Why Should I Change when I have a free VPN?

For many organisations, VPNs have become the go-to tool for secure wide area connectivity, despite the fact that they are far from popular with those that use and manage them.

Complex to configure , plagued by unpredictability , difficult to diagnose faults and unreliability they sit at the top of most IT teams’ lists of reviled technologies.

Yet are seen as the only real option for wide area networking without the complexity and much higher cost of MPLS lines. Their popularity is scarcely better with users, who suffer unreliable connections and mysteriously vanishing resources, negatively impacting collaboration, teamwork , productivity and company profits.

The main areas for the use of VPNs are :-

Home worker

VPNs allow individuals working from home to access resources at one or more company sites.



Mobile worker

VPNs provide similar functionality for mobile workers, whose location is neither fixed nor necessarily predictable.


Branch office

VPNs are used by organisations with several offices, each with a significant number of people, to allow staff in each location to access resources and communicate with individuals in others.

Beyond these three principal use cases, VPNs are also employed in various other ways, including connecting to major cloud services or datacentres, especially where organisations have relocated applications and servers from company offices.

Connectivity is the prime requirement for business and VPNs rarely stack up well against a companies requirements. Fiddly to configure, complex to adapt or scale, and prone to faults which often prove difficult to track down and fix, your VPN is almost certainly costing you much more than you think, in terms of lost productivity, staff and customer frustration, and IT resource drain. Everyone hates their VPN. No one should have to put up with this sort haphazard service and the lost business that FREE VPN is costing your company

End VPN nightmare now
iQuila…….