:25 Cloud that can manage you know 250 000

8:28 devices like that in one you know

8:29 instance uh the some of the other folks

8:33 haven't even hit scale like that right

8:35 so a a hyper differentiated you know

8:38 elastic scalable cloud is number one and

8:41 then it's a very micro Services

8:43 architecture right basically you know we

8:46 took what existed in the wireless LAN

Cloud native

8:49 controller World completely piece parted

8:52 the functions and and built micro

8:54 Services stateless microservices so we

8:57 can update them at will without causing

9:00 downtime right and so that's the second

9:03 so elastic scalable public cloud and

9:06 microservices core or differentiation

9:08 for us yeah and I'm glad you brought

9:10 that up because not all clouds are

9:12 created equal right so uh and it's a

9:14 it's you know for everybody watching

9:15 this it's this is important to

9:17 understand picking up a legacy workload

9:19 like a wireless controller yeah and

9:23 putting it in the cloud doesn't make it

9:25 Cloud correct it just makes it Cloud

9:26 resonant right not versus Cloud native

9:28 and there's a big difference between

9:30 Cloud resident Cloud native I think

9:31 that's what you're saying yeah yeah and

9:33 it you know there are easy ways in which

9:36 you can you can you know figure this out

9:38 right so for example

9:40 um for a cloud native architecture like

9:42 ours we are able to release new features

9:45 to the cloud right in fact yeah in fact

9:48 you do a bi-weekly uh update yeah yeah

9:51 and uh most of the cloud management

9:53 tools they actually have to shut down

9:54 that's right right so how are you how

9:56 are you doing that yeah so so so most of

9:59 our competitors you know uh have to take

10:01 down time on their Cloud I mean the the

10:04 largest competitor you know uh you know

10:07 a Rubik as an example takes down time

10:09 probably 8 to 12 hours every quarter to

10:11 upgrade their cloud in our case we've

10:14 not had to take down time at all right

10:16 so so and we upgrade production networks

10:20 while they're running while they're

10:22 changing configs while their user using

10:24 the net that isn't scary customers

10:26 initially it scares one of the one of

10:29 the customers actually uh they were like

10:31 what are you doing to us so you're going

10:33 to change my network every two weeks

10:36 without permission from me

10:38 fast forward to two years into their

10:40 deployment they say it's the single best

10:43 feature they've had from us because they

10:46 get new features and architecturally

10:48 they experience no downtime right from a

10:51 user perspective no downtime but they

10:53 get new features it's it's an

10:54 interesting architecture so the question

10:56 was how do we do this right and so the

10:59 the the technicalities actually if I

11:02 explained it is very it becomes very

11:03 simple so because our micro services are

11:07 stateless so we have let's say 12

Inline updates

11:09 instances of a micro service running I

11:12 can update the instance one the

11:14 remaining 11 are carrying the load and

11:16 then when it's updated it joins the

11:18 queue again and so I can you know in a

11:21 round robin fashion do the upgrade none

11:23 of this you know instances are have

11:26 state in them and so they can seamlessly

11:28 pick up where they leave and then they

11:29 continue and so we are doing inline

11:31 updates across all the micro services in

11:34 the cloud hundreds of them

11:36 with zero downtime and zero scheduled

11:39 outage yeah that's amazing that you can

11:42 actually do that and yeah you know when

11:44 you think about other uh it

11:48 um parts of it that move to cloud like

11:49 application development it's very common

11:51 to update an application on the fly

11:53 right right in the consumer world that

11:54 happens all the time you look you get a

11:56 new version of some applications yeah

11:58 yeah but in the in the networking space

12:00 we've resisted that and I think

12:02 the downside of doing that again if you

12:04 if you want to think of the if it ain't

12:06 broke don't fix it you're not getting

12:08 the security updates you're not getting

12:10 new features that are going to make your

12:11 network run better right which is why

12:13 when you look at a lot of large Legacy

12:15 networks out there they're running 10 20

12:18 30 40 maybe even 100 different versions

12:21 of operating systems they've got all

12:23 these different features it's very hard

12:25 to keep things in sync so things will

12:27 work out well in one box and not another

12:29 and then you wind up with the mess that

12:31 we have today yeah yeah and actually

12:32 you've touched on one of the most

12:35 important benefits of this a lot of

12:37 people don't come to Cloud because they

12:39 think from a security perspective oh my

12:42 God it's outside my uh my network and

12:45 how do I secure it in fact it's the

12:48 opposite Cloud gives you agility to

12:50 apply security patches you know when

12:53 when the crack virus uh crack a

12:55 vulnerability got announced right we had

12:58 a release on the same day the most

13:01 recent the log 4J yeah you know

13:03 vulnerability that was announced we

13:05 remediated on the cloud globally for our

13:08 customers without them lifting a finger

13:10 versus everyone else had to upgrade

13:13 their own network because the controller

