Artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping the security industry, driving significant advancements in technologies like video surveillance, access control and video analytics. For systems integrators, the rapid pace of AI adoption presents both opportunities and challenges, from navigating complex implementations to addressing the high cost of these cutting-edge solutions.
The cover story of SDM’s November emagazine, presented as a two-part online series, examines the implications of the rapidly changing AI landscape. The first installment focused on identifying which technologies are most significantly impacted by AI. Insights from interviews with leading integrators offer a closer look at their experiences with AI integration, how it’s reshaping system design, and the ways they are using AI to enhance internal business efficiencies.
This final installment will focus on the practical steps integrators take to ensure effective AI implementation, including assessing client needs, communicating AI’s value and managing budget constraints. Also, perspectives from manufacturers further illustrate how they support integrators in preparing for AI integration through comprehensive training programs and resources.
Effective AI Solution Implementation
When it comes to successfully implementing AI solutions, security integrators must first thoroughly evaluate their clients’ specific needs to determine which AI technologies can offer the most value. From assessing operational challenges to aligning AI with industry-specific use cases, integrators play a crucial role in selecting the right solutions and demonstrating the tangible benefits AI can provide, ensuring that each deployment enhances security and operational efficiency for the end user.
“We start by taking AI out of the picture and instead focus on the problem you want to solve,” says Satish Raj, CTO for San Antonio-based Pro-Vigil, a provider of AI-enabled remote video monitoring solutions. “We’re focused on having a workflow in which we can have accurate crime prevention. We started with that baseline and, once you set your accuracy needs, ask yourself how do you satisfy customer needs at this service level? And then how do you scale this up to thousands of customers? For us, AI is a force multiplier that allows us to offer that quality of service at scale.”
When deciding if AI is a fit for individual customer sites, Pro-Vigil looks at certain criteria including industry type. An outdoor construction site, for example, has different needs than a car dealership. “The same goes for a site that is fenced or gated — what we would recognize as a threat would be different there versus a site that is open to traffic,” Raj says. “From there, we create a customer profile and then we can apply AI to meet specific needs.”
To determine if AI-enabled solutions fit a client’s security needs, it’s crucial to ensure clear benefits like ease of use, streamlined operations and enhanced support, Amir Shechter, executive director of innovation and technology of Convergint, explains. The key challenge is delivering value that justifies the investment, with a strong focus on ROI to drive widespread adoption beyond the proof of concept.
“This is why upfront consulting, advisory services and technical innovation are essential. They help ensure organizational alignment, stakeholder buy-in and a willingness to manage change,” Shechter says. “Establishing realistic goals, achievable technical parameters, a phased approach, and the assignment of the right resources are all key. Ultimately, creating a collaborative project environment that includes internal and external stakeholders — such as the customer, integrator and solution providers — ensures the project’s success.”
Justin Stearns, vice president and partner, Chimera Integrations, also emphasizes the necessity for collaboration. Initially, the technology is vetted in-house before being considered for a client. For larger installations, a demo is set up in the client’s facility to allow the technology to demonstrate its capabilities. For example, Chimera recently designed a 250-camera system for a manufacturing facility. The primary concerns for the solution were employee safety and property damage caused by forklift accidents. A demo camera from a large, well-established manufacturer with previously vetted AI solutions was installed.
“The manufacturer supported us with the demo installation and programming and ultimately the solution failed to detect or prevent the situations we thought it would,” Stearns describes. “Ceiling height in this case caused the analytics/AI not to work without a significant increase in camera resolution that would have made the project go out of budget. We did an about face and installed a second demo with a different camera manufacturer and closed the sale on the project.”
Assessing AI-enabled solutions for a client’s security needs involves understanding their unique environment, pain points and goals, says Priya Serai, CIO, Zeus Fire and Security, which takes a consultative approach to ensure AI adds true value. The first step is evaluating the client’s specific security challenges and desired outcomes, such as real-time incident detection, access control enhancements or operational insights from video data.
The environment and context — including facility layout, foot traffic and existing infrastructure — are crucial for the effectiveness of AI solutions. For example, Serai says, optimizing customer flow in retail spaces involves considering both security and operational analytics to improve sales, staffing or inventory placement.
Scalability and integration are key factors as well, ensuring the AI solution can adapt to evolving needs and integrate with existing systems. Flexibility is essential for long-term value and ease of expansion. Additionally, the client’s readiness for AI, including infrastructure and willingness to adopt a data-driven approach, is considered. AI-enabled security requires continuous learning, refinement, and a shift in how teams use and respond to data, she advises.
“Ultimately, it’s about finding the right balance — the AI solution should enhance security, provide actionable insights, and align with the client’s overall business goals,” Serai says. “At Zeus, our focus is on ensuring the solution not only fits but truly makes an impact on protecting people, property and profits.”
Overcoming Cost & Budget Constraints
Security integrators often encounter financial challenges when implementing AI solutions, primarily due to the high upfront costs involved. However, integrators are finding ways to demonstrate the long-term value and return on investment (ROI) of these systems to their clients. By focusing on the operational efficiencies and enhanced security that AI can deliver over time, they work to balance immediate financial concerns with the broader benefits AI brings to end users.
