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Overview
Enterprise networking is entering a new era defined by distributed architectures, AI-driven workloads, hybrid and multi cloud expansion, and rising operational complexity. Traditional wide area networks were designed for predictable traffic, centralized applications, and long planning cycles. That model no longer reflects enterprise reality. AI initiatives introduce bursty, latency sensitive traffic patterns. Cloud adoption reshapes east–west flows. Ecosystem expansion pushes connectivity beyond the traditional perimeter. As expectations for scalability, availability, governance, and security increase, static networks are increasingly becoming bottlenecks rather than enablers.
In this research brief, theCUBE Research examines how networking must evolve to support the distributed, AI-driven enterprise. The analysis highlights rising complexity, growing operational pressure, and the need for networks that can scale, segment, secure, and adapt in real time. It explores how Zayo’s Dynamic Link platform redefines connectivity around agility, unified visibility, and embedded security, positioning the network as an active enabler of AI adoption, multi cloud expansion, and business responsiveness rather than a constraint on innovation.
Key Takeaways
- Security and governance must be embedded in the network fabric: Distributed environments expand the attack surface, making integrated protection, encryption, policy routing, and visibility foundational requirements.
- AI is the primary catalyst for network change: Bursty, latency sensitive, data-intensive workloads demand elastic bandwidth and dynamic traffic control that static networks cannot provide.
- Network complexity is rising faster than operational capacity: Most organizations report increasing network complexity while teams remain lean and constrained by skills gaps and budget pressure.
- Agility, not consumption models, defines modern networking: Enterprises care less about labels such as Network as a Service and more about real time scalability, segmentation, visibility, and policy enforcement.

