Top wireless security trends for 2011
Today’s security needs are different than they were a decade ago. People are ‘connected’ thanks to mobile devices so they can stay linked to their security and data systems in real time. When security is mobile, you need to be able to track it, according to Inovonics’ President Mark Jarman.
Jarman’s top predictions for 2011 include:
1. Integration of access control panels, video management systems and alarm sensors with IP-based security solutions will increase substantially. There is a convergence that’s been taking place in the security world with manufacturers of access control panels and video management systems integrating their systems into a cohesive IP-based solution.
In the coming year, development of IP-based specifications to achieve system-wide interoperability of IP security devices will accelerate and will soon become reality forcing vendors to shift their product strategies to comply with the new requirements.
2. Location and situational awareness in conjunction with mobile security capabilities will become a key requirement of campus-wide security systems. Today, security guards are mobile and have smart phones or two-way radios driving the growing trend toward mobility.
With an increasing number of security persons and human assets mobile these days, knowing where they are within a building or campus setting when they activate a duress alarm, such as a pendant, is mission critical. Then notifying others within that same environment via an integrated, easy-to-deploy and use mass notification system ensures they will get out of harm’s way quickly and safely.
3. Wireless sensor networks vs. hard-wired solutions. Wireless sensor networks in commercial settings will continue to gain traction against traditional hard-wired solutions due to their ease in extending monitored sensor types, speed of installation, cost savings and mobility, as well as overall reliability.
Altogether, this will improve the tangible ROI property owners expect. Increasingly, security dealers and directors are leveraging wireless throughout their organizations for these reasons – especially when a security breech occurs and the weaknesses of wired solutions are exposed.
Wireless security systems are poised to take advantage of a number of market factors in 2011,” said Jeff Kessler, managing director of Imperial Capital. “In the coming years ahead, we will see security directors and integrators asking vendors to better integrate access control, video analytics and external sensors into a single view to achieve true Physical Security Information Management (PSIM) capabilities. Wireless systems will play an important part in this evolution.”