
MHO Networks is positioned for enterprise, mid-market and multi-site operating models in MHO's covered metros — Enterprise DIA on FCC-licensed fixed-wireless spectrum, Layer-2 Metro Ethernet for multi-site interconnect, MHO Link point-to-point connectivity, and 10-business-day install on qualifying services rather than ILEC fiber lead times measured in months. Fibi sources and negotiates MHO on your behalf, at no cost to your business.
Coverage Check
MHO operates an FCC-licensed fixed-wireless network across covered metros. Fibi runs a coverage check across MHO and alternate carriers in parallel so you see the full options at each location — fixed-wireless, fiber DIA and cable enterprise broadband.
Portfolio
Enterprise Dedicated Internet Access, Layer-2 Metro Ethernet, MHO Link point-to-point connectivity, FCC-licensed fixed-wireless network, IP options under SLA-backed enterprise terms, and 10-business-day install timelines on qualifying services — under one carrier in MHO-covered metros.
Enterprise Dedicated Internet Access on MHO's FCC-licensed fixed-wireless network — symmetrical, SLA-backed enterprise DIA, fitting operating models whose timeline cannot absorb fiber construction lead times and whose SLA posture cannot accept best-effort cable broadband.
Layer-2 Metro Ethernet across MHO's covered metros — fitting multi-building, multi-site and campus operating models whose connectivity posture requires private Layer-2 interconnect between sites without traversing the public internet.
MHO Link point-to-point fixed-wireless connectivity between two MHO-covered sites — fitting multi-building campus, multi-site, and back-up-circuit operating models whose timeline or fiber-availability posture rules out ILEC point-to-point fiber.
FCC-licensed fixed-wireless network — fitting enterprise operating models whose connectivity posture requires SLA-backed fixed-wireless on protected licensed spectrum rather than unlicensed-spectrum fixed-wireless or best-effort cable broadband.
10-business-day install timeline on qualifying services — fitting operating models whose new-site activation, M&A integration or rapid-expansion timeline cannot absorb the months-long fiber-construction lead times that ILEC fiber commonly requires.
IP options for connectivity (including static IPv4 and IPv6) under SLA-backed enterprise terms — fitting operating models whose connectivity posture requires committed availability, latency, jitter and packet-loss SLAs rather than best-effort consumer-grade or business-class broadband.
Ideal For
Enterprise operating models in MHO-covered metros whose connectivity posture requires SLA-backed Dedicated Internet Access on FCC-licensed spectrum and whose timeline or fiber-availability posture rules out ILEC fiber construction.
Multi-building campus and multi-site operating models whose connectivity posture requires private Layer-2 interconnect between sites without traversing the public internet — Metro Ethernet and MHO Link cover both interconnect and direct site-to-site bandwidth.
Operating models whose new-site activation, M&A integration or rapid-expansion timeline cannot absorb months-long ILEC fiber construction lead times — 10-business-day install on qualifying MHO services collapses the activation timeline.
Business-continuity-focused operating models whose redundancy posture requires physically diverse last-mile media (fixed-wireless vs. fiber vs. cable) rather than two circuits from the same media class — MHO fixed-wireless adds a structurally diverse second carrier alongside fiber or cable.
Why MHO Networks
Structural advantages that justify MHO over ILEC fiber DIA, cable enterprise broadband, alternative fixed-wireless carriers, and SD-WAN-aggregated postures.
FCC-licensed fixed-wireless operates on protected spectrum that the carrier holds licenses for — interference-protected and engineered for enterprise availability. This is structurally different from unlicensed-spectrum fixed-wireless that competes with WiFi, Bluetooth and other consumer technologies for airtime.
ILEC fiber install timelines are commonly months and often require fiber to be built into the building. MHO's fixed-wireless install timeline is 10 business days on qualifying services — fitting operating models whose new-site activation, M&A integration or rapid-expansion timeline cannot absorb fiber construction lead times.
Operating models whose redundancy posture requires physically diverse last-mile media commonly run two circuits from the same media class (two fiber circuits or fiber + cable). MHO is fixed-wireless — physically diverse from fiber and cable — fitting business-continuity-focused operating models.
MHO covers SLA-backed DIA, Layer-2 Metro Ethernet for multi-site interconnect and MHO Link point-to-point — under one carrier in MHO-covered metros. Fits operating models whose connectivity posture spans internet access, multi-site interconnect and direct site-to-site bandwidth without traversing the public internet.
Why Use Fibi
Your contract is with MHO Networks either way. The difference is the comparison, sourcing, and ongoing support layer around it.
| Aspect | MHO Direct | MHO Through Fibi |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing | Standard MHO rates | Volume-negotiated — equal or better |
| Vendor comparison | MHO only | MHO vs ILEC fiber DIA, cable enterprise broadband, alternative fixed-wireless carriers, and SD-WAN-aggregated postures |
| Quote turnaround | 5–10 business days | 24–72 hours across multiple options |
| Architecture review | MHO solution architects | Independent advisor representing your interests |
| Post-go-live support | MHO support only | Fibi escalation + MHO support |
| Advisory fee | N/A | $0 — provider-funded |
FAQ
Fibi will scope your enterprise DIA, Metro Ethernet or point-to-point objective against MHO and the most relevant alternatives — including ILEC fiber DIA, cable enterprise broadband, alternative fixed-wireless carriers, and SD-WAN-aggregated postures — so you see how MHO's FCC-licensed fixed-wireless and 10-business-day install posture compares before signing, with no obligation and no sales pressure.
Compare MHO Networks against fiber DIA, cable broadband and other fixed-wireless carriers