Investing in Edge Computing: Cloudflare

Cloudflare’s platform helps clients secure and accelerate the performance of websites and applications. Motley Fool

Cloudflare (NYSE:NET), which completed its IPO in 2019, is a software-based content delivery network (CDN) internet security company that uses edge computing to protect against cybersecurity breaches. The whole premise of edge computing is to bring the access points closer to the end users. Cloudflare has access points at over 200 cities throughout the world, and they claim that 99% of Internet users are close enough that they can access the network within 0.1 seconds or less.

This internet infrastructure company manages the flow of information online and therefore plays an important role in migrating data from the cloud to the edge. Its platform helps clients secure and accelerate the performance of websites and applications. And, it offers myriad security products and development tools for software engineers and web developers.

The public internet is becoming the new corporate network.

Cloudflare is a leading provider of the network-as-a-service for a work-from-anywhere world. Effectively, the public internet is becoming the new corporate network, and that shift calls for a radical reimagining of network security and connectivity. Cloudflare is focused on making it easier and intuitive to connect users, build branch office on-ramps, and delegate application access — often in a matter of minutes.

No matter where applications are hosted, or employees reside, enterprise connectivity needs to be secure and fast. Cloudflare’s massive global network uses real-time Internet intelligence to protect against the latest threats and route traffic around bad Internet weather and outages.

Edge computing

While cloud computing houses data and software services in a centralized data center and delivers to end users via the internet, edge computing moves data and software out of the cloud to be located closer to the end user.

Edge computing reduces the time it takes to receive information (the latency) and decreases the amount of traffic traveling across the internet’s not-unlimited infrastructure. Businesses that want to increase the performances of their networks for employees, customers, and smart devices can take advantage of edge computing to bring their apps out of the cloud and host them on-site either by owning and using networking hardware or paying for hosting at localized data centers.

The company recently launched Cloudflare One, a network-as-a-service solution designed to replace outdated corporate networks. Cloudflare One acts as a secure access service edge (SASE). Rather than sending traffic through a central hub, SASE is a distributed network architecture. This means employees connect to Cloudflare’s network, where traffic is filtered and security policies are enforced, then traffic is routed to the internet or the corporate network.

This creates a fast, secure experience for employees, allowing them to access corporate resources and applications from any location, on any device.

Enterprise accelerating growth

Cloudflare has gained hundreds of thousands of users with a unique go-to-market strategy, according to Motley Fool. It launches a new product for free (with paid premium features) to acquire lots of individual and small business customers and then markets its new product to paying enterprise customers.

Cloudflare has created a massive ecosystem that it can leverage to land new deals and later expand on those relationships. It’s what makes this company a top edge computing pick since businesses and developers continue to flock to the next-gen edge network platform.

There is increased risk associated with a small-cap, pure-play edge computing company like Cloudflare.


References:

  1. https://www.fool.com/investing/stock-market/market-sectors/information-technology/edge-computing-stocks/
  2. https://www.cloudflare.com
  3. https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/06/17/forget-amc-this-growth-stock-could-make-you-rich/

Defining the Problem

“If I had an hour to solve a problem, I’d spend 55 minutes thinking about the problem and five minutes thinking about solutions.” Albert Einstein

This enlightened quotation by Albert Einstein points to the reason for the failings of many modern innovation and solutions. “Twenty-five percent of failures were due to people trying to solve the wrong problems,” says inventor Darrell Mann, CTO of consulting agency Blackswan, former chief engineer at Rolls-Royce, where he studied innovation duds and dynamos for 15 years.

What organizations struggle with is not solving problems but figuring out what the true problems are they’re trying to solve. Essentially, individuals and organizations are bad at problem diagnosis. Spurred by a penchant for action, corporate and organization executives tend to switch quickly into problem solving mode without checking whether they really understand the problem.

Well-defined problems lead to well aligned and breakthrough solutions. Most companies and organizations aren’t sufficiently rigorous in defining the problems they’re attempting to solve and articulating why those issues are important. Without that rigor, organizations miss opportunities, waste resources, and end up pursuing innovation initiatives that aren’t aligned with their strategies or mission.

Many companies and organizations need to become better at devoting the time and resources to ask the right questions so that they can define and tackle the right problems.


References:

  1. https://www.inc.com/thebuildnetwork/you-cannot-solve-what-you-dont-understand.html
  2. https://hbr.org/2017/01/are-you-solving-the-right-problems?ab=at_art_art_1x1
  3. https://hbr.org/2012/09/the-power-of-defining-the-prob