13:15 had vulnerabilities right and so

13:16 security is a great outcome in fact the

13:19 cloud is more secure and more resilient

13:23 than your on-prem networks yeah right

13:25 it's it's very counter and you would you

13:26 wouldn't have said that a few years ago

13:28 either right yeah you couldn't yeah you

13:30 could so now you've used this term scale

13:31 over and over

13:33 um when you say scale what do you mean

13:36 by that how do you think about that and

13:37 how does mist adapt uh scale up yeah so

13:41 so let's talk about scale up a little

13:42 bit right scale up from a the size of

Scale up

13:44 the network perspective and and the

13:46 operations perspective so I'll talk

13:48 about the operations first when Gmail

13:50 first came out Google had a distinct

13:54 goal that any page in Gmail should load

13:57 in 100 milliseconds less than 100

13:59 milliseconds right it doesn't matter how

14:01 much email you have in your email inbox

14:03 they want to load in in less than 100

14:05 milliseconds I get a lot of email yes

14:08 we had a similar goal that it didn't

14:11 matter what size of network you're

14:13 operating with juniper Mist we want you

14:15 to load in under two seconds right so if

14:18 you are Fortune you know 10 company with

14:21 a scale of Fortune 10 Network we still

14:24 want your network to just be buzzing you

14:26 know you be fast and and so you know a

14:29 lot of the Legacy

14:30 vendors if you do on-prem you know DNA

14:34 Center Cisco Prime blah blah blah you

14:37 are responsible for scale up in our case

14:39 we are responsible so that your

14:41 experience is always delightful that's

14:43 number one that's from a it experience

14:46 perspective from a user experience

14:48 perspective we think of scale as we just

14:50 want it to be elastic scalable right we

14:52 do not want you to have to worry about

14:54 because think of all the things that

14:56 current controller-based customers have

14:58 to worry about oh my controller has a

14:59 capacity of 5000 oh I need 200 more APS

15:02 oh God I need a new controller oh it

15:04 doesn't support my old AP image I mean

15:06 it's all of that magic poof goes away

15:08 right elastic scale and that's what the

15:10 my the public Cloud got for us yeah and

15:13 uh okay so now I'm going to flip a

15:15 question back at you asked me before why

15:17 aren't customers with the cloud what are

15:18 customers telling you why haven't they

15:20 moved the cloud and how do you convince

15:21 them that something they should do yeah

15:23 so so I would say you know exactly like

15:25 what you said is it it's it's either

15:27 inertia because don't fix it if it's not

15:30 broke or it's fear it's really just

15:33 those two feelings for them to go to the

15:36 cloud the the honest truth is all of the

15:39 vendors are going to the cloud if you're

15:40 Cisco you're going to the cloud with

15:42 Meraki if you're a rubber you're going

15:43 to the cloud with Central if you're Mr

15:45 coming to midst right everybody's going

15:46 into the cloud so so that's not a

15:49 question anymore whether your network is

15:51 going to the cloud or not all vendors

15:52 are going there so let's get on with it

15:54 now the the thing that actually you know

15:57 people struggle with is is is is just

16:01 you know how do I think about security

16:03 and here's the proof point I want to

16:05 give you right the world's largest

16:08 Enterprises including the most stringent

16:10 Enterprises like for example we've we

16:13 have won

16:14 um two of the largest five banks in the

16:17 in the world right literally the world's

16:20 largest financial institutions for the

16:21 wired wireless networks are coming to us

16:23 right and so they've done the reviews on

16:26 on security the top retailers in the

16:29 world are running on us in every

16:30 continent the number one retailer is

16:32 running on us

16:33 um and then we just most recently

16:35 launched our fedramp Cloud so so

16:38 basically U.S federal customers are

16:41 jumping on Australia Federal customers

16:43 other Federal customers are actually

16:44 looking at this as well and so

16:47 I want people to to think and assume

16:50 that hey the cloud just like you

16:53 validate security when you go to a

16:55 Office 365 type of cloud you know do all

16:58 of the checks but the cloud is secure

17:00 and other customers have done the due

17:02 diligence and and and the largest you

17:05 know customers in every vertical are

17:06 coming to us yeah now um at the

17:09 beginning you describe this as an AI

17:10 Cloud so what's the relationship between

17:14 ai ai Ops in the cloud yeah so so so

17:17 it's it's it's a very symbiotic a very

17:21 necessary relationship right you can

17:23 almost argue the AI and Cloud you can't

17:25 do AI without the clock you cannot do AI

17:27 without the cloud you absolutely cannot

17:29 right because you know we have we

17:31 measure user experience every user every

17:34 minute for all the users on the network

17:36 and that's what we use as the the data

17:39 for the foundation for the AI we needed

17:41 an elastic scalable club and that's

17:43 where you know the first employees

17:45 missed hired had nothing to do with

17:46 networking these with Cloud Engineers

17:48 they built you know literally the first

17:50 three employees never never built a

17:53 network never never were in networking

17:54 they were elastic scalable Cloud