Many security departments excel in operational management but struggle with the business aspect of security, Shechter explains. Building a strong business case and financial rationale for AI integration can be challenging. It involves clearly defining the specific needs, value and financial advantages that AI offers, as well as creating a detailed cost-benefit analysis.
“Clients may be hesitant to adopt AI due to skepticism from previous digital transformation initiatives that under-delivered,” Shechter says. “Without a solid, realistic plan that assures success, this skepticism can become a significant financial barrier, discouraging investment in AI solutions.”
In the physical security sector, the high initial costs of AI systems can be offset by extending their capabilities beyond security functions, Shechter says. For instance, AI-enabled cameras can also be used to enhance safety protocols, manage logistics and gather occupancy data that aids in more informed decision-making across various operations, adding value beyond security alone.
“AI tools can help manage people’s movement, monitor hazards, enhance employee and guest engagement, and contribute to ESG initiatives,” he adds. “By collaborating with other business units, organizations can maximize ROI and tap into additional budgets, making AI adoption more feasible and aligning with overall business goals.”
By enhancing existing video surveillance infrastructure with cameras that incorporate AI capabilities, many specialized IoT sensors are becoming redundant, streamlining design and maximizing the most use of the camera. This will not negate the need for special sensors in the near term, some use cases are very specific and require purpose-built devices.
Mark Barbaric, senior vice president of technology integration at Prosegur, notes that with the rapid pace of technological advancements, the company is increasingly finding that basic AI functionality is becoming a standard feature in modern hardware and the supporting software. For customers that are on a single video and access control platform, the upfront costs are negligible, he says, while long-term ROI can easily be demonstrated for upgrade to more advanced systems.
“Most of our customers recognize that challenge but have difficulty convincing the C-level to spend limited budgets on major upgrades where technology could rapidly become outdated,” he says. “Our approach is to work with manufacturers to design a hardware solution that is future-proofed and open to various software applications, should the need arise in the future for advanced AI projects that deliver high ROI.”
For Pro-Vigil, building AI models in-house has been a tremendous benefit for the company and its customers; however, it took years of expertise and investment to establish this infrastructure, Raj explains.
“Because of our scale of operation, we process tens of millions of events every month. Therefore we are in a unique position to use outcomes from this processing to train AI on an ongoing basis,” he says. “These are all benefits that are ultimately passed on to the customer in the form of faster, more accurate crime detection and deterrence.”
Balancing the high upfront costs of AI systems with their long-term value and ROI requires a clear strategy, Raj says. This includes implementing approaches that reduce the time it takes for AI-driven benefits to materialize, ensuring that the investment provides measurable returns sooner rather than later. If the benefits are vague and take too long to materialize, it might not be the appropriate solution.
“Having a defined roadmap helps solve the problem faster,” Raj continues. “If you start with a well-defined pain point, you can translate that into the value proposition and ask, ‘Am I willing to pay the upfront cost to solve the pain point?’ For Pro-Vigil, that pain point was the ability to scale. As our company grew, we were not able to scale with the same accuracy and that’s when we brought in AI several years ago.”
According to Serai, Zeus is focused on balancing AI’s high upfront costs with long-term ROI by maintaining transparency from the outset, ensuring clients understand both the initial investment and the potential value over time. The company highlights the likely savings and efficiencies, enabling clients to see the bigger picture.
To ease the financial burden, Zeus often starts with smaller use cases that deliver “quick wins,” showcasing immediate ROI. Scalability is achieved through phased approaches, beginning with pilot projects and expanding as results become evident. Zeus also emphasizes AI’s adaptability, showing clients how systems can improve and evolve, delivering increasing value as AI learns.
“Ultimately, it’s about showing a path from upfront investment to long-term gain while ensuring that each step is aligned with the client’s needs,” Serai says. “We don’t have all the answers yet, but we’re dedicated to finding that balance and making sure our AI solutions deliver growing value over time.”
Stearns notes that while the benefits of AI generally outweigh any additional costs, the biggest resistance typically comes from subscription fees, which clients often question. However, this pushback isn’t directly related to AI being part of the solution itself, he says, but is more of a broader concern regarding ongoing costs. He emphasizes that if the AI solution wasn’t financially viable for the client, Chimera wouldn’t have offered it in the first place.
“We also typically have a good, better and best solution for any technology we are presenting, so if budget is a concern the client can decide what features they aren’t willing to pay for,” Stearns adds.
Stearns challenges the assumption that AI systems always come with higher upfront costs. He explains that Chimera often designs systems using both AI and non-AI solutions, and in their experience, AI-based systems don’t necessarily have greater initial costs compared to alternatives. He emphasizes that this cost differential depends on the specific system and application rather than being a universal truth.
“One thing that saves money on installation is we don’t have to do as much programming for the cameras and typically the UI is easier to use, so we save on end-user training costs,” he explains. “In many cases, we don’t need to install as many cameras when using an AI system versus a traditional VMS that lacks these features. Furthermore, a lot of the VMS companies have HaaS (hardware as a service) models for their products, so now there is very little CapEx expenditure and the system is more budgetable and stays in their OpEx budget.”
