• Cybersecurity Glossary
What is Zero Touch Provisioning (ZTP)?
Zero Touch Provisioning (ZTP) is a network automation method that lets a device (a router, switch, firewall, access point or gateway) configure itself automatically the moment it is powered on and connected, with no engineer on site and no manual configuration. The device is shipped to the location, someone plugs in the cables, and it contacts a central provisioning system over any available transport, authenticates, downloads its software image and full configuration, and joins the network in minutes. ZTP turns the deployment of tens, hundreds or thousands of sites from a field engineering project into a logistics exercise. It is one of the defining capabilities of modern SD-WAN platforms, and a key differentiator of the Teldat CNM SD-WAN Suite, where automatic router deployment over any transport, including cellular, is built into the platform.
Zero Touch Provisioning (ZTP) definition
Zero Touch Provisioning is the automation of everything that happens between powering on a new network device and that device being fully operational with its production configuration. In a ZTP workflow, the device leaves the factory or warehouse in a generic state. Its identity (serial number, certificate) is registered in advance in a central provisioning system. When the device boots at the destination site, it obtains basic connectivity, reaches out to the provisioning system, proves who it is, and receives its assigned firmware version and configuration. No console cable, no laptop, no command line, no engineer.
The “zero touch” refers to technical touches, not physical ones. Someone still has to unbox the device, connect power and plug in the WAN cable or antennas. The point is that this someone can be anyone: a store manager, a courier, an electrician. Every task that previously required networking knowledge has been moved from the site to the central system, where it is done once, in a template, for all sites.
ZTP matters because device deployment is where branch network projects historically stall. Sending a qualified engineer to every site is expensive and slow; preconfiguring devices in a staging depot creates its own logistics and version control problems. ZTP removes both: devices ship directly from the factory or distributor to the site, and the configuration lives centrally until the moment it is needed.
How ZTP works, step by step
A ZTP workflow has a standard anatomy regardless of vendor or device type. The six steps below describe the sequence as it runs in a modern SD-WAN deployment, from the moment the device is registered to the moment the site carries production traffic.
Manual provisioning vs ZTP
The case for ZTP becomes obvious when the two deployment models are placed side by side. The table below compares traditional manual provisioning (engineer on site or staging depot) with ZTP across the dimensions that determine project cost and speed at branch scale.
| Dimension | Manual provisioning | Zero Touch Provisioning |
|---|---|---|
| Who configures the device | Network engineer, on site or in a staging depot | Central system; on site, anyone who can plug in cables |
| Time per site | Hours per device, plus travel or shipping through staging | Minutes from power on to production |
| Skills required at site | CLI and platform knowledge | None; unbox, connect, power on |
| Cost per deployment | Engineer time and travel, or depot logistics, per site | Marginal; cost is concentrated in templates built once |
| Human error exposure | Per device manual typing and version selection | Eliminated at site; errors fixed once in the template |
| Configuration consistency | Drifts across sites and engineers over time | Identical by construction; one template, many sites |
| Firmware version control | Whatever shipped or was staged; manual upgrades later | Enforced at provisioning; every site lands on the assigned version |
| Scaling to hundreds of sites | Linear cost and calendar growth | Waves of dozens of sites per week with the same team |
| Replacement of failed hardware | Engineer visit or preconfigured spare logistics | Ship a generic spare; it self provisions on arrival |
The economics compound with scale. For five sites, manual provisioning is an inconvenience. For five hundred, it is the dominant cost and the critical path of the entire rollout. ZTP inverts the equation: the effort moves into building good templates once, and each additional site costs nearly nothing to bring online. This is also why hardware replacement under ZTP transforms field operations: a failed router is swapped by a courier delivered generic spare that provisions itself, instead of an engineer visit with a preconfigured unit.
What ZTP is used for?
ZTP covers much more than the first installation. In Teldat deployments, the same provisioning machinery handles the full operational lifecycle of the device fleet. The six activities below are where ZTP delivers measurable value in production networks.
What to look for in a ZTP system?
Not all ZTP implementations are equal. These are the factors that separate a production grade ZTP system from a basic boot script, and the ones worth examining closely before committing a large deployment to any platform.
