What is our primary use case?
I work in the IT field and I take care of machines, like servers and emails. My job title is Professional Services Engineer and my company is Infrasense IT.
We use OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey to connect to the client site from remote locations. We use OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey to securely connect to the client environments. Once I connect, I verify connectivity by testing access to the internal resources like servers, RDP hosts, or domain controllers and running a quick ping test to confirm network reachability. After that, my daily tasks usually involve connecting to the Windows Servers through RDP, accessing Active Directory for users or policy management, troubleshooting networks, monitoring backups and security tools, and performing patches. Security is important, so I also make sure MFA is enabled where required. VPN sessions are disconnected after work is completed. For example, if a client reports they cannot access shared folders, I would connect to their environment through OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey, verify the file server is reachable, check DNS and SMB connectivity, and review permissions or mapped drive issues. That is usually the standard workflow I follow in the managed IT support environment day to day.
In my role, OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey is part of the standard workflow for accessing client infrastructure securely. Different engineers may have different permission levels depending on the client and the type of work they handle. Helpdesk technicians may only have access to the user systems or specific support servers. Infrastructure or professional services engineers like me usually have broader access for server management, migration, firewall changes, or troubleshooting. Security or senior engineers may handle privileged administrator access and VPN policy reviews. On a day-to-day basis, I personally use it quite frequently because my work involves server administration, remote troubleshooting of Microsoft 365, and hybrid environment support. Our team generally follows documented access procedures and VPN usage tied to the security policies like MFA, least privilege access, and activity logging. That helps maintain secure remote operations while supporting clients in different locations.
When evaluating remote access solutions alongside OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey, the comparison usually includes both firewall-native VPN platforms and some common alternatives we look at, including WireGuard, Cisco AnyConnect, FortiClient, and Sophos Connect. The decision usually comes down to existing client infrastructure, cost and licensing, MFA support, scalability, and team familiarity with the platform. OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey was attractive because it was flexible, reliable, cost-effective, and worked well across different client environments without locking us into a single firewall vendor.
Before using OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey, a lot of access is either handled through built-in VPN solutions or through client-specific remote access methods. In different environments, we used things like native Windows VPN such as PPTP, L2TP, or IKEv2, or firewall-based VPNs from vendors like Fortinet or Sophos, or direct RDP access through restricted public IPs in older setups, and also site-to-site VPN tunnels for permanent office connectivity. The challenge with some of the older or manual approaches was less centralized management, inconsistent security policies across clients, and more complicated troubleshooting. For example, in smaller environments, admins sometimes manually maintain individual remote access configurations on routers or firewalls. That worked initially but became difficult to manage as the number of users and the client's environments grew. OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey helped standardize remote access by providing encrypted secure tunnels, consistent authentication methods, and easier client profile distribution. In many cases, it became the preferred option because it was flexible, cost-effective, and relatively straightforward to deploy across different client infrastructures.
OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey has a pretty noticeable impact on both operational efficiency and security in day-to-day support work. The biggest improvement is probably consistency. Before standardization around a more unified VPN approach, different clients often have completely different remote access methods, which makes troubleshooting and onboarding slower. OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey helps create a more predictable workflow for engineers. Some of the main impacts include faster remote access and troubleshooting, improved security posture, better scalability for MSP operations, more efficient onboarding for engineers, reduced dependency on physical presence, and improved support during remote work periods. From a business perspective, it also helps improve responsiveness and service delivery because engineers could securely access systems from anywhere instead of depending on on-site access or less secure remote methods.
What is most valuable?
The best feature of OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey, especially in my day-to-day MSP and infrastructure work, is mainly its flexible security and reliability. The features we use the most include secure encrypted remote access, cross-platform compatibility, client profile configuration, certificate-based authentication, stability and reliability, vendor-neutral deployment, flexible routing and subnet access, and logging and troubleshooting visibility. In my day-to-day work, the most commonly used functions are probably connecting securely to the client environment, accessing servers over RDP or management tools, and supporting hybrid or remote workforces. From an admin perspective, the flexibility and control are probably the strong advantage. It can fit into small deployments as well as more complex multi-client environments without recurring major licensing costs.
OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey is usually more of a department-specific and client-specific tool rather than something used by the entire company universally. In my MSP environment, specifically engineers who handle infrastructure or professional services tend to use it much more heavily because they work across multiple client networks daily. Adoption is broad within the technical teams, but usage depends heavily on the job responsibilities.
