
Chattanooga built a reputation for fast internet, but speed at one building does not solve the harder problem of tying many sites together. A logistics operation near the I-75 and I-24 split, a manufacturer in the industrial corridor along the river, and a front office downtown on Market Street still need to behave like one network, with calls and cloud apps that do not break when a single link gets congested. SD-WAN delivers that by pooling your circuits and routing traffic intelligently across all of them.
BlueHouse Telecom is carrier neutral, and with SD-WAN that independence is the foundation. We source the underlying links from every provider that reaches each location, then layer the SD-WAN fabric on top so your network is not bound to one carrier's footprint. A warehouse out toward Ooltewah and an office in the Southside district can each ride the best available connection while sharing one set of policies and one dashboard.
Connecting freight, manufacturing, and offices as one network
Chattanooga sits on a major freight crossroads, and the logistics and manufacturing operations that cluster around it move data constantly between sites, partners, and the cloud. A distribution center near Enterprise South cannot have its warehouse system stutter because a video call elsewhere ate the bandwidth. SD-WAN classifies traffic and gives the systems that run the business priority, then shifts flows to a healthier path automatically when a circuit gets congested, so the important work keeps moving.
The geography spreads operations across the valley and into north Georgia, and matching circuits at every site is rarely practical. SD-WAN lets you blend fiber, cable, and wireless, then treats the mix as one network. A small satellite office across the state line or out near Hamilton Place still follows the same routing and security policy as the headquarters connection, without paying for a premium circuit it does not need.
Failover that holds through valley weather and cut lines
A single backhoe through a fiber line or a round of severe weather rolling up the valley can take a circuit down without warning. With SD-WAN, a second link from a different carrier picks up the load the moment the primary degrades, and the handoff is fast enough that an active call usually stays connected. For a manufacturer running just in time or a contact operation handling live customers, that automatic failover turns a potential lost day into a non event.
Real redundancy depends on the two paths being independent, not riding the same conduit out of the building. Because we source the links from multiple providers, we map how each circuit physically enters the site and build the backup to avoid the primary's path. That detail is what separates genuine failover from a backup that goes dark at the same instant as the link it was meant to protect.
Managed centrally, rolled out fast
SD-WAN runs from one dashboard, so a policy you set once applies across every location, from the main plant to a two person sales office. New sites come online quickly because the appliance ships preconfigured and pulls its settings when it connects. We handle the design, the rollout, and the ongoing tuning, and we stay on the account so changes do not pile up on your internal staff.
What you get with SD-WAN
We run a distribution site near Enterprise South and an office downtown, and a cut fiber line used to mean a dead afternoon at one of them. BlueHouse designed an SD-WAN with backup links from a second carrier, and the last time our primary went down the network just rerouted. The warehouse never stopped scanning.
Why Chattanooga businesses choose BlueHouse
Keep warehouse systems and calls moving between every site
Survive a cut line or storm outage without losing the day
Stand up a new branch in days rather than weeks
Blend affordable links without losing performance or security
