🛞 SD-WAN | Not a Point of Failure—A Point of Resilience 🚘

Ronald BartelsRonald Bartels
3 min read

There’s a common refrain that echoes through some corners of IT and network engineering circles:
“SD-WAN is just another point of failure—it’s extra software in the path.”

It sounds logical at first glance. More software, more complexity, more chances for something to break, right?

But if you step back and think about it, this argument falls apart under scrutiny. It’s like saying a spare wheel is an unnecessary point of failure in a car—when in reality, it’s a safeguard for when something else already has failed.

The Faulty Logic Behind the “Extra Point of Failure” Claim

Let’s break down the underlying assumption:

  • SD-WAN = More software = More things to go wrong = Less reliable

But this is a misunderstanding of what SD-WAN actually does. SD-WAN isn't just software for software's sake. It's a resilience layer, designed to mitigate and correct existing failures in the network—not introduce new ones.

By this logic, you shouldn’t install antivirus because it might crash, shouldn’t use RAID because a controller might fail, and shouldn’t wear a seatbelt because it might lock up. All ridiculous, right?

SD-WAN is the same. It’s not a liability; it’s a reliability enabler.

SD-WAN Makes Networks More Reliable, Not Less

Here’s what SD-WAN brings to the table:

  • Redundancy & Path Diversity
    SD-WAN allows the use of multiple WAN links—fibre, LTE, microwave, even satellite—simultaneously. If one fails, the traffic can fail over seamlessly, often without users noticing.

  • Active Path Monitoring & SLA-Based Routing
    Unlike traditional static routing, SD-WAN constantly monitors links for latency, jitter, and loss, and routes traffic according to real-time conditions. That’s proactive failure avoidance in action.

  • Application-Level Awareness
    SD-WAN can steer mission-critical apps over the best available path while routing bulk traffic elsewhere. That’s smart prioritisation you simply don’t get with old-school routing.

  • Simplified Management & Zero-Touch Provisioning
    Modern SD-WAN solutions deploy in minutes and are centrally managed. Less room for human error, which is still one of the top causes of network failure.

The Software Fallacy | "Software = Fragile"

Yes, SD-WAN is software-based. But software is everywhere—your phone, your firewall, your router, your car’s engine control unit. We trust software with life-critical systems, from aviation to healthcare.

More importantly, good SD-WAN solutions are:

  • Built with redundancy in mind

  • Field-tested across thousands of production environments

  • Often run on hardened appliances or robust virtual platforms

You wouldn’t refuse to install a UPS because it’s “just another electronic device that might fail.” The same goes for SD-WAN.

The Reality | Networks Without SD-WAN Are More Fragile

Without SD-WAN, networks rely on:

  • Manual routing and static configurations

  • BGP with little awareness of real-time performance

  • Expensive MPLS links to fake reliability

  • Single links per site with no true redundancy

That’s fragile. That’s brittle. And that’s why businesses have outages during fibre cuts, failover delays, or link degradation.

With SD-WAN, networks adapt in real time. They self-heal. They route around problems. They buy time for humans to fix what needs fixing.

Wrapping Up | Don’t Blame the Toolkit for the Mechanic’s Incompetence

Sometimes, objections to SD-WAN come from bad deployments, poor implementation, or solutions that were overpromised and underdelivered. That’s not a software problem—that’s a people problem.

When implemented properly, SD-WAN dramatically improves network resilience, increases visibility, and restores control to network teams. It turns a single-threaded, failure-prone WAN into a fault-tolerant mesh of dynamic connectivity.

So, the next time someone calls SD-WAN “just another point of failure,” ask them:
Do you also refuse to carry a spare tyre?

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Written by

Ronald Bartels
Ronald Bartels

Driving SD-WAN Adoption in South Africa