This post is intended to help the
office managers have a better understanding of what to expect and ask when
looking to hire a cabling company as well as helping the cabling professional
to set clear expectations when doing the job.
I based the post on my experience doing
numerous cabling jobs for different businesses in New York and New Jersey,
though I may not touch on every single aspect that needs to be addressed I definitely touch
what can be considered as the baseline for a successful cabling job
implementation.
I'm focusing here on Ethernet twisted
pair cabling as it is what I deal with for LANs in office environments.


For the business owner:
1. Sketch out the plan: A simple office plan layout would be of great help
before contracting the cabling company. This is especially true when moving
into a new office environment where managers may overlook important things such
as placing desks close to power sources.
2. Get all decision makers and department
managers involved ( if applicable): Getting everyone in agreement of their desks positions
avoids delaying the project and incurring in new charges.
3. Know what you need: Many times the business owner request to have cable runs
without really considering what they need. When counting the cable runs
you need just don't focus on the computer but think about the other devices
that require network connections that are part of the users' environment.
4. Plan for expansion: Chances are you
already know if you'll be adding new employees in the near future, if you'll be
adding a new network device, etc. This is the time to do it, cable runs can
become intrusive jobs in an office environment disrupting business operations,
have you cabling professional take care of it while they are doing the other
runs.
5. Know what you are paying for: Having a clear
understanding of what you are paying will avoid unpleasant situation at the end
of the project. Depending on the contract, the cabling professional might be
responsible for the runs, including the jacks, wall plates, actual cables and
the termination at the patch panel. Once everything is ran and tested the
job can be considered done. Well for network operations they still need a
switch, patch cables, and many other network configurations that may not be
part of the cabling job contract.
6. You get what you pay for: Ethernet cables are like the arteries in your body, they
carry the essence of what makes your network alive. Every company have their
own pricing model, some charge by drop, others by the hour, etc. Talk to cable
professional if you want to find a way to bring the cost but it without
compromising on quality. They might be able to help you based on the amount of
work or future work. In my case I give my customers a special rate when running
cable drops because i already have other business relationships with them, be
it managed IT support, security solutions, consulting services, etc.
For Cabling
Professionals: many of the
points professionals need to keep in mind are the same as the business'
owners.
1. Do a walk through (if applicable): Have customer
show you where they want the cable drops. Make recommendations as needed.
2. Create diagram: Outline location and amount of each network connection.
After document is reviewed have the project owner sign it off.
3. Specify the technology use: will you use
Cat 5e, Cat 6, shielded or unshielded twisted pair, EIA 568A or EIA 568B, etc.
4. Ensure the customer understands what
they are paying and any fee associated for extra parts and work: Do you provide
the patch panel as part of the job or charge extra for it? How do you address
the changes in locations or adding new cable runs. Have those clearly stated in
the contract.
5. Use cable management: use ladder rack, rack base cable management or the like
will make maintenance much easier for the administrator.
6. Stay off the grid: don't run cables on top of the drop ceiling. Not only
makes it a cleaner job but it also may avoid issues as running cables by power
lines and other electromagnetic fields that might cause issues.
7. Don't cut corner: Let's show the highest level of
professionalism at every job, even when the customer doesn't see what's
happening behind the scene. If you need to run a new cable do it, don't splice
it if it got damaged during the run.
8. Use different jack colors for Voice
and Data: Though not necessary it’ll make administration much
easier when all the yellow jack are for voice and the blue for data.
9. Use different color patch cord for
different devices: This is more of
a network administrator task but should also be implemented by the installer if
required to patch in devices. It's a network administrator best practice
to use certain patch cord color for printers, computers, access points, medical
devices, etc.
10. Always carry a vacuum cleaner or
sweeper with you: Cabling jobs tend to be messy so it doesn't hurt to have
a vacuum cleaner available in case you need it.
11. Test and Label every connection: I can't stress
this more. Identifying each connection at the patch panel and wall jacks is
imperative for network administration and management. This will save the
network administrator tons of headaches and perhaps the cable installer from
coming back just to trace a cable.
I hoped the article have been
helpful to you, the last advice i can give that applies to the installer and
business owner is to keep the communication channel open, always bring up
concerns or doubts as soon as they come up.
Feel free to contact us if you are in need of Cabling
jobs in NYC or New Jersey. JDTech is an IT service Provider Company located in
North Bergen, NJ offering fortune 500 technical solutions and implementations
to small and mid-sized businesses. We achieve our goals by aligning technical
solutions with businesses' needs, goals, and implementing scalable solutions.
Contact us with any technical needs at 888-580-4450 | info@jdtechsolutions.net | www.jdtechsolutions.net for more
information.

I liked the article, i wished i would've read it two years ago. Letting the business owner know what they are paying for is a must for us, we have them sign the agreement and clauses that extra charge will be added for any changes.
ReplyDeleteIt is a well executed post. I like the diagram most. It is a helpful informative post. Thanks for sharing this great information.
ReplyDeleteoffice cabling solutions nyc