Because almost nothing in a modern office works on its own anymore — it all talks over the network. Your phones are internet phones, your cameras send video across it, and your files, accounting software, email, and Microsoft 365 ride the same wires and wireless. So when people say the internet's slow, the phones cut out, or the camera feed froze, they're usually describing one root cause: a network that wasn't designed to carry everything piled onto it. Get the network right and the rest of your technology gets quietly, dramatically more reliable.
What are the four layers of a business network? A complete network is four layers working together: the cabling underneath it, the connectivity coming into it, the wireless on top of it, and the security wrapped around it. Skimp on any one and the whole thing gets fragile. Most owners think of the network as the WiFi password or the box the internet company dropped off — but a weakness in any single layer shows up as a problem you'd never guess was a network issue. LRG designs and manages all four as one system, which is the entire point of having one partner instead of four.
What does managed network services actually include? It means a partner designs, monitors, and maintains all four layers for you — instead of you only calling someone once it's already broken. Managed networking covers the up-front design and planning; the right switches, routers, firewalls, and access points; the VLANs and segmentation that keep traffic organized and safe; and continuous monitoring so problems get caught early. The difference between "we installed a network" and "we manage your network" is the difference between a one-time project and a system that keeps working as your business grows, changes, and adds the next 20 devices.
A well-designed network is invisible — fast, no dead zones, a backup path when something fails, and someone watching it. What most growing businesses have is a network that was never designed at all: it accumulated. A router here, a cheap switch there, a big-box WiFi extender, cables added one emergency at a time. It works — until you add the cameras, the new hires, or the cloud software — then it fails in ways nobody can explain. The accidental network isn't cheaper; you just pay for it later, in downtime and emergency calls.
Design, switches, firewalls, wireless, VLANs, and monitoring — the heart of the system.
The labeled, tested, standards-built wiring everything else depends on.
One accountable owner for your circuit, router, and managed wireless.
Because nearly everything you run — phones, cameras, cloud software, internet, email, payments — depends on the network to work at all. A weak or poorly designed network shows up as slow systems, dropped calls, dead WiFi zones, and frozen camera feeds, even though those feel like separate problems. Investing in the network first is the cheapest way to make every other piece of technology more reliable.
It typically includes network design and planning; the switches, routers, firewalls, and wireless access points; traffic organization through VLANs and segmentation; security configuration; and 24/7 monitoring so problems are caught before they cause downtime. The core idea is that a partner proactively maintains the whole network for a predictable fee — instead of you calling someone only after it breaks.
A consumer router is built for a home and struggles to cover a business with many devices, walls, and users — which is why dead zones and slowdowns appear. Business-grade managed WiFi uses multiple access points placed and tuned for full coverage, and it's monitored and maintained so it keeps working as you add people and devices. The difference is most obvious in the back office, the warehouse, or anywhere the one router never quite reached.
They're inseparable. The firewall and network segmentation are your first line of defense — they decide what's allowed in and out, and keep a problem in one area, like guest WiFi or a camera, from spreading to your critical systems. A well-designed network is the foundation of a secure one, which is why LRG treats network security as one of the four core layers.
Usually not. We start with a network assessment to find what's actually causing problems — often it's a few specific weak points, not the whole system. You get a prioritized findings report so you can fix the urgent issues first and plan the rest on your own timeline, instead of being sold a rip-and-replace you don't need.