Technical Diagram

We create diagrams that simplify technical concepts, making it easier for your team to understand the overall structure, system components and how everything works together.

Why You Should Care

Straightforward technical diagrams allow both technical and non-technical audiences to see the full picture and understand the system layout, connections and dependencies. Without these visuals, teams struggle to figure out how system components connect and how data flows. These diagrams are also important for the future, especially when you need to troubleshoot a problem, plan an upgrade or remain compliant.

What We Cover

Data centre architecture

Data centre architecture diagrams show the physical layout and floor plan of your data centre where servers, storage, racks, networking equipment and other infrastructure items are positioned. We can also work with your engineers to draw the airflow patterns, an important aspect that is often overlooked when planning for cooling and energy costs.

Common use case: When you plan to build, upgrade or move data centres, and need to map rack allocation, manage power and cooling distribution, make the most of physical space or document the facility for audits and maintenance.

System architecture

System architecture diagrams provide a high-level overview of your entire system, showing how different components such as databases, servers, user interfaces and dependencies fit together and interact. These diagrams help your IT teams and business stakeholders understand the system at a glance without needing to see the fine details of how it’s built.

Common use case: When you launch a new software platform and need to document how front-end, back-end, databases and APIs interact. Or when you want to explain the system to new team members, plan for a new rollout or review architectural decisions with business stakeholders.

Network connectivity

Network connectivity diagrams illustrate how network components connect and communicate, showing both physical connections (e.g., cables, switches, routers) and logical relationships (e.g., VLANs, subnets, routing protocols, IP addresses). Clear diagrams make planning, troubleshooting and performance tuning much easier.

Common use case: When you want to design network infrastructure, plan for network expansion, document network topology for security and performance compliance, or help IT teams understand data flow paths and network dependencies.

Process workflow

Troubleshooting guides let users find and solve common problems encountered when installing or using a product. The information is often structured in a problem-solution format, i.e., common issues, what causes them and step-by-step fixes. Some guides also include workarounds for issues that can’t be fully resolved.

Common use case: When users experience problems and you want them to try resolving issues on their own before contacting your support team.

Let’s Work Together!

You may already have a hand-drawn diagram your engineers made in a hurry on a piece of plain paper and you need it turned into something clean and professional. Or maybe you have older diagrams that need a fresh, modern look. Whatever it is, just get in touch with us to discuss your diagramming needs. Don’t see the type of diagram you need listed above? Contact us to discuss your specific requirements.

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