How managed SD-WAN provides intrinsic network security
The threat to digital enterprises grows every day, and not all cloud solutions offer adequate protection. Singtel explores how managed SD-WAN provides integrated network security from day one, and why other solutions can’t protect globally distributed networks.
SD-WAN is inherently secure because it encrypts network traffic as soon as it is created
Securing your network, rather than securing endpoints, is much better suited to modern, global organisations
VPNs can leave your enterprise exposed to threats by simply ‘ring-fencing’ devices
Using a secure SD-WAN solution from an MSP removes a huge resource burden from IT teams
Connected enterprises are facing a greater cyber security threat than ever before.1 81% of business leaders state that staying ahead of cyber security attackers is a constant battle, and the cost is unsustainable.2 But there is one key change that cloud-centric organisations can make to protect their network at its core: upgrading to a software-defined wide area network (SD-WAN).
81% of business leaders find that staying ahead of cyber security attackers is a constant battle and the cost is unsustainable²
SD-WAN can not only provide an inherently secure, encrypted enterprise network but enables significant cyber security upgrades without straining in-house resources. Adopting a network that is encrypted at its core makes a huge difference to globally distributed businesses. This article will dive deep into the security value that SD-WAN can bring to globally distributed, cloud-centric enterprises.
Endpoint security incurs too much risk
Traditionally, all of an enterprise’s traffic could be routed through data centres with robust firewalls and security protocols to protect everything on the local area network (LAN). But the demands of today’s enterprises - with huge amounts of data being generated by endpoints, edge devices and remote workers all over the world - put a much higher security burden on these data centres which makes them an easy target for cyber attacks.3
In today’s cloud-centric landscape, there are myriad remote endpoints and cloud-based connections that raise the attack surface of your enterprise by a huge degree.4 As a result, endpoint security should only ever be a last line of defence as it cannot intercept malicious traffic before it breaches your network, and bolt-on network security is simply not enough to protect against constantly evolving cyber security threats.5 Even when adopting a multi-vendor approach to build a secure boundary around your network, if the network itself is not secured then malicious actors can still find their way in.
Cloud-based security protects the core of your network
Using a single network-based solution improves the efficiency of your network communications and incurs significantly less costs than a multi-vendor approach. Combining different security solutions to effectively ‘surround’ your network might seem like a robust security strategy. But in a constantly evolving cyber security landscape, only a fully integrated network security solution built into the foundation of your network can protect your data right from the source.
This is where an SD-WAN can provide truly reliable security for the cloud-based digital enterprise without compromising the efficiency of your network. Whereas additional network security can only form a protective barrier around your enterprise network, the entire architecture of an SD-WAN is built using IPSec-encrypted ‘tunnels’ to protect your data as soon as a device is plugged into the network.
SD-WANs protect traffic from source to cloud
Because traffic is encrypted by the SD-WAN controller as soon as it is created, rather than being sent between individual encrypted networks, businesses can monitor endpoint traffic centrally as part of a single service. Site-to-site traffic is inherently encrypted within an SD-WAN, so only traffic moving outside of the corporate network needs to be monitored by these additional security functions.
By 2024, 80% of SD-WAN deployments will incorporate SSE requirements⁶
And because SD-WANs are cloud-based, they can easily be upgraded and combined with network-centric Security Service Edge (SSE) services such as zero-trust network access and secure cloud gateways. Gartner predicts that by 2024, 80% of SD-WAN deployments will incorporate security service edge (SSE) requirements, up from less than 25% in 2022.6 This combination of SD-WAN and SSE creates the next generation of secure networking (SASE, Secure Access Service Edge), which can only be supported by the inherent security of SD-WAN itself.
Managed SD-WAN offer stress-free security
This inherently secure nature of SD-WAN removes a huge resource burden from internal IT teams, who no longer have to implement, manage, and upgrade security at every site. With a majority (62%) of organisations reporting that they are understaffed and underequipped to tackle emerging threats, adding to the security burden of overstretched IT teams is a recipe for disaster.
62% of organisations feel they are understaffed and underequipped to tackle emerging threats⁸
When using a multi-vendor approach consisting of multiple VPNs and endpoint security solutions, IT teams must constantly monitor and troubleshoot issues in each solution to keep the network secure. In contrast, SD-WAN offers centralised management and network visibility, a simplified security architecture to eliminate application sprawl, and ensures that an organisation’s security posture is constantly updated to address emerging threats.