ZTP security considerations
ZTP automates the most security sensitive moment in a device’s life: the moment it receives its identity, software and policy. Done well, ZTP is more secure than manual provisioning, because it removes per site improvisation. The six points below are what “done well” means.
ZTP in the Teldat CNM SD-WAN Suite
Automatic router deployment is one of Teldat’s key differentiators, built into the CNM SD-WAN Suite rather than added on top. ZTP in the Teldat platform covers branch routers, industrial gateways, 5G FWA devices and access points, over any transport, and is the same machinery that later runs upgrades, reconfigurations and hardware replacement for the whole fleet.
Why ZTP is a platform property, not a feature: the value of ZTP is not the first boot, it is everything that reuses the same machinery afterwards: firmware campaigns, policy changes, hardware swaps, fleet growth. Because Teldat builds ZTP into the provisioning layer of the CNM SD-WAN Suite, a device provisioned in minutes on day one is upgraded, reconfigured and, if needed, replaced through the same audited, template driven workflow for its entire life. Day zero automation that does not extend to day two operations solves the easy half of the problem.
FAQ’s about Zero Touch Provisioning
❯ What is Zero Touch Provisioning in simple terms?
Zero Touch Provisioning (ZTP) is a way to deploy network devices without sending an engineer to the site. The device ships in a generic state; when someone plugs it in and powers it on, it automatically contacts a central system, authenticates, downloads its assigned software and configuration, and joins the network. All the technical work happens centrally, once, in templates; at the site, anyone who can connect cables can deploy a router.
❯ How does ZTP work?
The device’s identity (serial number plus a factory installed certificate) is registered in a central provisioning system and linked to a site template before shipping. On first boot, the device obtains basic connectivity (DHCP on broadband or a preinstalled SIM on 4G/5G), discovers the provisioning service, and the two authenticate each other mutually. The device then receives its assigned firmware and full configuration, establishes its overlay tunnels and starts reporting telemetry. The typical elapsed time from power on to production is minutes.
❯ Is ZTP secure?
A production grade ZTP implementation is more secure than manual provisioning, because it removes per site improvisation and enforces a uniform, audited workflow. The requirements: device identity anchored in a hardware certificate, mutual authentication between device and server, encrypted transport, cryptographically signed firmware images, and scoped configuration delivery so each device can retrieve only its own configuration. The channel between the ZTP system and the device is a critical attack surface and must be evaluated first when selecting a platform.
❯ What is the difference between ZTP and manual provisioning?
Manual provisioning requires a network engineer to configure each device, either on site or in a staging depot, taking hours per device with travel or extra logistics, and introducing per device opportunities for human error. ZTP moves all configuration work to a central template built once; at the site, the device provisions itself in minutes after power on. At branch scale, ZTP typically turns deployment from the critical path of a rollout into a logistics task, and enables hardware replacement by courier instead of engineer visit.
❯ What is ZTP used for besides initial deployment?
The same provisioning machinery handles the full device lifecycle: mass firmware and operating system upgrade campaigns, mass or per site configuration changes, hardware replacement (a generic spare self provisions with the failed unit’s site configuration), and fleet expansion as the business grows. Day zero provisioning that also runs day two operations is what distinguishes a platform capability from a deployment script.
❯ How does Teldat implement Zero Touch Provisioning?
Teldat builds ZTP natively into the CNM SD-WAN Suite, covering branch routers, industrial gateways, 5G FWA devices and access points. Devices self provision over any transport including 4G/5G cellular, configuration is generated from graphical templates with per site variables, the management plane is separated from the data plane so sites never depend on the cloud to keep running, and multi tenant operation supports partner managed and co managed models. This automatic router deployment is the engine behind Teldat’s largest deployments, including 2,700 sites at the Junta de Andalucia.
Deploy your network with zero touch, with Teldat
The CNM SD-WAN Suite provisions routers, gateways and access points automatically over any transport, including 5G, with template driven configuration, embedded security from first boot and the same machinery running upgrades and replacements for the life of the fleet. Proven at 2,700 sites.







