Empowering manufacturing excellence through global platform for smart working

maxon

Case Study maxon

maxon is a developer and manufacturer of high-precision drive systems. maxon’s operations are as precise as its manufacturing output. The business wants to ensure its global workforce has access to the latest collaboration tools, with the ability to work remotely and form dynamic, cross-border project teams. Today, its Aruba architecture enables half of all employees to work using Wi-Fi, it supports digitisation of production and logistics, and reduces network management burden, freeing time to explore innovation.

maxon is a manufacturer of high-precision drive systems. Few people know the name, but most will appreciate maxon’s expertise: maxon products can be found in cardiac pumps, racing cars, camera lenses and NASA’s Mars rover.

Based in Switzerland, the company has more than 3,000 employees and revenues of CHF 568 million in 2019. Family-owned, maxon has operations in more than 30 countries, including production facilities in China, France, Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands, South Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States.

In a global market, the business must be innovative; more than eight per cent of annual revenues are invested in research and development. As maxon’s manufacturing output is precise, so are most of its operations. The business wants to ensure its global workforce has access to latest collaboration tools, with the ability to work remotely and form dynamic, cross-border project teams.

AN UMBRELLA UNDER WHICH TO MANAGE THE ENTIRE NETWORK

The network needed to support this style of work must be adaptive, secure and easy to manage, says Thomas Rossacher, Head of ICT Services, maxon. The group wants centralised control and visibility but to retain the ability to scale things up quickly at a local level when needed.

“We operate from 30 locations around the world and some locations are growing fast,” Rossacher explains. “On the network side, we only have a small team and everything is managed from here.”

The Aruba architecture delivers a unifed network infrastructure, from access points to switches and uncompromising protection and security orchestration together with supervision and oversight. Other vendors were considered in proofs of concept, says Rossacher, but only Aruba could provide the vital management layer.

“We’re a long-time HPE network customer and we favour a single-vendor strategy, so Aruba was always in a strong position,” he admits. “But Aruba ClearPass and Aruba AirWave really made the difference. That gave us an umbrella under which to manage everything.” The implementation was designed and managed by SOFTEC, a local Aruba partner

We are an engineering company. There is no shortage of people coming up with new ideas. With Aruba, we have given them a highperformance network. They will fgure out how to use it best.

Thomas Rossacher
Head of Corporate Security and ICT Services, maxon

 

SUPPORTING MOBILITY AND DIGITISATION

The engagement enables campus-wide wireless access at every maxon location. At the headquarters this means unobtrusive mobility for employees: there are no DECT phones, VoIP and Ofce 365 are standard, and half of the 1,300 people working there have no fxed desk. In the factories and logistics centres, handheld scanners connected to the network record the production process.

“We digitise more and more processes in the production environment,“ says Rossacher, “this makes us more efcient and helps us to deliver best quality to our customers.”

Today, all Client-Ports are authenticated with ClearPass.Dynamic VLAN/Role Assignment is used, without tunnelling. All wired-ports and wireless-SSIDs authenticated over ClearPass.

ONBOARDING AND MANAGEMENT

Rossacher says the use of ClearPass, in particular, simplifes and consolidates the network. The business is exploring IoT in the production and logistic environments: “Separating different networks for different usages behind ClearPass is far simpler than spreading ten different SSIDs around the world,” he explains.

Likewise, maxon uses ClearPass Policy Manager to separate users into different networks, with different policies for each group. “It’s a starting point,” says Rossacher.

He praises the ability of ClearPass to integrate with third parties. “We’re using Microsoft Intune to onboard the Zebra scanners and corporate and personal mobile devices, authenticated on ClearPass. It means there is no manual intervention need, users can automatically access the network worldwide.”

A PLATFORM FOR CONTINUED EXPERIMENTATION

More importantly, the Aruba Edge Services architecture enables maxon to experiment with new network approaches. Besides ensuring the network is ft for purpose, the job of the maxon network team is to explore new possibilities.

“We are an engineering company,” says Rossacher. “There is no shortage of people coming up with new ideas. We have given them a high-performance network. They will fgure out how to use it best.”

With a view to further simplifying management and working alongside Softec, the team is looking at Dynamic Segmentation and Aruba Central. “We’re looking at PoC with Central as a means to improve how we manage our branch ofces,” says Rossacher. “We want to be faster and more efcient in the way we manage remote locations.”

Aruba Remote Access Points are already being used to extend the maxon network to hotels hosting staff visiting the head office.

“We’ve used the RAPs in quickly setting up a new office in Paris,” explains Thomas Rossacher, a maxon network engineer. “They plug into the local Wi-Fi and have secure access to the maxon network. ClearPass enables us to extend the corporate security policies to the remote location.”

With home working now an established practice, Rossacher says extending the network, securely, to remote locations has to be a viable long-term option.“ It’s hard to say for certain how things will be in a year’s time but we have to imagine that travelling to and working from an ofce will not be a preferred option for many. Aruba gives us a platform to accommodate a changeable future.”

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