Networking networks are not just collections of hardware; rather, they are the road that governs application performance, information integrity, and all other elements of how you conduct your organization both today and in the years to come. Building the next generation of networks, in which information, apps, and users may be located anywhere in the cloud, calls for a strategy that takes a comprehensive view of the problem. This method offers a uniform, easy administration platform, permits choice for consumers, and helps organizations to install and manage the apps they have now, while also enabling them to be ready for those applications that they do not even know are coming in the future. The regional director for India and SAARC at Netgear is called Subhodeep Bhattacharya. The job that Shubhodeep plays at Netgear can unquestionably be described as that of a technology advocate. He considers the applicability of a technology to small and medium-sized businesses and sole proprietorships, and he continually evaluates both the need and the practicability of introducing and modifying technology in a manner that is tailored to these market subsets. He is skilled at seeing trends and requirements in small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and thinking about technology that can suit these needs and be made less difficult without necessarily abandoning the high-end advantages. Because there is an ever-increasing need for storage, Shubhodeep believes that there is a need for cost-effective units that are targeted at the midmarkets and that can afford de-duplication, unlimited snapshots, thin provisioning, and replication. These features should be affordable. Shubodeep invests his time in gaining a grasp of the requirements of the client as well as the extent to which the client is ready to pay to fulfill those requirements. According to him, the value of a technology evangelist rests in the capacity to transform a requirement into specified goods while staying within the budgetary constraints of the project.