What needs improvement?
OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey is very flexible, but there are features that would significantly improve day-to-day operations, especially in MSPs. The biggest improvement I would see is better centralized management, easier routing and network virtualization, more advanced built-in monitoring and reporting, simplified certificate lifecycle management, and stronger integrations with identity providers. One thing we often wish for is something similar to enterprise VPN dashboards where we can instantly see who is connected, which routes are active, failed authentication attempts, and tunnel health. Overall, the core VPN engine itself is solid, but most frustrations are really around management, visibility, scalability, and operational convenience rather than the tunnel functionality itself.
The biggest friction point with OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey is usually around configuration complexity and troubleshooting, especially in more complex client networks. I encounter issues whenever there are routing and subnet issues, DNS resolution problems, certificates and client configuration management challenges, limited centralized management in the community edition, or documentation dependency.
For how long have I used the solution?
It has been more than three years since I became familiar with OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey.
How was the initial setup?
When I start working with OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey, the initial setup takes roughly a few hours for a basic working deployment, especially for testing or small environments. The main steps include installing an OpenVPN server package, configuring certificates, authentication, setting up client configuration files, opening the required firewall ports, and testing the connectivity from external networks.
What was our ROI?
If I could change just one thing about OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey, it would be adding fully integrated centralized management and visibility dashboard. That single improvement would probably have the biggest day-to-day operational impact for our team. Right now, in the community edition, a lot of management tasks are still fairly manual, including user provisioning, certificate handling, connection monitoring, troubleshooting, and multi-client management. Having a centralized interface that combines user management, live session visibility, and route monitoring would drastically reduce administrator overhead. That one change alone would probably save the team several hours each week in troubleshooting and administrative work, especially in larger or more complex environments.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Our team mostly learns through hands-on usage and internal documentation rather than formal vendor training. OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey is fairly intuitive once the environment is already configured. For regular engineers or help desk staff, the workflow is usually simple: launch the VPN client, select the client profile, authenticate the credentials or MFA, connect, and verify access. Most team members become comfortable with the daily use very quickly. The more technicians' learning curve is on the administration side, especially around certification management, DNS troubleshooting, split tunneling, user access control, and security policies. Overall, end-user usage is straightforward while deployment and advanced troubleshooting require more practical experience and networking knowledge.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
When evaluating remote access solutions alongside OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey, the comparison usually includes both firewall-native VPN platforms and some common alternatives we look at, including WireGuard, Cisco AnyConnect, FortiClient, and Sophos Connect. The decision usually comes down to existing client infrastructure, cost and licensing, MFA support, scalability, and team familiarity with the platform. OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey was attractive because it was flexible, reliable, cost-effective, and worked across different client environments without locking us into a single firewall vendor.
What other advice do I have?
OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey definitely improved team collaboration on operational coordination, especially in a multi-engineer MSP environment. One of the biggest changes is creating a more standardized remote access workflow across the teams. Before that, engineers often used different methods depending on the client environment, which made handoffs and troubleshooting less consistent. After standardization, collaboration becomes smoother in several ways, including easier engineer-to-engineer handoffs, more consistent troubleshooting workflows, faster collaboration during incidents, reduced dependency on specific individuals, and improved after-hours support coordination. A good example would be a critical server outage. One engineer could establish VPN access and validate connectivity, another could check virtualization infrastructure, and another could review backup or monitoring systems because everyone used a consistent remote access method. The team could coordinate much more efficiently instead of wasting time figuring out how to access the environment first. Beyond just connectivity, OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey indirectly improved operational consistency, knowledge sharing, escalation handling, and overall team responsiveness.
OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey has a noticeable impact on both operational efficiency and security in day-to-day support work. The biggest improvement is probably consistency. Before standardization around a more unified VPN approach, different clients often have completely different remote access methods, which makes troubleshooting and onboarding slower. OpenVPN Community Edition - powered by TurnKey helps create a more predictable workflow for engineers. Some of the main impacts include faster remote access and troubleshooting, improved security posture, better scalability for MSP operations, more efficient onboarding for engineers, reduced dependency on physical presence, and improved support during remote work periods. From a business perspective, it also helps improve responsiveness and service delivery because engineers could securely access systems from anywhere instead of depending on on-site access or less secure remote methods. I would rate this review an eight out of ten.