Highlights of smart home systems growth analysis

  • Service providers with smart home offerings share core tenets that incorporate flexibility, innovation and ‘the experience’. As long as a service provider adheres to these values, the means of development and delivery of the ecosystem (proprietary or open) is inconsequential.
  • IHS Markit projects the penetration of smart home systems will reach 3 percent of global households by 2018 and 7 percent by 2025. In 2023, professionally monitored smart homes will exceed non-connected, traditionally monitored security systems.
  • In order to preserve the growth of the smart home, service providers need to have flexible billing models. The challenge with alternative models to the typical two- or five -year contact is churn and the cost of acquiring the customer. As a result, on-demand/no-contact models may be enticing for do-it-yourself (DIY) solutions, but may be less lucrative in the short-term for service providers. Despite this challenge, consumers are beginning to expect alternatives to long-term contracts in the form of on-demand billing, professional installation with self-monitoring or DIY installation with professional monitoring. For security providers, these alternative models can be an additional source of RMR for dealers seeking quick installations with minimal effort required.

Rise of the DIY market

  • Innovation is critical for service providers in the smart home. The future of the smart home will have less focus on safety and security devices and more focus on automation, user experience, and ecosystems.
  • It is no secret that the DIY market has taken revenue from professional channels because of the innovation and design flexibility of DIY versus the often vertically integrated and proprietary nature of professional offerings.
  • As a result, service providers with vertically integrated ecosystems need to be quick to market with in-house innovation as well as necessary third party integrations, such as voice control with Alexa Skills or Google Home. Moreover, integrations with automotive, well-being (independent living and digital/telehealth) and multi-room audio will ensure differentiation, future proofing, and additional revenue streams.

All about the experience

  • Innovation is critical for service providers in the smart home

    The experience is the final critical tenet for service providers to be fully engaged with the smart home. The experience could be a platform with a unique GUI or the experience could be devices that complement each other well, e.g. indoor/outdoor cameras with the complete spectrum of security and automation devices.
  • If what a service provider offers is a single device without an ecosystem built around it, it must be compatible with others, and offer multiple transport protocols. For service providers, this could also mean consolidating the smart home intelligence into a router or gateway.
  • Engaging the end user with problem-solving technology (hook products) at the start, and making it simple to add additional devices (a large ecosystem of potential devices) is important for long-term success. Whether the end-to-end ecosystem is built up in-house or outsourced with reliance on third-party integrations makes no difference for the long-term success of service providers in the smart home as long as the devices are thoroughly vetted with the platform.
  • The advantages of in-house development cannot be ignored, with the ability to have tighter control of the data and end-user experience. Many of the industry’s top-players are moving in this direction, namely Vivint, with its Sky platform and Comcast, with its manufacturing of sensors, its partial acquisition of Icontrol and finally the ability to control lighting with its voice-controlled remote. Despite one company being security focused and the other being a telecom, both have moved more quickly than many of their peers in terms of innovation and evolving user experience. 

Overall, service providers are in a unique position in that many already have millions of customers, so service providers that implement these three tenets will find the most success against the DIY juggernauts of Amazon, Apple, Samsung, and Google/Nest.

Download PDF version Download PDF version

In case you missed it

How can organisations integrate physical security with other systems, such as IT and HR?
How can organisations integrate physical security with other systems, such as IT and HR?

By linking human resource (HR) systems to physical security, access control systems can automatically update permissions based on employee changes, such as promotions, terminations...

How are wearable technologies impacting the security market?
How are wearable technologies impacting the security market?

The most common wearable device deployed by security professionals is the body-worn camera. Traditionally used by law enforcement professionals, these devices are finding more and...

Dahua AI perimeter protection for SMBs
Dahua AI perimeter protection for SMBs

The perimeter of a small and medium-sized business (SMB) property is its first line of defence against intruders. It keeps the premises away from theft, property loss and security...