Wi-Fi Built for How
Alberta Operates

From downtown Calgary offices to Grande Prairie distribution centres and remote northern work camps, your wi-fi network has to hold up everywhere your people are.
A professional wi-fi site survey gives you exactly what’s failing, what’s working, and what needs to change - before you spend a dollar on new equipment.

Your Network Is Either
Enabling Your Team
or Costing Them

Connectivity problems have a way of spreading. A dead zone in the conference room means remote participants drop out mid-meeting. Spotty coverage in a warehouse means staff walk to a fixed terminal instead of scanning on the floor. Weak signal in a shared workspace means people burn through mobile data and wait on slow load times while trying to get through the day.

None of these are dramatic failures. But they compound. Over weeks and months, the accumulated friction of a poorly performing wi-fi environment adds up to real losses in output, focus, and patience.

The fix rarely requires ripping everything out and starting over. In most cases, it starts with a clear, evidence-based picture of what your current setup is actually doing. A plan that addresses specific gaps before you spend a dollar on new equipment.

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Plan Wi-Fi That Actually Works

Discover how real-world data from a site survey leads to smarter access point placement and stronger performance.

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Is This the Right Time to Book a Wi-Fi Site Survey?

Most organizations wait longer than they should. A wi-fi site survey belongs on the agenda any time you’re facing one of the following:

  • Taking on a new facility or expanding your footprint across an additional Alberta location
  • Renovating, reconfiguring, or changing how a space is used
  • Adopting cloud applications, collaboration platforms, or device-heavy workflows
  • Moving toward a setup where wi-fi carries the bulk of your connectivity load
  • Managing high user density—open offices, multi-tenant buildings, or public-facing venues
  • Running operations in environments where signal travel is complicated—processing facilities, healthcare buildings, industrial sites

If people are complaining about the connection, or you’re about to change something significant, you already have your answer.

What You Get Out of the Process

A site audit trades assumptions for answers. Instead of guessing at what might improve performance, you’ll have specific, documented findings tied to your actual physical space and how your team uses it.

Decisions Based on Data, Not Defaults

Every recommendation comes from measurements taken inside your environment, not vendor templates or best-guess layouts lifted from a floor plan.

A Network That Fits Your Operation

A survey accounts for your specific layout, the density of users in each zone, and how your team moves through the space, so the resulting infrastructure serves your actual workflows rather than a generic office scenario.

 

Problems Caught Before They Escalate

Dead zones, interference sources, and capacity shortfalls are far cheaper to address before a failure disrupts operations than after. You’ll go into any upgrade or expansion knowing exactly what your infrastructure can support.

How Your Wi-Fi Site Survey Gets Done

A thorough inspection covers every factor that shapes how your Wi-Fi performs. Here’s what gets examined across each stage:

1. Coverage and Signal Quality

Your space gets walked and measured, zone by zone, to establish where the network performs and where it doesn’t. That includes assessing signal strength from a user’s physical position and capturing key indicators like RSSI and SNR that confirm whether your connections are holding up under real conditions, not just registering as connected.

3. Demand, Devices, and Capacity

The findings establish how many users and devices your infrastructure is serving, what applications are running and how bandwidth-intensive they are, and whether current capacity can handle today’s load, let alone where you’re headed over the next few years.

2. Interference and Signal Attenuation

Alberta industrial and commercial environments introduce interference sources that general surveys often miss. That includes identifying competing networks on overlapping channels, RF noise from Bluetooth devices, machinery, and other equipment, and structural factors, including concrete, metal shelving, and mechanical systems, that obstruct or degrade signal travel through your building.

4. Post-Remediation Validation

After changes are implemented, a follow-up visit confirms they worked. That means testing throughput, verifying clean handoffs as devices move between access points, and taking a full look at channel conditions, coverage, and signal quality to confirm the environment is performing as it should.

Answers to Common Questions

Stop Troubleshooting. Start With a Survey.

Alberta organizations can’t afford to lose time to infrastructure that wasn’t designed around their environment. A professional site assessment gives you the documentation to make the right call on hardware, layout, and priorities, without the guesswork.

When you’re ready to understand exactly what your wi-fi setup needs, book your free assessment and get a clear answer.

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