17:56 engineers and that became the foundation

17:58 so if we need our elastic scalable Cloud

18:00 for AI yeah I think uh just an easy way

18:03 to think about it is AI requires lots of

18:06 horsepower right most companies don't

18:07 have that on their own Prem because lots

18:09 of data Sciences that's right to be able

18:11 to train the models and things like that

18:13 and even if a company had those things

18:15 I'm not sure that their data set would

18:17 be large enough to train it with right

18:19 right and so that's um you know and

18:21 that's what you get from the cloud right

18:23 or at least the cloud vendor like

18:25 yourself I do think an interesting uh

18:27 data point that you guys published those

18:29 the efficacy of your of your AI and

18:31 right uh because let's let's be honest

18:33 it's not perfect right right but it gets

18:35 better with time correct and I do think

18:37 that sometimes when I talk to network

18:40 Engineers they go we tried Ai and it

18:41 didn't work right because it made one

18:43 error and I might I've always said don't

18:45 wait for Perfection that's right as long

18:46 as is better than people that's right

18:48 right and as I mentioned human error is

18:50 still the largest cause of downtime so

18:52 that's right you know

18:53 I I think the you know AI is going to do

18:56 a better better job of that I'll give

18:57 you a simple example of this I think in

18:59 the in the spirit of what can AI do for

19:02 you if you're a a wired Wireless

19:04 engineer can AI impact you here's the

Can AI impact you

19:07 simplest example we deploy the most

19:09 complex networks in the world I mean

19:12 large robotic facilities and warehouses

19:14 to higher education you know a large

19:17 University uh around the world

19:20 we deploy our APS obviously you design

19:23 you know you we deploy our APS and

19:26 basically

19:28 um you know essentially we ask the

19:30 engineers to step away from the keyboard

19:31 right we let the AI self-optimize better

19:35 than any ccie has ever been able to

19:37 optimize the network every missed

19:39 Network around the world is built that

19:41 way where we trust our AI to to build

19:45 the most efficient Network

19:47 better than humans can in every

19:49 environment and that's been the best

19:51 outcome I'll give you a couple of

19:53 examples right so give me some customer

19:55 examples in the business value that are

19:57 brought yeah yeah so so Jim Pike at

19:59 Newport News schools right so

20:02 um they were 3 000 AP Aruba shop lots of

20:05 you know fine-tuning the school district

20:08 Network school district is a heavily

20:10 used Network Jim says after they

20:13 deployed the 3 000 missed APS AP to AP

20:16 they replaced no additional APS no

20:18 additional cables exact same location

20:20 same amount of rapes

20:22 zero tickets to an entire school year of

20:24 testing zero tickets right and then in

20:28 the higher ed space Dartmouth College 70

20:31 reduction in user tickets coming in and

20:34 off the 30 of the tickets that still

20:35 come in you know 80 of them are solved

20:39 by first line Half tasks because of the

20:40 visibility AI has impact on the

20:42 operations right AI has an impact in

20:45 deployment you know we displaced 24 000

20:48 Meraki APS at the Gap with 24 000 missed

20:52 APS no one API additional AP added no

20:54 additional cable pull

20:56 85 reduction in the number of site

20:59 visits right number of site visits

21:01 across and those are expensive expensive

21:03 site visits around the world right so AI

21:05 has an impact yeah and so uh one last

21:08 question and uh I we can't talk AI

21:11 without the topic of chat GPT and uh

21:14 General AI coming up so what are you

21:16 guys thinking about there how how will

21:17 that uh work into what you guys are

21:20 gonna missed we're looking at Shops

21:22 because we love this we we you know you

21:25 know Bob Friday uh I mean almost very

21:28 Visionary four years ago he said we went

21:31 from CLI to dashboards and we're going

21:34 to go to conversation assistants 40

21:35 years ago you know our competitors sort

21:37 of mocked us saying you know they're

21:39 losing their dashboards

21:40 um but you know we started Marvis

21:43 conversation assistant four years ago

21:45 we've we've had a very mature uh

21:48 conversational assistant for uh for

21:50 helping with you know solving problems

21:51 on the network

21:53 um what we have already had is NL you

21:56 natural language understanding and we

21:59 have all the AI models for anomaly

22:01 detection to find marvelous actions and

22:03 stuff what we are super excited about uh

22:06 you know with with GPT and chat CPT in

22:09 specific is is nlg natural language

22:12 generation yeah so what you saw on May

22:15 17 that the mobility field they launched

22:18 is that we are now natively integrating

22:20 chat GPT into marvelous conversational

22:23 system so chat CPT the power of chat TPT

22:26 is now in The Marvelous conversation

22:28 assistant that's impressive so uh all

22:30 right so here uh I think we'll run up

22:32 against the clock here I want to thank

22:33 you very much for your time on behalf of

22:36 the year of Zs caraval from ZK research

22:38 saying uh don't forget to hit the

22:39 Subscribe button and I'll see you next

22:41 time on another zcast thank you very

22:43 much

22:45 [Music]

22:50 foreign

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