Production depends on more than office internet. Barcode scanners, production workstations, wireless access points, switches, cabling, ERP access, vendor-connected equipment, and segmented networks all affect whether the floor can keep work moving.
Shop floor connectivity support focuses on the network and IT systems that connect production areas to ERP, inventory, scheduling, shipping, reporting, vendor support, and other business-critical systems. Interlink reviews production workstations, barcode scanners, wireless coverage, switches, cabling, network segmentation, vendor remote access, documentation, and lifecycle risks so manufacturers can identify connectivity issues before they interrupt production.
The Production Floor Depends on More
Than a Working Wireless Signal
When production loses access to systems, the cause may not be the application itself. The problem may be wireless coverage, unmanaged switches, aging cabling, poor segmentation, workstation issues, vendor-connected equipment, unclear network paths, or missing documentation.
When the Floor Cannot Connect,
Production Slows Down
A small network issue can create a large operational problem when it affects scanning, inventory updates, job status, shipping, ERP access, or vendor-connected production systems. Interlink helps manufacturers review the technology layers that keep the shop floor connected to the systems the business depends on.
Eight Connectivity Areas That Affect
Production Reliability and Supportability
We Help Review Recovery Readiness —
We Do Not Recommend Replacing Everything at Once
Interlink helps manufacturers identify lifecycle risk and build practical replacement priorities. Not every older device requires immediate replacement. The goal is to understand what exists, what it supports, what risk it creates, and when replacement should be planned.
When lifecycle planning involves ERP, production systems, accounting, or vendor-supported applications, Interlink helps coordinate the infrastructure, access, backup, documentation, and vendor communication layers while the appropriate software or equipment vendor handles application-specific requirements.
Twelve Signs Your Production Network
May Need Attention
Three Outcomes That Depend on
Reliable Production Connectivity
Four Steps from First Conversation
to Written Planning Guidance
Questions About Server, Workstation &
Network Lifecycle Planning
Yes. Interlink supports the IT network and connectivity layers that help production areas access ERP, inventory, shipping, scheduling, vendor support, and other business systems.
No. Interlink does not replace machine vendors, PLC programmers, CNC control specialists, or automation vendors. We support the IT network, access, security, documentation, and coordination layers around those systems.
Yes. Interlink can review the IT factors that affect scanners and production workstations, including wireless coverage, network connectivity, device configuration, workstation health, access methods, and vendor coordination. Hardware repair or firmware updates specific to scanning equipment may require the device vendor.
Yes. Interlink can review segmentation between office and production networks and help plan secure network paths that allow required traffic while reducing unnecessary exposure between environments.
Yes. Interlink can help review and document how vendors access production-related systems, whether that access is controlled, and whether access should be limited, monitored, or disabled when not needed.
No. The initial review is designed to be observational and discussion-based. Production-impacting changes are not made without coordination, approval, and appropriate scheduling.
Is Your Shop Floor Connectivity Supporting
Production — or Slowing It Down?
If scanners, production workstations, wireless coverage, vendor access, or network equipment are creating recurring issues, a manufacturing IT assessment can help identify what needs attention before connectivity problems interrupt production.