With the middle mile emerging as one of the next major topics of interest for global enterprises, we thought it would be useful to develop a comprehensive explanation of this new market segment.
Broadly, we outline the middle mile like this:
In other words, the middle mile refers to the segment of network infrastructure that lies between the core network of a telecommunications operator or internet service provider (ISP) and the local network that directly serves end-users (the "last mile").
It's the crucial link that aggregates traffic from various last-mile networks and transports it to the high-capacity backbone of the internet.
We wrote all about this over here.
There are some notable use cases for middle mile, as vendors look to optimize traffic flow, provide discrete circuits, offer flexible commercial terms, and enable agile deployments.
Middle-mile providers distinguish themselves from telcos by offering more flexible transactions, simplified pricing, agile provisioning, user-friendly portals, and transparent network performance visibility.
However, middle-mile operators face challenges, including limited reach compared to global telcos and reliance on other telcos for last-mile connectivity. Despite these challenges, telcos remain capable and are the incumbent option, especially with their integrated access networks and established infrastructure.
Coevolve CTO Ciaran Roche visitied our podcast to discuss just this. Ciaran explores how middle mile solutions are selected to solve real-world enterprise WAN issues. ⬇️