Choosing a Telecom Installer in the Southeast: Licenses, Insurance, and References
The gap between a great telecom installer and a bad one doesn't show up in the quote — it shows up two years later, in the closet, in the drywall, and in whether anyone answers when something breaks. Here's how to vet before you sign.
Paperwork first
- Licensing: Georgia requires low-voltage licensing for this work (with similar regimes in neighboring states). Ask for the license class and number; legitimate companies volunteer it. Unlicensed work can jeopardize inspections and insurance claims — it's not a technicality.
- Insurance: general liability and workers' comp certificates, current, before anyone climbs your ceiling. If a shortcut installer's employee falls, an uninsured company's problem becomes yours.
- Real references: not logos on a website — phone numbers of businesses like yours, serviced for years. Longevity of relationships is the tell; anyone can produce one happy new customer. (Ours include a city government we've served for over a decade.)
Workmanship standards to require in writing
- Certified and labeled cable runs (test results delivered, both ends labeled)
- Proper pathways and supports — no cable resting on ceiling tiles and light fixtures
- Documentation handoff: port maps, configurations, credentials in your possession, not just theirs
- Firestopping and code-compliant penetrations (your fire inspector cares even if you don't)
Red flags, learned the hard way
Quotes without a site visit; “we don't really do paperwork”; every answer is yes; no service department — install-only outfits leave orphaned systems (we adopt a lot of them); and pressure to sign today for a discount that expires at sundown.
The relationship test
You're not buying an installation — you're choosing who answers for this infrastructure for the next decade. Ask: who supports this after go-live, at what response times, and what does year-three service actually cost?
Vet us with this list
We wrote it because we clear it: licensed, insured, references on request, documentation standard, and a 24/7/365 help desk behind every install across Georgia and the Southeast. The free assessment is a low-stakes way to see how we work before anything is signed.
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