Building a Cloud-to-Edge Architecture Across 40K Global Locations
Edge at any kind of distributed scale requires new management approaches that account for edge idiosyncrasies, like poor connectivity, limited hardware or lack of onsite technical support.
But those concerns don’t absolve enterprise IT teams who are under constant pressure to maintain reliable, consistent digital services across the company’s footprint, no matter how large, disbursed or problematic. After all, the digital experience is so closely tied to customer satisfaction, operational excellence and business goals that maintaining those services is the No.1 responsibility of many enterprise IT teams.
Achieving this level of service across thousands (or tens of thousands) of locations is a huge challenge, as YUM! Brands, parent company of global restaurant chains Taco Bell, KFC, Pizza Hut and Habitat Burger, discovered. The solution, it found, is a modular, container-based and edge-native architecture that standardizes digital operations across its 40,000+ global stores.
Lessons Learned From Deploying Kubernetes at Scale
If you’re looking for advice on providing consistent digital experiences across diverse locations, watch Scaling Edge Platforms to Thousands of Global Locations, recorded live from AWS re:Invent.
During this free livestreamed webinar, Ryan Good of YUM! Brands, Justin Swagler of AWS and TNS Founder Alex Williams explained how YUM! collaborated with Spectro Cloud to deploy next-gen edge platforms to support AI/ML workloads, boost uptime and drive agility.
Learn how AWS and Spectro Cloud enable centralized management and scalable, production-grade infrastructure to bring innovation closer to customers — whether in retail, industrial or remote settings.
Watch This Live Webinar Today!
What You’ll Learn
By watching, you’ll get best practices, real-world examples and actionable tips, including:
- Why differentiating customer experiences are often AI-driven and they almost always require edge.
- Why edge at a distributed scale requires new management approaches that account for edge idiosyncrasies, like lack of connectivity and limited hardware.
- How to plan for repeatability, cost, availability, security and life-cycle management — critical factors for success.