Adopting an SD-WAN solution from a managed service provider (MSP) further removes the security burden from an enterprise. Securing your network from the ground up with a managed SD-WAN solution ensures that all network traffic is monitored proactively and continuously, without enterprises having to lift a finger to protect their network.
Put your trust in cloud network security experts
As connected enterprises become more cloud-centric and cyber security threats become ever more sophisticated, the decentralised, site-to-site, and multicloud security that SD-WAN offers as part of its foundation is quickly becoming a necessity.
When adopting any advanced technology, an experienced managed service provider can mean the difference between a perfectly optimised solution and an unmanageable burden for in-house teams. SD-WAN is no different, and with the safety of your enterprise at stake, putting your trust in the hands of a dedicated team of cloud experts can future-proof your network security against and protect against even the most insidious network-based threats.
Get in touch to find out how Singtel can secure your enterprise network:
References:
Cloudflare, 2022, DDoS threat report 2022 Q3
Accenture, 2021, State of Cybersecurity Resilience 2021
ZDNet, 2022, Data centres are still a tempting target for hackers. Here's how to improve your security
Forbes, 2022, Building A Strong Cybersecurity Posture
McKinsey, 2022, Cybersecurity trends: Looking over the horizon
Gartner, 2022, How to Align SD-WAN Projects With SASE Initiatives
Network Computing, 2022, How Secure SD-WAN Can Help Relieve IT Burdens
ISACA, 2022, State of Cybersecurity 2022
Related articles
End-to-end network-centric security: The key to secure and successful business
SASE: The New Paradigm of Network & Security
Discover more insights
The network as a sensor: why Industry 5.0 needs a spatial layer — Wireless networks are evolving beyond pure connectivity into a spatial intelligence layer. As cellular standards progress towards integrated sensing and communication (ISAC), the same radio infrastructure that carries data can also interpret movement, presence, and asset flows. This reduces reliance on fragmented sensor estates and enables a continuous view of how people, machines, and materials interact across physical space./business/insights/the-network-as-a-sensor-why-industry-5-point-0-needs-a-spatial-layer
AI’s breakthrough moment is being held back by fragmentation — As AI workloads become heavier, more real-time, and increasingly autonomous, they continue to be deployed across fragmented compute, storage, networking, and security environments. This fragmentation has become a limiting factor, constraining scale, increasing risk, and slowing the transformation AI is intended to deliver. Read on to explore what this means for enterprise environments./business/insights/ai-s-breakthrough-moment-is-being-held-back-by-fragmentation
IDC MarketScape: APAC Managed SD-WAN/SASE Services 2025–2026 — We’re honoured to be named a leader in the IDC MarketScape: APAC Managed SD-WAN/SASE Services 2025–2026. This report offers clarity on where the market is heading, and what a trusted managed SASE partner should deliver./business/insights/idc-marketscape-apac-managed-sd-wan-sase-services-2025-2026
Restoring line of sight in the digital maze — Enterprises today operate within a complex web of digital dependencies that power daily operations but often escape visibility. Each connection creates blind spots where vulnerabilities hide. Restoring visibility across this “invisible network layer” is now critical to resilience. With Singtel CUBΣ, businesses gain a unified, real-time view of their entire digital ecosystem, mapping every dependency and endpoint to strengthen business continuity. /business/insights/restoring-line-of-sight-in-the-digital-maze
From connected enterprises to connected intelligence — At GovWare, Singtel showcased a complete suite of future-ready enterprise solutions, showing connected intelligence in action, where networks, data, and AI come together to transform what’s possible. Dive into the highlights in this snapshot./business/insights/from-connected-enterprises-to-connected-intelligence
Securing the invisible: building resilient supply chains — Modern software supply chains face growing exposure to hidden risks that can exploit trusted channels. Recent incidents highlight how malicious code can infiltrate popular software libraries undetected. Strengthening resilience calls for both robust technical safeguards and a skilled workforce equipped to detect, respond to, and prevent such threats./business/insights/securing-the-invisible-building-resilient-supply-chains