Enterprise Licensing Plans | Verified NAICS & SIC Data Access
Industry Intelligence Center · Updated: April 2026 · Reviewed by: SICCODE Research Team
Enterprise data licensing from SICCODE.com gives organizations structured access to NAICS and SIC business datasets for internal analytics, compliance, modeling, market intelligence, and large-scale research. This model is designed for organizations that need more than a one-time file and want controlled delivery, clearer usage terms, and a stronger governance framework for ongoing internal use.
Many organizations do not need just a list. They need an internal data asset that can support repeated analysis, classification-based segmentation, reporting, governance review, and downstream system use. That is where enterprise licensing becomes a better fit than a one-time data purchase.
Why choose licensed access
Built for recurring internal use
Enterprise licensing is better suited for organizations that need repeatable access to classification-based business data across multiple internal workflows, teams, or reporting cycles.
Clearer usage structure
Licensing makes it easier to define permitted internal use, refresh expectations, deployment scope, and handling standards in a more formal way.
Stronger data governance
Organizations with audit, compliance, or internal controls often need version awareness, refresh visibility, and more structured dataset handling than an ad hoc purchase provides.
Better fit for enterprise systems
Licensing can support structured delivery aligned with warehousing, BI, CRM, analytics, or internal research environments rather than a one-time campaign workflow.
Licensed access is usually the right fit when the goal is long-term internal use of NAICS and SIC business data across analytics, compliance, or modeling workflows.
Available licensing plans
Licensing can be structured around geography, department scope, internal access needs, and delivery preferences.
| Plan | Coverage | Access | Typical use case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regional License | Single state, metro area, or defined territory | Structured file delivery or approved internal access format | Regional analytics, targeted research, territory design, local compliance review |
| National License | Nationwide U.S. business coverage | Full file delivery or controlled enterprise delivery | Enterprise analytics, classification-based modeling, internal research, governance workflows |
| Enterprise Custom | Custom geography, department scope, or deployment structure | Schema alignment, custom packaging, and defined delivery planning | Large organizations, internal platforms, advanced analytics, broader internal deployment |
What can be included in a license
- Primary and secondary NAICS and SIC code fields
- Company identity and location fields for internal analysis and record matching
- Geographic attributes for mapping, territory planning, and regional modeling
- Employee and revenue range indicators where included in the licensed package
- Version tracking and lineage support for internal governance use
- Crosswalk context across related classification systems where relevant to the engagement
Exact field availability, refresh cadence, delivery structure, and allowed deployment scope should be defined in the final license terms for the specific project.
Integration options
Enterprise licenses can support structured delivery formats suitable for internal analytics and data operations, including flat-file delivery and formats prepared for warehouse or system ingestion. For more advanced internal environments, some organizations pair licensing with broader enterprise access planning or custom database buildouts.
Related pages include Enterprise Access: Large Business Databases and API Integration and How Custom Business Databases Are Built and Verified by SICCODE.
Compliance and data governance
Enterprise licensing should help reduce ambiguity, not create it. A well-structured license can define internal use boundaries, deployment scope, refresh handling, and version expectations so the dataset remains easier to manage across teams and over time.
This is especially important for organizations that need a more defensible internal data process for reporting, model inputs, compliance review, or audit readiness.
Redistribution, resale, public exposure, and multi-office deployment should be addressed explicitly in the license terms rather than assumed.
About SICCODE.com
SICCODE.com provides industry classification reference tools and related business data services built around NAICS and SIC use. For enterprise users, the value is often not just access to raw records, but access to a structured, internally usable dataset that supports classification-based segmentation, research, analytics, and compliance workflows.
Related background pages include SICCODE.com and the U.S. Economy: Verified Industry Data Infrastructure and Case Studies: SICCODE Data in Action.
FAQ
- What is enterprise data licensing?
Enterprise data licensing is a structured access model that allows an organization to use a defined dataset internally under documented terms covering scope, permitted use, and delivery. - How is licensing different from buying a list?
A one-time list purchase is usually narrower and more transactional. Licensing is typically better suited for repeat internal use across analytics, compliance, research, or multi-team workflows. - Can licensed data be used across multiple offices?
That depends on the license terms. Multi-office or broader internal deployment should be defined explicitly in the agreement. - What delivery formats are possible?
Delivery can often be structured around enterprise needs, such as flat files, warehouse-ready formats, or other controlled delivery methods appropriate to the project. - Why do enterprises choose licensing instead of ad hoc data buys?
Licensing is often a better fit when the organization needs repeatable access, clearer governance, and a more stable internal data workflow over time.