Based in Seattle, Washington, evo is an omni-channel retailer specializing in outdoor sports and lifestyle gear, including skiing, snowboarding, mountain biking, surfing, and camping gear. Its online store is responsible for about 85% of its sales, and evo’s two biggest selling days of the year are Black Friday and Cyber Monday.
Like all online retailers, evo has to deal with automated traffic, nefarious crawlers, malicious bots, and the threat of DDoS and other attacks. Unlike legitimate customer traffic, which is stable and predictable, malicious requests often come in giant spikes, which can degrade site performance.
As evo’s business has grown, so too has their risk of DDoS and other forms of cyber attack. At key times of the year, an attack leading to downtime could prove extremely costly. This risk concerned Ben Plehal, Director of Technology. “When sales are at their holiday peak and every minute of website uptime is critical, we simply can’t afford to have an attack disrupt our ability to serve our customers.”
evo was also unsatisfied with its content delivery network (CDN). evo’s first CDN partner was Akamai, which became expensive as they scaled. The company then switched to Verizon Edgecast. However, Verizon’s CDN was difficult to configure, and Verizon didn’t offer other services evo needed.