Below the service menu, your technology is really four connected systems: the network everything runs on, the security wrapped around it, the day-to-day support that keeps it alive, and the strategy that points it where the business is going. Each hub is a plain-language guide to one of them — built to answer the question you're actually asking before you ever talk to a salesperson.
Why everything in your business runs on the network — and the four layers a real one needs: cabling, connectivity, wireless, and security.
Real protection isn't cameras or antivirus alone. It's physical, network, and identity working together — and how all three map to CMMC and HIPAA.
Why paying only when things break costs more than it looks, what proactive managed support includes, and when co-managed IT makes sense.
Beyond keeping the lights on: the move from break-fix to MSP to TSP, plus vCIO planning, roadmaps, and honest AI guidance.
A hub is the 'why' — an in-depth guide that explains how a whole area of your technology works and fits together. A service page is the 'what' — the specific thing LRG delivers and what it costs. Hubs link down to the service pages, so you can read the strategy first and then go straight to the work that solves it.
Start with the problem that's top of mind. If technology feels unreliable, read Networking. If you're worried about breaches, cameras, or compliance, read Security. If you're tired of surprise repair bills, read Managed Support. If you want IT to actually move the business forward, read Technology Success Partner.
No. The whole point of a single accountable partner is that you don't have to. Most clients start with one assessment, then let LRG manage the pieces together — network, security, support, and strategy — under one contract and one number.