Enterprise definition

Dedicated Internet Access

Business Internet with dedicated bandwidth, static IPs, routing support, and a clear upgrade path.

What it means

Dedicated Internet Access, often shortened to DIA, is Internet service built for business and enterprise use. It is not just speed; it is a service model with clearer bandwidth, static addressing, routing support, and support expectations.

Where it fits

  • Business and enterprise Internet access
  • Sites that need static IPs or routed blocks
  • Organizations that need predictable upgrade paths
  • Locations where BGP may come later but is not required today

What we'll talk through with you

  • What bandwidth do you need now and in the next 12 to 24 months?
  • Do you need static IPs or a routed subnet?
  • Do you need a simple handoff or routing support?
  • Is this on-net, near-net, or off-net?
  • Do you need failover or carrier diversity?
Important context DIA is usually the right answer when the primary need is Internet access, not private transport between specific points.

How it shows up in a real project

A business needs 1G Internet, static IPs, and a future path to BGP. DIA gives a clean starting point without overbuilding the first order.

Learn the goal

We start by translating the business need into endpoints, capacity, term, resiliency, and support expectations.

Map the meet points

We identify carrier meet points, IX ports, cloud on-ramps, colocation footprints, or private handoffs that matter.

Choose the model

The answer may be DIA, IP Transit, Type II access, dark fiber, wavelength, IRU, managed transport, or a blend.

Build the path

Quad State Internet can build, coordinate, light, monitor, document, and support the route after turn-up.