Verizon
Verizon is a global communications and technology company that provides network, mobility, and enterprise infrastructure services for consumers, businesses, and public-sector organizations.
- Wireless voice, data, and messaging connectivity for consumer and enterprise devices
- Wireline broadband, fiber-based internet access, and private networking for business and wholesale customers
- Enterprise mobility management, Internet of Things (IoT) connectivity, and machine-to-machine networking services
- Cloud-connected network services, security-focused connectivity, and edge access for distributed applications
- Managed network and communications solutions for government, public safety, and large institutional customers
More About Verizon
Verizon operates as an integrated communications and technology provider, supplying wireless, broadband, and enterprise networking services that function as core infrastructure for businesses, public-sector entities, and service providers. Its wireless network supports mobile voice and data connectivity for smartphones, tablets, routers, and IoT endpoints, which enterprises use for field operations, remote work, logistics, and customer engagement. The company’s network assets are used as transport and access layers in a range of enterprise architectures, including hub-and-spoke, regionalized, and distributed edge designs.
Enterprise customers use Verizon’s broadband and private networking offerings to connect branch locations, data centers, cloud environments, and remote users. These services commonly rely on IP-based transport, including IPv4 and IPv6, Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) (networking), and Virtual Private Network (VPN) (network security) technologies to segment traffic and enforce routing policies. Verizon’s role in global internet routing and peering allows organizations to establish stable connectivity paths between on-premises (on-prem) infrastructure, public cloud platforms, and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) applications, with service-level commitments that support production workloads.
In mobility and IoT solution areas, Verizon provides cellular connectivity, Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) management, and related services that enterprises use to connect sensors, industrial devices, vehicle fleets, and consumer equipment. These uses rely on standardized wireless protocols such as Long Term Evolution (LTE) and 5G (mobile networking), as well as messaging and data-transfer mechanisms suitable for low-power and wide-area deployments. Enterprises integrate these connectivity services into application stacks for telemetry ingestion, remote monitoring, asset tracking, and control systems, often combining them with cloud-based analytics and device management platforms.
For security and compliance requirements, Verizon offers network services that support segmented architectures, encrypted tunnels, and policy-based access control across hybrid and multi-cloud environments. These capabilities align with common enterprise frameworks that separate user, application, and management planes and that require consistent observability of network behavior. Verizon’s managed and professional services groups work with large organizations and government agencies to design, deploy, and operate wide-area networks, contact center connectivity, and critical communications systems, including support for public safety entities that depend on resilient voice and data services.
Within an enterprise technology directory, Verizon can be categorized under network and connectivity services, wireless and mobility services, IoT connectivity services, managed network and communications services, and security-focused connectivity offerings. Its portfolio spans consumer and business markets but is often selected by enterprises and institutions that require wide-area reach, standardized protocols, and integration with existing IT, cloud, and Operational technology (OT) environments.