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Sharafdeen Milhan Ahamed
Sharafdeen Milhan Ahamed

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From Home Router to Enterprise Network: 7 Things I Learned as an IT Executive

As an IT Executive, I used to think networking was only about cables, routers, and internet speed. But once I started working hands-on with real systems, I realized networking is the backbone of every business operation. If the network goes down, everything stops.

Here are 7 practical networking lessons I learned that every beginner in IT should know:

1. IP Addresses Matter More Than You Think

Every device needs a unique identity. Understanding IPv4, subnetting, DHCP, and static IPs saves hours of troubleshooting.

2. DNS Is the Internet’s Phonebook

Many “internet down” issues are actually DNS problems. If Google opens with IP but not by name, check DNS first.

3. Switches vs Routers

A switch connects devices inside a network. A router connects networks together. Knowing the difference is fundamental.

4. Ping Is Your Best Friend

Before panicking, run:

ping_XXXX

It tells you if the issue is connectivity, DNS, or routing.

5. Security Starts with the Network

Strong Wi-Fi passwords, firewall rules, VLANs, and access control are not optional anymore.

6. Documentation Saves Careers

Keep records of IP schemes, ports, devices, and credentials. Future you will be grateful.

7. Cloud Networking Is the Future

AWS, Azure, and hybrid networks are changing IT roles fast. Traditional networking knowledge now connects directly with cloud careers.

Final Thoughts

Networking may look complicated at first, but it becomes easier once you understand the basics. Every IT professional should build strong network fundamentals—it opens doors to system administration, cybersecurity, and cloud engineering.

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