Squiz is an AI-powered Digital Experience Platform (DXP) provider, with offices in multiple locations globally, including the United States, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.
Designed to minimize complexity, the Squiz DXP makes it easy for marketers and developers to build, manage, and optimize intelligent enterprise websites, portals, and app experiences.
Squiz offers multiple AI-bolstered capabilities built into the platform, including content management, search, personalization, optimization, visual page building and forms built using drag and drop functionality. Delivered via a composable architecture, the platform also allows seamless integration with existing martech systems.
Since 1998, Squiz has been embraced by a growing number of public and private sector organizations. Its diverse customer list now covers various industries, including government, higher education, and professional services.
For Squiz, composability is the key to creating a functional, effective, and easy-to-use DXP solution.
“Composability — the ability to take all types of files, media, and players (whether new or legacy tech) and interconnect and integrate them under a singular platform — is the heart of what we do,” explains Martin Pretorius, IT strategist and Head of Security at Squiz. “By abstracting complexity and simplifying the digital asset management process, Squiz delivers the best possible experience regardless of the state of our clients’ legacy media.”
However, as Squiz helped their clients navigate the complexities of managing vast, often fragmented libraries of digital assets, the company faced its own set of challenges. Keeping pace with growing consumer expectations and the rapid evolution of digital and interactive media technology placed increasing strain on the company’s legacy infrastructure. As they shifted to the cloud to modernize and maintain their competitive edge, Squiz sought a technical partner to help drive improvement in these core areas:
“Most of our stakeholders had already had positive experiences with Cloudflare,” says Pretorius. “So, when we decided to partner with industry experts to provide the best possible customer experience, Cloudflare was the obvious choice.”
As Squiz moved their legacy servers into the cloud to improve performance and augment their customers’ ability to deliver flawless digital experiences. They also adopted Cloudflare performance services. The first priority was to accelerate customer applications, improve media delivery, and ensure the availability of their customers' digital properties.
Leveraging Cloudflare ’s enterprise-grade content delivery network (CDN) — spanning over 330 cities and 120 countries across Cloudflare’s global network — enabled Squiz to host and deliver customer content closer to the end user, reduce latency, improve page load times, and ensure faster, smoother digital experiences.
“Cloudflare delivered the performance we were looking for, pushing our products and packages into the future and helping us get our clients closer to their customers on the network edge,” says Pretorius.
With their initial performance goals met, Squiz moved beyond static content performance enhancements. They implemented Cloudflare Workers — a cornerstone of the Cloudflare developer platform — to run their dynamic workloads at the edge of the global network and automatically scale applications to their distributed customer base.
“The more trips you have to make from the customer to where you generate dynamic content, the less performant the overall experience,“ explains Pretorius. “We were already hosting static content on the Cloudflare global network, so using Workers to render and deliver dynamic content from the edge was a natural evolution.”
Squiz also uses Workers to tailor their clients’ digital experiences and distribute video, audio, and images to both mobile and desktop devices much more efficiently.
“Improving the user experience has always been our goal — and Cloudflare lets us serve static and dynamic content separately, picking the best way to deliver every element on the page,” says Pretorius. “Those benefits accumulate so that every instance is another performance gain.”
Squiz’s developers also use Workers KV, Cloudflare’s serverless key-value application storage, to extend application functionality and reduce response times by caching authentication tokens and other important information on the Cloudflare network.