Is your business network ready for the next 12–24 months?
Take this 3-minute readiness check to see whether aging equipment, Wi-Fi issues, undocumented changes, security concerns, or growth plans may be creating network upgrade risk.
Most networks don't fail all at once — they show warning signs first. This check turns those signs into a simple priority score so you know whether it's worth a closer look.
Why this matters
Network problems usually start small
They rarely announce themselves with a total outage. They show up as everyday friction first — the kind that's easy to live with until it quietly starts costing you uptime, productivity, and budget room.
Slow cloud apps
Files and applications that drag during the busy part of the day.
Wi-Fi dead zones
Spots in the building where the signal drops or won't hold.
Recurring complaints
The same connectivity issues coming back week after week.
Aging equipment
Firewalls, switches, or access points well past their prime.
Poor documentation
No current record of how the network is actually set up.
Remote access friction
Hybrid and remote staff fighting the connection to get work done.
Security & compliance
Requirements or cyber insurance that hinge on your setup.
No replacement plan
Equipment running until it fails, with no timeline to refresh it.
What you'll get
Clarity, not a sales pitch
When you finish the check, you'll get a straight read on where your network stands — and what's actually worth doing about it.
A priority score
A clear Low, Moderate, or High priority rating for upgrade review — no jargon, no scare tactics.
What your answers suggest
A plain-language summary of the signals worth paying attention to — and the ones that look just fine.
Recommended next steps
Practical moves you can make on your own timeline — what to fix now, what can wait, what to plan for.
Optional resources
A checklist, roadmap template, or assessment option — matched to your score. Take what's useful, skip the rest.
The readiness check
Take the 3-minute check
Eight quick questions. Answer honestly — there are no wrong answers, just a clearer picture of where things stand.

