The Wi-Fi router from the cable company was built to cover a living room. It was never meant to handle an office of six people, a printer, security cameras, and a VPN — let alone a building with metal-roof construction, multiple rooms, and concrete walls.

Most small business network problems we see in Levy County come from the same root cause: equipment that's been asked to do far more than it was designed for, plus wiring that grew piecemeal over the years.

What's Included

  • Site survey and signal mapping of your existing setup
  • Business-grade router, access points, and switches sized for your space and traffic load
  • New Cat6 cable runs where they make a real difference (between buildings, to printers, to key workstations)
  • Properly mounted ceiling or wall access points — no more "router on the floor behind a filing cabinet"
  • Secure guest Wi-Fi separate from your business network
  • Labeled cables and documented network map so future maintenance is straightforward

Why Local Offices Need This Done Right

Offices in this part of Florida have a lot working against them: older construction, metal roofs, longer distances between buildings, and rural internet connections that don't have a lot of headroom to spare. We've done network rebuilds across Chiefland, Bronson, Williston, and Cedar Key — the patterns are familiar.

Adding "boosters" or extenders from the big-box store usually makes things worse, not better. The real fix is putting access points where the people actually are (not just where the cable jack happens to be) and running real cable to the spots that matter. Done right, you stop thinking about Wi-Fi entirely.

What This Costs

Network rebuilds are priced per engagement based on the size of the building, complexity of the cable runs, and the equipment your office actually needs. We’ll come out for a site visit and quote your specific situation — no charge for the initial look.

Quick Check Before You Call If your office has a routine for "what to do when the Wi-Fi goes out" — that's not a working network. That's a workaround you've gotten used to.