The SMB Internet Reliability Blueprint
Be Internet Fail-Safe!
(And Keep Your Business Humming Without a Hiccup)

We can only service California, but the principles apply everywhere, so feel free to gain some valuable insight no matter where you are!

Are you ready to survive an Internet outage
(and feel confident in your solution)?

We are Cal.net, a California ISP, and we've helped businesses get online and stay online for over 25 years. We’d love to share our expertise in Internet reliability, so you can experience it firsthand.

  • Prevent costly internet downtime and lost revenue

  • Eliminate hidden vulnerabilities in your network

  • Gain expert strategies for reliability and resilience

This free email course gives you everything you need to stay connected.

"A real lifesaver for our small service business"

Want to make sure this free email course is “worth it” before you sign-up?

Here's everything that's inside the SMB Internet Reliability Blueprint:

Day 1: Why Relying on A Single ISP Connection Is the Biggest Risk to Your Uptime and RevenueDay 2: How Hidden Flaws in Shared Infrastructure Can Imperil Redundancy (And How to Avoid Them)Day 3: When Unclear Failover Strategies Wreak Havoc by Causing Delays in Switching Between ISPsDay 4: Why Growth and Peak Demand Expose Weaknesses (And How to Plan Ahead)Day 5: The Silent Risks Of “Set It and Forget It” (And What to Do About Them)

Hooray! The first lesson of The Small/Medium Business (SMB) Internet Reliability Blueprint is on its way to your inbox.

Within the next minute or two, you're going to get an email from Ken Garnett of Garnett Digital Strategies (our market development consultant).This email contains instructions to get started with the SMB Internet Reliability Blueprint, so be sure to check it out!But if you have any questions, don't hesitate to hit reply and let us know—we'll be happy to help! :-)Now go and check your inbox!


P.S. If you don't find the email in your inbox in the next couple of minutes, please check your spam folder...Chances are it ended up there.(Sometimes the "email algorithms" think we're a robot! 🤷🏻)