Protect Your Business with Advanced Surveillance Solutions from Atlantic Communication Team
August 5, 2025
Protect Your Business with Advanced Surveillance Solutions from Atlantic Communication Team

In today's security-conscious business environment, comprehensive surveillance systems are no longer a luxury—they're a necessity. For 40 years, Atlantic Communication Team has been Central Florida's trusted partner for advanced business surveillance solutions, protecting over 10,000 clients with cutting-edge technology designed to enhance security and provide complete peace of mind.
Why Modern Businesses Need Professional Surveillance
Central Florida businesses face unique security challenges, from after-hours break-ins to employee safety concerns. Professional surveillance systems serve as both deterrent and documentation, providing the evidence needed for insurance claims and legal proceedings while creating a safer work environment for employees and customers alike.
Edge Series: Reliable Foundation Security
Our Edge Series cameras provide the essential security foundation every business needs. Featuring high-quality 1080P Full HD resolution with 2MP and 4MP options, these systems deliver crystal-clear footage day and night with long-range IR night vision capabilities. The outdoor weather-rated and vandal-resistant design ensures reliable operation in Florida's challenging climate, while PoE (Power over Ethernet) connectivity simplifies installation and reduces costs.
Elite Series: Premium Protection Technology
For businesses requiring maximum security coverage, our Elite Series offers ultra-high 4K resolution with advanced features like 40x zoom PTZ cameras and 360° panoramic views. The AI autotracking technology and laser smart IR night vision illuminators provide unparalleled situational awareness, automatically following suspicious activity and maintaining clear visibility in complete darkness.
Flex Series: Versatile Security Solutions
The Flex Series bridges the gap between basic and premium surveillance, offering varifocal lenses and resolution options from 2MP to 8MP 4K. Built-in audio support, internal SD card slots, and intelligent motion detection with tripwire alerts make these cameras perfect for businesses needing flexible, feature-rich surveillance solutions.
Network Video Recorders: Intelligent Storage and Management
Our multi-core Intel processor-powered NVRs support up to 64 camera inputs with 4K display capability and dual HDMI output. Advanced features like facial recognition, perimeter protection, and intelligent motion detection transform raw footage into actionable security intelligence.
IC View+: Mobile Security Management
Monitor your business from anywhere with IC View+, available on iOS and Android devices, M1 Macs, and smart watches. View up to 16 camera feeds simultaneously, access two-way communication, and receive instant alert previews—putting complete security control at your fingertips.
Ready to enhance your business security? Contact Atlantic Communication Team at 386-677-4040 (Daytona) or 407-830-5993 (Orlando) to schedule your surveillance system consultation and discover how advanced security technology can protect your Central Florida business.

If you’re moving offices, adding workstations, opening a new suite, or renovating in Orlando or Altamonte Springs, your cabling plan is one of those “do it once, do it right” decisions. It impacts Wi-Fi performance, VoIP call quality, camera reliability, and how easy it is to scale later. ACT provides structured cabling across the Orlando area, including Altamonte Springs, with commercial-grade installs designed for growth. Below is a practical checklist you can use before you sign a lease, start buildout, or bring in furniture. Why structured cabling matters more than ever Even if you’re “mostly wireless,” your business still depends on wired infrastructure for: Wi-Fi access points (PoE) VoIP / cloud phone systems Security cameras (CCTV) (PoE) Door access control Workstations, printers, POS Backups and file access Network stability under load A clean cabling plan keeps everything stable, reduces downtime, and makes troubleshooting fast. Step 1: Map your floor plan for what you actually need Before any cable is pulled, you want a simple plan that answers: How many people today vs. 12–24 months from now? Where will desks, conference rooms, printers, TVs, and POS stations be? Do you need camera coverage or access control at entrances? Where will the network rack/closet live? Pro tip: plan for growth. If you’re adding 6 desks now, plan for 10–12. Adding cable later costs more and looks worse. Step 2: Decide CAT6 vs CAT6A vs fiber (without overbuying) Here’s the no-nonsense version: CAT6: Great for most offices; supports gig speeds and PoE devices well. CAT6A: Better for higher interference areas, longer runs, and more future-proofing. Fiber: Ideal for long distances inside larger buildings, multi-suite connections, or where you want maximum speed and zero interference. If your office is “normal size” and you’re not doing heavy internal data transfers, CAT6 is usually the sweet spot, while CAT6A is a smart upgrade if you want extra headroom. Step 3: Put your MDF/IDF in the right place You don’t need to be a network engineer—just make sure these basics are right: Choose a location for the main rack/closet (MDF) that’s secure, accessible, and ventilated Keep it away from water risk and random storage clutter If your footprint is large, consider a secondary closet (IDF) to avoid long cable runs This step alone can prevent “mystery Wi-Fi dead zones” and future expansion headaches. Step 4: Plan for PoE (Power over Ethernet) Many modern business devices can run power + data on one cable: Wi-Fi access points VoIP phones security cameras door access controllers intercoms If you’re installing any of the above, structured cabling should be planned around PoE, proper switch sizing, and cable pathways that keep everything clean and serviceable. Step 5: Think about pathways, ceilings, and code The biggest “surprise costs” usually come from how the cable is routed: Drop ceilings vs. open ceiling (exposed conduit may be required) Fire-rated requirements and penetrations (commercial spaces often require this) Shared risers in multi-tenant buildings (coordination + permissions) Patch panel / rack standards and labeling requirements A professional team will coordinate this during the walkthrough so the buildout doesn’t stall. Step 6: Labeling and documentation (this is what separates pros from “a guy who runs wire”) Two businesses can spend the same money—one ends up with a usable system, the other ends up with spaghetti. Make sure your structured cabling project includes: Patch panels (not just loose ends) Port labeling (rack + wall plates) A basic as-built map (even a simple diagram is huge) Cable certification/testing (especially in commercial builds) This documentation is what saves you time and money every single time you add, change, or troubleshoot something. Step 7: Coordinate cabling with the rest of your tech stack Structured cabling shouldn’t be done in a vacuum. It should support the rest of what you’re using (or planning to use), like: managed IT support and monitoring VoIP / cloud phones business Wi-Fi design security cameras door entry / access control ACT offers these services, so you can plan everything together instead of having three vendors pointing fingers when something doesn’t work. Common mistakes we see in Orlando-area office buildouts Not running enough drops (then relying on cheap switches everywhere) Putting the rack in a bad location (heat, no access, not secure) No labeling or documentation Poor Wi-Fi planning (APs placed wherever it’s “easy”) Forgetting cameras/access control until after the walls are closed Using bargain cable that can’t properly support PoE long-term

