To help convey how a dedicated network can improve stability, imagine you’re at a crowded party at a friend’s home. Multiple conversations on various topics are happening – but everybody at the party is mixed together in the same space. Everyone must talk louder, repeat themselves, and strain to hear each other, resulting in constant interruptions to the flow of the conversation. Inevitably, some information is misunderstood or lost. This situation is not efficient at all.
Seeing the problem, the host decides to split groups into different rooms by topic so that they can communicate without interruption. Problem solved.
Now, think about the data network in your organization. If multitudes of devices throughout different departments are sharing a network, the devices will have to compete for bandwidth and work harder to communicate with each other. It becomes similar to the party. And, unfortunately, devices can’t just speak louder. They get drowned out and/or interrupted by all the competition.
However, if your IT department serves as the “host” by separating groups of devices into different sections of the network, similar to the analogy of putting people in different rooms by topic, the result will be more efficient management of the organization’s overall traffic. Having one of these dedicated sections of the network exclusively for your Laerdal equipment will result in a more stable connection that will lead to fewer drops and lags.
In addition to the benefits of fewer headaches and the time consumed by network issues that a stable connection will provide, consider the possible impact of connectivity problems on your learners. If a scenario gets interrupted due to a connectivity issue, it will inevitably cause a reduction in the scenario’s realism. This could potentially affect the participants’ engagement levels.1
You put a lot of effort into maximizing your students’ engagement levels, from designing an effective pre-briefing to planning every detail of your scenarios. Would you want something as straightforward as a network issue mid-scenario to undo the work you’ve done?