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Aviatrix
Overview
HQ Location
United States
Year Founded
2014
Company Type
Private
Revenue
$10-100m
Employees
201 - 1,000
Website
Twitter Handle
Company Description
Aviatrix is a cloud integration solutions provider. It develops software that enables enterprises to build hybrid clouds by connecting to dozens of AWS virtual Private Clouds (VPCs) and Azure VNets without buying additional networking equipment. Its solution is offered as two products bundled into one
IoT Snapshot
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Technology Stack
Aviatrix’s Technology Stack maps Aviatrix’s participation in the IoT Technology stack.
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Devices Layer
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Edge Layer
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Cloud Layer
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Application Layer
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Supporting Technologies
Technological Capability:
None
Minor
Moderate
Strong
Case Studies.
Case Study
How Epsilon Built a Global Transit Hub Aviatrix on Amazon Web Services
Epsilon, a global marketing company, helps Fortune 500 companies drive growth through data-driven marketing solutions and is a leader in data privacy and security. With platforms connected across Amazon Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs) and on-premises resources, Epsilon recognized the need to efficiently establish connectivity and continue to secure data-in-motion between platforms. To solve for this, Epsilon chose to build an Amazon Web Services (AWS) global transit architecture. To implement this architecture, Epsilon decided to overhaul its cloud networking strategy and start from scratch. They began by prioritizing business requirements, specific technical challenges, and implementing a solution that could scale as fast as its AWS resources.
Case Study
Leading SaaS Provider Adopts Aviatrix for Multi-Cloud Readiness and Increased Customer Satisfaction
The SaaS provider was faced with the challenge of meeting the demand for multi-cloud service delivery, which caused an exponential rise in complexity to utilize native cloud constructs in an additional cloud. This resulted in re-training of staff, and business requirements that further reduced the agility of the SaaS provider’s cloud IT teams. On-boarding just a single additional CSP resulted in inconsistent network architecture and created inefficient operations as much of the existing automation needed to be refactored for the new CSP environment. The SaaS provider wanted to create a service delivery infrastructure strategy that would provide the best possible end customer experience with the simplest and most consistent infrastructure operations, scale to their growth targets while ensuring security, financial, and reputational risks were minimized.