
A health system with clinics from Midtown to Elk Grove. A state contractor with offices near the Capitol and a records center in Rancho Cordova. A grower with a headquarters in the city and packing operations out in the Delta. Each one ends up managing a pile of separate circuits one location at a time. SD-WAN folds that pile into a single overlay that treats every connection as part of one network, routes each application down the path that suits it, and reroutes around a failing link in seconds.
BlueHouse Telecom designs and sources SD-WAN across the Sacramento region without favoring one carrier. We mix the access that fits each site, fiber in a downtown tower along Capitol Mall, a cable and wireless pair in a smaller storefront in Folsom, whatever the building can actually support. We compare the platforms, build the design, and stay on to run it.
Why public sector and healthcare work pushes Sacramento toward SD-WAN
Sacramento runs on state government, and the contractors who serve agencies near the Capitol often work under strict requirements for uptime and data handling. Backhauling every site through one data center adds delay and a single point of failure. SD-WAN lets each location reach cloud applications directly while one security policy applies everywhere. A clinic in Carmichael and a field office in West Sacramento behave like one network even when their underlying links share nothing in common.
Voice and video are where the gap shows. SD-WAN watches each path for loss, latency, and jitter, and it moves a call to a cleaner link the instant a circuit degrades. For a Sacramento practice running hosted phones and telehealth, that steering decides whether a patient visit holds or breaks up while the provider is mid sentence.
Distance across the region is the real cost
The metro spreads from Roseville down to Elk Grove and out past Davis, and a company that grows across it collects a different carrier in nearly every building. SD-WAN ties those mismatched links into one fabric so a new branch is a configuration change rather than a fresh network project. The American River corridor and the older commercial stretches along Stockton Boulevard do not all carry the same fiber, and the overlay hides that unevenness from your users.
How we design and run it
We map your sites, your applications, and the circuits already in place. Then we propose a design, source new access only where it strengthens the build, and compare platforms on features, support, and total cost. After cutover we manage the policies and the monitoring, so adding a location or reprioritizing an application is a quick request rather than a project that ties up your staff.
What you get with SD-WAN
We run clinics from Midtown out to Elk Grove, and each one broke in its own way during the busy hours. BlueHouse built a single SD-WAN fabric across all of them, and now a degraded circuit reroutes on its own before a front desk ever calls IT.
Why Sacramento businesses choose BlueHouse
Keep calls and clinical apps stable when a link falters
Run every location under one consistent security policy
Add or change sites without a forklift upgrade
Cut backhaul cost by sending cloud traffic out locally
