Technology Services Listings

The listings collected within this directory cover technology service providers operating across the United States, organized by service category, delivery model, and regional availability. Each entry reflects a structured set of verified attributes — license type, service scope, and geographic reach — drawn from publicly available business registrations and industry classification standards. Understanding how these listings are built helps users match a specific technical need to the right provider profile. For context on why this resource was assembled and what gap it fills, see the Technology Services Directory Purpose and Scope.


How listings are organized

Listings follow the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), published by the U.S. Census Bureau, as the primary taxonomy for categorizing technology service providers. NAICS codes in the 5100–5190 range cover information technology and related services, including data processing (NAICS 518210), computer systems design (NAICS 541512), and custom software development (NAICS 541511). These codes provide classification boundaries that distinguish, for example, a managed IT services firm from a software-as-a-service vendor — two categories that share infrastructure but differ significantly in contractual liability, support scope, and customer deliverables.

Within each NAICS grouping, listings are further subdivided by delivery model:

  1. On-premises services — provider personnel or equipment operate at the client's physical location
  2. Remote/cloud-delivered services — services are delivered via internet-connected infrastructure with no required on-site presence
  3. Hybrid delivery — a combination of on-site hardware management and cloud-based software or monitoring

This three-tier delivery breakdown aligns with guidance published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in SP 800-145, which formally defines cloud service models (IaaS, PaaS, SaaS) and deployment environments that underpin how technology service contracts are structured.


What each listing covers

Every entry in this directory contains a standardized set of fields derived from public business registration data and self-reported provider information verified against state licensing databases. A complete listing includes:

Listings do not include pricing, revenue figures, or employee counts unless the provider is a publicly traded company with SEC-filed financials. This boundary is intentional: privately held technology firms are not required to disclose financial data under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and including unverified estimates would undermine the directory's reliability. For guidance on interpreting what a listing does and does not assert, see How to Use This Technology Services Resource.


Geographic distribution

Listings span all 50 U.S. states plus the District of Columbia. Density is not uniform: the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program identifies California, Texas, New York, Washington, and Virginia as the five states with the highest concentration of computer and information technology workers, and those states account for a disproportionate share of entries in this directory.

Providers are tagged at two geographic granularities:

A remote-first software development firm (NAICS 541511) operating from Austin, Texas, may list statewide or national coverage, while a managed service provider (NAICS 541513) offering on-site network support in the Dallas–Fort Worth metro would carry a metro-level tag. This contrast is functionally significant: metro-tagged providers may impose travel radius limits or on-site response time commitments that statewide-tagged providers do not.

Rural coverage gaps are documented where identifiable. The Federal Communications Commission's Broadband Data Collection maps infrastructure availability at the Census block level and informs which service categories are feasible in low-connectivity regions — a relevant filter for cloud-dependent service categories in those areas.


How to read an entry

Each listing page follows a fixed layout. The header block displays the provider name, legal entity type, and the primary NAICS code in brackets — for example, [541512] Computer Systems Design Services. Beneath the header, the delivery model badge (On-Premises / Remote / Hybrid) appears as a labeled tag, not a prose description, to allow fast visual scanning.

The service description field is the only free-text element. Readers should treat this as a summary of stated scope, not a contractual specification. Technology service agreements — governed in part by the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Article 2 and, for software specifically, by state-level interpretations that vary across jurisdictions — determine actual service obligations. The listing description is a discovery tool, not a binding document.

Certification flags appear as named identifiers (e.g., "AWS Certified Solutions Architect," "CompTIA Managed Services Trustmark") only when the credential is publicly verifiable through the issuing organization's partner or credential database. Flags are not awarded by this directory; they reflect the provider's standing with third-party credentialing bodies as of the listing's last verification cycle.

For deeper background on the technology service categories represented across this directory, the Technology Services Topic Context page maps each major NAICS grouping to the regulatory frameworks and industry standards most relevant to that service type.

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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