A friend with an accounting firm called in a panic. His web connection was dead, along with his phone system.

Clients couldn’t call in. Their email was bouncing. They couldn’t reach his website. And his overpaid partners couldn’t reach clients via email or phone either. The whole firm had screeched to a halt, with folks using their personal cell phones for only the most pressing business. Total disaster.

First time he’d ever seen or heard of such a disaster in his twenty-four years in business.

How could such a perfect storm happen?

Avoid Phone/Data Network Co-Dependancy
Compare phone and data network maps to avoid co-dependancy. -- Email Battles

A tech at the ISP’s shop had screwed up a router during normal maintenance. After four frantic hours, the accountants were back to accounting.Our non-technical friend was a victim of Progress… at the hands of a blindly optimistic telephone salesman, who happened to also represent an ISP. The ISP, it turns out, was operating a phone business (CLEC) that used VOIP for call connection.

A few questions later, we discovered that our staid accountant was relying on a single vendor… and a single incoming pipe… for all his voice, data and email services. Very risky business indeed.

To prevent a recurrence, we suggested that he separate his phone and network services. Use a full-blown phone company with phone company Quality of Service requirements for your phones. Then pick anybody that suits your fancy for Internet service… preferably on a different set of incoming lines.

The best solution calls for making sure your voice and data services are 100% separated, with no common use anywhere. Each feed should feature separate wiring into your office. The delivery network should employ distinct central switches. Ideally, neither network should depend on the other’s cable, routers, switches or personnel for delivery of any service to you.

If a rep promises they don’t or won’t, ask for maps of both networks. Then ask tough questions about any points at which the networks seem to meet.

You’ll pay a little bit more for distinct services, but a sharp network manager can design your internal network so each provider backs the other up.

Instead of twisting in the wind for a stupid mistake, you’ll always be reasonably safe.