PacketFabric Democratizes Cloud Connectivity Pricing

December 15, 2020 Off By David
Object Storage

PacketFabric, an innovator of on-demand connectivity to the secure, private internet, announced it launched flat rate pricing for hybrid cloud connectivity across the U.S. and Europe. With this innovative pricing strategy, PacketFabric continues to lead the market disruption of networking and cloud computing.

PacketFabric’s new democratized pricing is $100 per month for hosted hybrid cloud connections up to 1Gbps, for both metro and long-haul capacity in the United States and Europe. With this new pricing strategy, PacketFabric is making cloud connectivity egalitarian across the tech landscape.

“Cloud is the future, and it shouldn’t be exclusive,” said PacketFabric CEO Dave Ward. “That’s why we sought a way to democratize it. Now with PacketFabric’s flat rate pricing, companies from emerging businesses to large enterprises can have affordable access to the cloud.”

According to Gartner, “cost optimization will be crucial to drive cloud adoption, and by 2024, all legacy applications will be migrated to public cloud infrastructure.”

“They say you can’t have it good, fast and cheap, but now you can have all three with PacketFabric’s flat rate, cloud connectivity pricing,” continued Ward. “We’ve been disrupting the market since we launched PacketFabric’s Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) platform in 2017, and we continue to lead the way forward.”

PacketFabric’s NaaS orchestrates and guarantees connectivity between collocation facilities, clouds, and offers private network interconnection across the globe. The NaaS platform is private, secure, reliable and scalable, plus it’s fully redundant. PacketFabric is a women-founded technology start-up, launched by industry veterans Jezzibell Gilmore, PacketFabric’s Chief Commercial Officer, and Anna Claiborne, Senior Vice President of Product and Engineering for PacketFabric.

Ward, a prolific technologist, expands on PacketFabric’s strategy in his recent blog post, “Democratizing Access to the Cloud, Disrupting the Business of Getting to the Cloud.”