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    Business Network Installation & Structured Cabling: Planning Your Infrastructure Right

    Every phone system, security camera, and wireless access point depends on your network. Here's how to plan a business network installation that lasts 15+ years.

    December 2025 12 min read

    SECTION 01

    Your Network Is the Foundation for Everything

    Every modern business system depends on your network. VoIP phone systems transmit voice over your network. Healthcare communication systems route clinical alerts through it. RTLS tracking sends location data across it. Security cameras stream video over it. WiFi access points connect to it. If your network infrastructure is poorly designed, undersized, or unreliable, every system that depends on it suffers — dropped calls, lost data, slow applications, and frustrated users.

    A properly designed and installed business network lasts 15-20 years. The structured cabling you install today will support technologies that haven't been invented yet — if it's done right. Conversely, cutting corners on network infrastructure creates a bottleneck that limits every future technology investment. This is why network installation is the most important infrastructure decision a business makes.

    15-20 yr
    Lifespan of quality structured cabling
    TIA Standard
    Cat6A
    Current recommended cabling standard
    10 Gbps Support
    100%
    Of modern systems depend on network
    Infrastructure Reality

    SECTION 02

    Structured Cabling Standards & Best Practices

    Structured cabling follows TIA/EIA-568 standards that define cable types, installation practices, and testing requirements. Cat6A (Category 6A) is the current recommended standard for new installations, supporting 10 Gbps Ethernet at distances up to 100 meters. While Cat5e and Cat6 are still functional, Cat6A future-proofs your investment for emerging technologies including WiFi 6E access points, high-definition security cameras, and IoT device density.

    Professional structured cabling includes: home run topology (every cable runs from the wall jack to the central patch panel), proper cable management in pathways and cable trays, labeled and documented every cable at both ends, tested and certified to category specifications, and organized patch panels in ventilated telecommunications closets. Shortcuts — daisy-chaining cables, using residential-grade materials, or skipping testing — create problems that are expensive to diagnose and fix later.

    SECTION 03

    Key Network Components

    Network switches — the central hubs that connect all devices. Enterprise-grade PoE (Power over Ethernet) switches from Aruba Networks power phones, cameras, and access points over the same cable that carries data. Wireless access points — enterprise APs from Aruba Networks provide high-density WiFi with seamless roaming. Firewall/router — the security gateway between your network and the internet. UPS battery backup — protects equipment during power events. Patch panels — organized termination points for structured cabling. Cable management — trays, conduit, and labels that keep the infrastructure organized and maintainable.

    SECTION 04

    WiFi Planning & Wireless Coverage Design

    WiFi planning begins with an RF site survey that measures the radio frequency characteristics of your space — wall materials, ceiling height, interference sources, and device density requirements. Access point placement is engineered for both coverage (signal strength everywhere) and capacity (enough bandwidth per device). Our Aruba Networks wireless designs use predictive modeling software to optimize AP placement before installation, then validate with post-installation testing.

    For healthcare environments, WiFi must support clinical devices, wireless phones, and RTLS tracking with 99.99% reliability. For offices, WiFi must handle 3-5 devices per employee with QoS prioritization for voice and video. For schools, WiFi must support 1:1 device programs with content filtering and CIPA compliance. Each environment has unique requirements that demand professional wireless design.

    SECTION 05

    VoIP-Ready Network Design

    If you're planning to deploy VoIP phone systems, your network must be designed for voice from the start. This means: VLAN separation (voice traffic on a dedicated VLAN, isolated from data traffic), QoS configuration (voice packets prioritized over data), PoE switches (to power desk phones without separate power adapters), and adequate bandwidth with low latency. Our network installations are always VoIP-ready — even if you're not deploying phones today, the infrastructure supports it when you're ready.

    SECTION 06

    Network Security from Day One

    Network security should be designed in, not bolted on. Our installations include: next-generation firewall configuration, network segmentation (separating employee, guest, IoT, and voice traffic), 802.1X port-based authentication, wireless security with WPA3-Enterprise, and managed monitoring that detects threats 24/7. For healthcare clients, HIPAA-compliant network segmentation protects clinical systems from general network threats.

    SECTION 07

    Post-Installation Network Management

    A network installation is not a one-time project — it's an ongoing operational responsibility. Managed network services include 24/7 monitoring, firmware updates, security patch management, performance optimization, and rapid response to issues. Network analytics provide visibility into bandwidth utilization, device inventory, application performance, and security events — enabling proactive management before problems affect users.

    SECTION 08

    Planning for Growth

    Every network installation should include 20-30% spare capacity for growth — additional cable drops, switch ports, and access point locations that can be activated as the organization expands. Planning for future needs during initial installation costs a fraction of retrofitting later. We document every cable, every port, and every pathway, creating a network blueprint that makes future expansion straightforward and cost-effective.

    SECTION 09

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Should I use Cat6 or Cat6A cabling?

    Cat6A is recommended for new installations — it supports 10 Gbps and future-proofs your investment. The cost premium over Cat6 is minimal compared to the 15-20 year lifespan of the cabling.

    How many cable drops do I need per office?

    Minimum 2 drops per workspace (phone + computer), plus 1-2 spare. We recommend 3-4 drops per workspace to accommodate growth and additional devices.

    Can you upgrade my existing network?

    Yes — we assess existing infrastructure, identify bottlenecks, and upgrade strategically. Often the cabling is fine but switches, WiFi, and security need modernization.

    How long does a typical office installation take?

    A typical 5,000-10,000 sq ft office takes 1-2 weeks for cabling and equipment installation. We coordinate with your schedule to minimize disruption.

    Ready to Upgrade Your Communications?

    Contact Executone of New Orleans — the Gulf South's communications leader since 1947.

    Call (504) 838-3025