Operations team on the warehouse floor reviewing systems

Network readiness · Pillar guide

The IT infrastructure checklist

If your network slows down, your equipment is aging, or nobody can say exactly what you’re running — this is the practical checklist to get your arms around it. No jargon. Just what to fix, and in what order.

Most operations businesses don’t think about their network until it costs them a morning. A line stops because a controller drops off Wi-Fi. A crew in a job trailer can’t pull up the plans. An invoice run stalls because the one server nobody documented decided to quit. None of that is a “technology” problem in the abstract — it’s lost production, lost hours, and a surprise bill.

Network readiness just means knowing where you stand before something breaks. This checklist walks through what to fix now, next, and later. Work through it and you’ll have a clear picture of your risks and a rough order of operations — without spending a dollar. Prefer a shortcut? Take the free 3-minute Network Readiness Check and get a snapshot in less time than a coffee break.

What “network readiness” actually means for an operations business

Forget the buzzwords. Readiness comes down to four plain questions:

  • Will it stay up? Can your people, machines, and sites stay connected through a normal workday — and a bad one?
  • Is it protected? Are the doors locked on the systems that hold your bids, contracts, financials, and customer data?
  • Can you recover? If a server dies or a file gets encrypted, how fast are you back to work?
  • Do you know what you have? Could you hand someone a document today that explains your setup, or does it live in one person’s head?

If any of those made you wince, you’re not behind — you’re normal. The point of a checklist is to turn that wince into a list.

The 7 areas every IT infrastructure check should cover

A complete readiness check touches these seven areas. You don’t need to be technical to walk through them — you just need to be honest about what you actually know versus what you’re assuming.

01
Network & Wi-Fi
Wired and wireless coverage where the work actually happens.
02
Security & access
Who can get in, and what stays locked down.
03
Equipment & age
What you’re running and how close it is to end-of-life.
04
Backups & recovery
Whether you can get back to work after a failure.
05
Remote & field access
How people connect from home, the road, or a trailer.
06
Documentation
A current record that isn’t stuck in one person’s head.
07
Support & response
Who picks up the phone when something breaks.

Fix now: the things costing you downtime and risk today

These are the items that can bite this week. If you find gaps here, they jump to the front of the line.

  • Unsupported or overloaded core gear. A firewall or switch past end-of-life, or Wi-Fi sized for half your current headcount, is a daily reliability tax.
  • No working backup you’ve actually tested. A backup you’ve never restored from is a hope, not a plan.
  • Shared or stale passwords and open access. Former employees who still have logins, admin passwords on a monitor, no multi-factor on email — doors left unlocked.
  • One person holds all the keys. If your setup lives in one employee’s head, a vacation becomes an emergency.

Not sure how bad the security side is? Start with our network security checklist for operations leaders — plain English, not jargon.

Fix next: aging equipment, Wi-Fi dead zones & remote access

These won’t stop you today, but they’re the surprise-cost and slow-drip-frustration category. Plan for them so they don’t plan for you.

  • Equipment nearing end of life. Map what’s aging so a failure becomes a scheduled replacement, not a fire drill.
  • Coverage gaps. Dead zones on the plant floor, in the warehouse, or across a jobsite slow everyone down. See what’s usually behind office and warehouse Wi-Fi problems.
  • Remote and field access. If people connect from home, the road, or a trailer, how they get in matters — loose remote access is one of the most common gaps we find.

Fix later: documentation, lifecycle & roadmap planning

The “later” bucket isn’t “never” — it’s the foundation that keeps the other two buckets from filling back up.

  • Documentation. A simple, current record of what you run, where it lives, and who to call.
  • Lifecycle planning. A rolling view of when equipment gets replaced, so upgrades are budgeted, not surprises.
  • A roadmap. A living plan that puts the now/next/later items on a timeline you can fund.

How to turn your checklist into an upgrade roadmap

A checklist tells you what’s wrong. A roadmap tells you what to do about it — and when. Take everything you flagged and sort it three ways: what threatens uptime or security (now), what’s a growing risk or a known replacement (next), and what strengthens the foundation (later). Put a rough cost and a rough date on each. That’s a roadmap — and it’s what keeps IT spending predictable instead of reactive.

Want a head start? Our Network Upgrade Planning Guide walks you through building the roadmap step by step — what to prioritize, how to phase it, and how to budget for it.

Free · 3 minutes

See where your network stands

Take the free 3-minute Network Readiness Check for an instant snapshot of what to fix now, next, and later. Ready to go deeper? Grab the planning guide.