A methodical guide from Cabling For U, Auckland’s small-business cabling specialists.
Cabling a small Auckland business — typically a 5–30 person site — is one of the most common jobs we do, and one of the most satisfying when it’s done well. Here’s the exact 10-step process we follow, including what a good outcome looks like at each stage.
Step 1: Site walk and requirements gathering
Before we quote, we walk the site and answer seven questions:
- How many users now? In three years?
- Desktops, laptops or both?
- VoIP phones? Wi-Fi phones?
- Video-conferencing room count and ceiling height?
- Any PoE cameras, printers, or NAS drives?
- Where’s the existing internet handoff (ONT)?
- What are the business hours and change windows?
These answers decide cable count, AP count, switch size, rack size and labour schedule.
Step 2: Cable path design
We sketch cable pathways on the floor plan. Typical small office:
- Ceiling tray or J-hooks in the ceiling void
- Drops down interior walls to desk GPOs where possible
- Surface-mounted trunking only where wall drops aren’t feasible
- Conduit through any fire-rated walls with approved fire-stop compound
Design locks in the pathway before the first cable is pulled.
Step 3: Outlet count and patch panel size
Rule of thumb: 2 outlets per workstation (data + phone or data + desktop), plus 1 per printer, MFD, AP, camera and any “other” device (NAS, EFTPOS, door controller). Round up. Cable to where the device will be, not just where it is today.
Step 4: Wi-Fi coverage plan
For a small Auckland office, typical AP placement:
- 1 AP per 150 m² of open office
- 1 AP for every meeting room of 20+ people
- 1 AP for reception/client-facing area
- 1 AP for kitchen/staff room
We’d rather install one extra AP than have a dead spot in a meeting room that costs you a client call.
Step 5: Rack room spec
- 12U wall-mounted cabinet for 10–20 users
- 24U floor-standing for 20–50 users
- 42U floor-standing when servers are on-prem
- Separate dedicated 20A circuit from building supply
- UPS sized for 30-min runtime on router/switch load
- Location: not a cupboard under stairs. Ventilated.
Step 6: The cable pull
This is where experience shows. Good practice:
- Pull multiple cables in a single trip through the ceiling
- Maintain minimum bend radius (4× cable diameter) — kinks cause failed channels
- Dress and label at both ends before cutting
- Leave 2–3 m service loops at each end for future moves
- Keep away from fluorescent ballasts and high-current circuits
Step 7: Termination and patching
- Use the right tool — punch-down blade calibrated for Cat6/Cat6A
- Keep the cable pair twist as close to the termination as possible
- Terminate to T568B everywhere — don’t mix A/B standards
- Label the patch panel and outlet with matching numbers
Step 8: Testing and certification
Every cable gets a Fluke DSX channel test. The pass/fail is about much more than continuity — it tests wiremap, length, insertion loss, return loss, NEXT, ACR-F, delay and delay skew. A printed report per run is handed to the client as part of our as-built package. See our data cabling page for more.
Step 9: Equipment commissioning
- Install and configure the switch with VLANs (staff, voice, guest, cameras)
- Set up APs with site survey and channel planning
- Connect the router and confirm internet handoff
- Test each outlet with a live device
- Label every cable at both ends in case of future work
Step 10: Handover and documentation
On completion you receive:
- Fluke test report per run
- Cable schedule tied to a floor plan
- Network topology diagram
- Inventory list of all equipment with serials
- Admin credentials in a secure handover
- 12-month workmanship warranty
This documentation is gold. It cuts diagnosis time from hours to minutes when something changes in two years’ time.
Typical timelines for Auckland small business installs
- 5-user startup office, 12 outlets: 2–3 days total
- 15-user professional services office, 30 outlets + 3 APs: 4–7 days
- 30-user growing SMB, 70 outlets + 5 APs + rack: 8–12 days
We schedule around your business hours and can stage the cutover during a weekend if downtime is critical.
Frequently asked questions
How many outlets do I need per desk in an Auckland small office?
Two is the standard. One for a desktop or docking station and one for a VoIP phone or secondary device. Use one cable for data and another as a spare or for future growth. Running two cables now costs only 20 to 30% more than one and avoids retrofit costs later.
Do I need a network switch if I already have a router?
Home routers have 4 or 5 ports. Any business with more than 4 wired devices needs a dedicated switch. Business-grade switches also support VLANs, PoE for cameras and APs, and managed configuration that home routers don't offer.
Can you install cabling in a leased Auckland office?
Yes. Most commercial leases allow structured cabling with landlord approval. We provide a scope letter you can send to the landlord, install cable in ways that are easy to remove at end of lease if required, and can quote both permanent and surface-mounted options.
What's the difference between data cabling and structured cabling?
Data cabling is a general term for network cables. Structured cabling is a formal standards-based approach (TIA-568, AS/NZS 3080) with defined cable categories, patch panels, labelled outlets and certified test reports. Structured cabling is what professional Auckland installers do by default.
How do I future-proof a small business network?
Install Cat6A to every desk and AP, leave 30 to 50% spare ports on the patch panel, use a managed switch, configure VLANs from day one, and document everything. The cable will last 15+ years; the switch will be replaced every 5 to 7; plan the cabling for the longer horizon.
What's included in a small business cabling quote?
A complete quote should include cable runs, modules, faceplates, patch panel, rack, patch cords, cable pathway (tray, conduit, J-hooks), labour for pull and terminate, Fluke certification, as-built documentation, fire-stopping, and a 12-month workmanship warranty. Request itemised quotes so you can compare like for like.
Ready to spec your site?
We’ll walk your Auckland office, design the cable layout and quote fixed-price with full documentation included. Book a free site survey or call 0800 222 546.
Take the next step
Most SMB installs in this guide use Cat6 — see full pricing.

