The world is made of data—at least, the business world is. And a common question when moving that data around is about bandwidth: how fast does it go (and can it go faster)? And a surprising number of enterprises don’t consider wireless WAN capable of providing enough of it … without really knowing what “enough” means (or how much they really need).
We understand. Bandwidth is a measure of speed, and as a business customer, you want everything to be fast. But a vanilla Megabits per second figure isn’t the only factor influencing your productivity. Real-world performance—how people perceive the connection’s actual performance while doing their jobs—isn’t a single number: it involves usage patterns, application needs, and resilience of the connection. (If you’re not sure why this matters, the answer is ahead).
In this article, we’ll explore these real-world factors that affect performance—with a free cheat sheet that’ll help you decide how fast your wireless WAN really needs to be.
Consumer and business needs: really, really different
Wireless enables connectivity for things that move around in remote places—which means it can deal with a broader set of use cases than its wired cousins. So while the available speeds of an LTE/5G connection may sound slower than the latest fibre to the home, it’s not a fair comparison. Consumer connections are a different beast. Businesses behave differently, and have different needs.
How different? The issues are fourfold, summarised as where you are, what you do, the people (and non-people!) using the connection, and the criticality of the data.
1. Where you are. Consumers cluster in cities, but wireless data is about reaching areas that aren’t easy to connect with cables. This doesn’t just mean hi-tech solar farms in the desert or mining sites in the mountains (although we’ve done those)—it can be as close to home as a pop-up shop in your local mall, or a food court at a festival site.
Such setups aren’t for watching 4K movies. They’re for transacting payments, connecting to corporate over your SD-WAN, accessing SaaS platforms in the cloud. Which means, reliability, consistency are much more important than your peak download rate.