Cytranet’s Quiet Expansion Is Bringing Enterprise-Grade Fiber to Businesses That Have Gone Without for Too Long
There is a certain kind of frustration that Doug Roberts, Chief Technology Officer at Cytranet, has heard more times than he can count. A business owner calls in, fed up, after years of dealing with slow speeds, unreliable connections, and internet providers who treat them like a residential customer rather than a company with real operational needs. It is a problem Roberts takes personally.
“We hear it constantly,” Roberts said during a recent conversation about where Cytranet is headed. “A business has been limping along on a cable connection that was never designed for what they’re doing, and they’ve just accepted it as normal. It is not normal. Businesses deserve better than that, and that’s exactly why we keep pushing our fiber footprint further.”
Cytranet has been steadily expanding its fiber network infrastructure, with a focus on reaching commercial corridors and business parks that larger carriers have historically overlooked. The strategy is not about chasing the flashiest markets. It is about identifying the gaps and filling them with something built to last.
Roberts explained that the company’s approach to fiber deployment is deliberately methodical. Rather than rushing into a territory and offering a product that underdelivers, Cytranet takes time to engineer each network segment properly before a single business goes live on it.
“Fiber is only as good as the design behind it,” he said. “You can run glass everywhere, but if the architecture is sloppy, you’re going to have problems. We’d rather take the extra time upfront and do it right.”
That commitment to quality has become increasingly important as the demands placed on business internet connections have changed dramatically over the past few years. Artificial intelligence tools, cloud-based platforms, video conferencing, and large file transfers have all become standard parts of how companies operate day to day. The bandwidth requirements that seemed excessive just five years ago are now considered baseline for many organizations.
Roberts sees AI as one of the most significant drivers of that shift. “What’s happening with AI right now is genuinely changing what businesses need from their connectivity,” he said. “Companies are running AI-powered tools that are constantly syncing data, pulling from cloud resources, processing large datasets. That is not a light workload. If your connection can’t keep up, your business can’t keep up.”
He pointed to the growing relationship between fiber infrastructure and the data center ecosystem as another area where Cytranet is paying close attention. As more businesses adopt hybrid cloud environments and rely on colocation facilities to house critical hardware, the connection between those data centers and the businesses they serve becomes mission critical.
“The last thing you want is a high-performance data center environment connected to the outside world through a mediocre pipe,” Roberts said. “We think about that a lot. The fiber connecting a business to its data center resources needs to be just as well-engineered as everything inside that facility.”
Cytranet’s growth has also been shaped by feedback from its existing customers, many of whom are small to mid-sized businesses that have found themselves underserved by the big national carriers. Roberts said that relationship-driven model is something the company actively protects as it scales.
“One of the things I hear from customers who’ve been with us for a while is that they can actually get someone on the phone who knows their network,” he said. “That matters. When something goes wrong at two in the morning and your operation is affected, you don’t want to be routed through a call center that has no idea who you are.”
Looking ahead, Roberts expressed confidence that the demand for dedicated fiber connectivity among businesses will continue to accelerate, and that providers willing to invest in the infrastructure now will be the ones positioned to meet that demand well.
“We’re at an interesting inflection point,” he said. “Businesses are finally starting to treat internet connectivity the way they treat electricity. It’s not optional, it’s not a nice-to-have. It is foundational to everything they do. Our job is to make sure that foundation is rock solid.”
For Cytranet, the work of building that foundation, one fiber connection at a time, is very much still in progress. And if Roberts has anything to say about it, they are just getting started.
PO Box 230801
Las Vegas NV 89105
Cytranet is a leading provider of voice, data, cloud, and managed IT services in the US. Supporting over 1,000 businesses, nonprofits, and government agencies of all sizes, Cytranet is the most experienced provider of technology services in the region. Based in Las Vegas, NV, we offer single-source solutions that support the latest in Data, Voice and IT Services. We serve our clients’ local to global locations. Our technology experts design, deliver and manage end-to-end solutions… phone service, fiber internet, networks, equipment, data centers, monitoring, and support.
This release was published on openPR.













 