Are you planning a new
wireless network for your company and wondering how much your new WiFi network
will cost? Or do you have an existing Wi-Fi network that is too slow, too
unreliable or insecure?
If you feel a little
overwhelmed by the whole process and don't know where to start, you are not
alone.
In a digital world, your
company's success depends largely on its ability to adapt the technology it
needs to be competitive. When so many end-users connect to your WiFi with their
smartphones, tablets or laptops, you don't want all your business applications
to run on a slow, fragile and clumsy wireless network infrastructure.
But unless you're a
professional looking for and buying a wireless network, you may not even know
the right questions to ask. And the technology changes so quickly; what you
knew a year or two ago may not be relevant.
Also, as corporate
wireless has evolved, being a generalist in IT or a computer network won't cut
it. Too many stakes.
And of course, no the company can afford to write a blank check for WiFi, initially or continuously.
What is the right answer
for your situation? How do you determine WiFi Installation Cost? What should you look for in an economic quote?
In this blog post, you
will learn about WiFi planning, how the WiFi design process works and the
budget for WiFi as a service for your new WiFi network.
Wifi Planning
Before going too far,
find out what's going on in WiFi planning best practices. And just as
important, remember that finding and buying a business-class Wi-Fi network is
very different from installing an access point in your home.
What should you think to
prepare for success with your new wireless network?
Check out each of these
seven areas to make sure your WiFi quote is truly complete:
Radio Frequency (RF)
Planning and Design - Unlike traditional
computer networks that use twisted pairs and fiber optic cables, WiFi networks
operate on radio frequencies. Since RF is invisible to the naked eye, make sure
that the company you are considering is familiar with predictive RF design,
surveys on wireless sites, wireless engineering, performance reviews,
performance monitoring and systems management.
Coverage vs. capacity: your WiFi planning should also consider the
effectiveness of your
wireless coverage and
how this approach to managed WiFi will meet the end-users' capacity needs, both
now and at least in the intermediate future, in the next 24-36 months.
Access Points - Think about a big city with major crossroads
and traffic lights and how they keep traffic flowing without too many
accidents. With this analogy, you begin to approximate the importance of access
points. But how many PAs do you need? What type of related equipment is
required? And where should all this be installed to make sure your WiFi is as
fast, reliable and secure as it is needed?
Network infrastructure - Yes, the access points are the building blocks
of WiFi. But your access points are almost worthless without a solid underlying
network infrastructure. Controllers, switches, firewalls and power supplies
must be addressed in the same type of conversation.
Scalability: your business can have 50 end-users in one
place. And each has two devices. How will your WiFi evolve if you reach 150 end-users in the same place, add 30 guest users per day and each user now carries
three devices? Good question, right?
Security: Is the Internet becoming more secure with each
passing month? Almost. And there is a good reason why cybersecurity experts
demand such high starting salaries. There are not enough of them and the
training is long and expensive. If your IT team doesn't have advanced Wi-Fi
security skills, it's best to find someone who falls under your managed WiFI
agreement.
System Management - Travel. Adds. Changes. Integration of new users.
If any of these make you look like a dot between a deer in the headlights and a
cold sweat, be sure to consider your system management needs in your overall
WiFi budget.
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