
Verizon Software Defined Secure Branch
SD-WAN solutions
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
Take the quiz to check if Verizon Software Defined Secure Branch and its alternatives fit your requirements.
Contact the product provider
Small
Medium
Large
- Banking and insurance
- Healthcare and life sciences
- Public sector and nonprofit organizations
What is Verizon Software Defined Secure Branch
Verizon Software Defined Secure Branch is a managed SD-WAN offering designed to connect and secure enterprise branch locations using centralized policy and orchestration. It targets organizations that want Verizon to provide the WAN overlay, edge deployment, and ongoing operations across many sites. The service typically combines SD-WAN connectivity with integrated security capabilities and optional access technologies (e.g., broadband, LTE/5G) under a single managed service model. It is positioned for distributed networks that need standardized branch rollout and lifecycle management.
Carrier-managed deployment and operations
The product is delivered as a managed service, which can reduce the internal effort required to design, deploy, and operate SD-WAN across many branches. Verizon can provide standardized provisioning, monitoring, and incident handling as part of the service engagement. This model fits organizations that prefer an outsourced operational approach rather than running SD-WAN controllers and edge lifecycle management in-house.
Integrated branch security options
The offering is designed around a “secure branch” concept, typically bundling SD-WAN with security functions such as segmentation and policy enforcement at the edge. This can simplify branch architecture by reducing the number of separate appliances and management consoles needed for connectivity and security. It also supports consistent policy application across sites when managed centrally.
Multiple access and transport choices
As a network operator, Verizon can package SD-WAN with a range of underlay options, such as business broadband, private access, and wireless (LTE/5G) for primary or backup connectivity. This helps support resiliency patterns like dual-uplink branches and rapid turn-up for temporary sites. It can be useful for organizations standardizing connectivity procurement alongside SD-WAN.
Less control than DIY SD-WAN
A managed service model can limit direct administrative control over configuration details, change windows, and troubleshooting workflows compared with self-managed SD-WAN platforms. Customers may need to follow provider processes for policy changes and escalations. This can be a constraint for teams that require rapid iteration or deep customization of routing and security policies.
Feature set depends on vendor stack
Capabilities can vary based on the underlying SD-WAN and security technology Verizon uses in a given offer or region, and on which service tier is purchased. Some advanced functions (e.g., granular analytics, custom integrations, or specific security controls) may require add-ons or may not be available in all configurations. Buyers typically need to validate the exact platform components, licensing, and roadmap in the contract and statement of work.
Potential provider and contract lock-in
Because connectivity, edge hardware, and operations are often bundled, switching providers later can require replacing equipment, re-provisioning sites, and renegotiating access circuits. Contract terms, managed service SLAs, and pricing structures can make partial migrations harder than with standalone SD-WAN software. This is a consideration for organizations pursuing multi-provider network strategies.
Seller details
Verizon Communications Inc.
New York, NY, USA
2000
Public
https://www.verizon.com/business/
https://x.com/verizonbusiness
https://www.linkedin.com/company/verizon/