Ask three field-service providers what a wireless survey costs and you'll get three discovery calls, two "it depends," and one PDF a week later. We think that's why so much Arizona field work gets deferred until something breaks. So we productized it: 42 services, each with a fixed scope, a named deliverable, a price, and a time estimate, published where procurement can see them.
What productized means in practice
Every catalog item answers four questions before you ask:
- Scope — exactly what's inspected, installed, or performed, and what's excluded.
- Deliverable — the artifact you receive: a findings report with photos, an asset register, a port map, a signed lane-test checklist.
- Price — a number or a tight band. Rack audits: $200 per rack. POS lane deployment: $150 per lane. Access point installs: $85 per unit at five or more. A full infrastructure assessment: $500–$1,500 depending on site size.
- Time — how long we'll be onsite, so store managers and site contacts can plan.
Why buyers win
Budgeting stops being a negotiation. A printer fleet assessment is $350–$700. A new store survey is $350 and up. You can put those numbers in a capex line without a quote cycle.
Ordering gets fast. Because scope is pre-defined, a catalog service can be dispatched from a single intake form — no scoping call unless the site is unusual.
Deliverables are enforceable. When the deliverable is named up front ("coverage map + health report"), you know on day one whether the engagement is complete. Every visit also includes photo documentation as standard.
Why we win too
Honesty about scope keeps our calendar honest. Fixed-scope work is schedulable; "come look at everything" is not. The catalog also makes retainers rational: coverage clients use included hours for break/fix and assessments, then order projects from the catalog at known prices — nobody argues about what counts as retainer work.
Where to start
If you run multi-site operations in Arizona, the highest-leverage first orders are the assessments: network health, Wi-Fi, rack audit, or site readiness. They're cheap relative to what they find, and each one produces the documentation that makes every later dispatch faster.
Browse the full catalog, or send a scope through dispatch intake — fixed quote back, usually same business day.