Manufacturer Strategies for AI Training & Resources
In response to the growing demand for AI integration in security systems, manufacturers are implementing various training programs and resources to prepare integrators for this technological shift. SDM asked representatives from several companies to explain how they are assisting their integrator partners with this endeavor. Their answers follow:
Alcatraz AI
In the evolving field of AI-powered security systems, Alcatraz AI offers the “easy button” for biometric technology. Systems integrators no longer need to struggle with complex SDK integrations to bridge the connection between biometric technology and access control systems. Rock X works natively on any access control platform utilizing Wiegand or OSDP communication. The enrollment process is streamlined for integrators — autonomous, mobile, and automatic enrollment make uploading a user population into the biometric database simple. Our systems integrators’ Partner Portal is full of helpful information including technical training modules, pricing, and co-branded marketing literature.
In a landscape where concerns over privacy and potential liability over biometric and AI arise for users and integrators selling, installing, and supporting these systems, we are committed to protecting users’ privacy and safeguarding their biometric data. Rock X is a privacy-first device with an opt-in consent model, ensuring users are not unknowingly tracked or profiled. Unique biometric face templates are created then stored for each user without using or retaining images–their data is fully anonymized and encrypted from end-to-end. As leaders in facial biometric privacy with modern facial authentication, Alcatraz AI’s technology is designed to comply with privacy frameworks such as BIPA, CCPA and GDPR, and other future privacy regulations. — Tina D’Agostin, CEO
Axis Communications
Axis Communications is focused on helping integrators prepare for the integration of AI through efforts to equip them with the knowledge and expertise they require to effectively serve their customers. Our goal is to make it easy, efficient, and scalable for systems integrators to deploy AI technologies in our solutions. Just as they trust us to provide the necessary requirements for cybersecurity, we aim for the same level of confidence in our methodology when it comes to our AI tools and techniques.
Accordingly, we offer extensive resources including Axis Communications Academy trainings on our AI-based analytics, hands-on product and solutions demos at our Axis Experience Centers as well as whitepapers, use-case studies and in-depth articles. Additionally, our subject matter experts actively participate in industry events — providing workshops, keynotes and panel discussions that address topics around AI technology, ethics and legal matters.
Our commitment to industry associations, such as SIA, ASIS, NSCA and others, also plays in important role in educating and informing system integrators about AI technology. Through these associations, we’re able to learn more about integrator needs and concerns, which is highly beneficial as we incorporate AI technologies into our solutions. Ultimately, these meaningful interactions between people, processes and technology help ensure that AI is developed and deployed in the most effective and responsible way. — Quang Trinh, business development manager, platform technologies
Bosch Security and Safety Systems
Bosch is focused on releasing application-specific AI-enabled video solutions that accurately detect, classify, and count objects based on specific goals. With analytics offerings tailored for enhancing the safety of building occupants, the security of perimeters, the flow of traffic and pedestrians in smart cities, and more, Bosch is making it easier for integrators to solve challenges in a range of industries.
Through our Training Academy, we offer commercial training to help integrators understand the types of analytics available and the benefits to a range of applications. We also offer online or classroom-based technical training to help integrators learn to choose the right analytics for an application and configure and fine-tune the analytics to get the best results.
Bosch is also making it easier to set up AI-based analytics. For standard use cases, no calibration is needed. More advanced applications require a 3D understanding of the scene to enable real sizes, object speed, object classification, and the best performance for long-distance detection and people counting. For these capabilities, calibration is required. To make this easier, we offer autocalibration that uses AI to detect and analyze objects in the scene to determine parameters, map-based calibration with points identified on a map to facilitate autocalibration, and assisted calibration with measuring that combines information from the camera’s internal sensor with user input. — Matthew Cirnigliaro, director of regional marketing – video systems
Hanwha Vision America
Incorporating AI into security systems will be a layered approach, as it starts at the edge and works its way into the VMS. The most common use case for AI today is enabling cameras to detect specific types of objects, such as people and vehicles, and then creating specific rulesets, such as a vehicle loitering in a certain zone.
Hanwha’s certification program provides a hands-on deep dive into the configuration of AI cameras, providing them with real-world examples and walking the integrators through the camera configuration process. Then these AI-driven events are brought into a VMS to provide alerts and notifications that are relevant to the end user. The upcoming certification for our OnCloud VMS is planned to fully take advantage of our AI cameras and AI searching, ensuring integrators know how to perform these searches most effectively, saving them and their users valuable time when reviewing footage, as well as gaining new insights into operations and efficiencies. — Aaron Saks, director of product training
i-PRO Americas
i-PRO provides system design support from dedicated territory sales engineering to ensure that projects are set up for success. The company also offers specific tools to design, calculate, and configure AI systems for our more experienced integrators. For example, the i-PRO System Design Tool can simulate the perception and size of a subject whenever camera settings and conditions are changed. This also allows integrators to calculate the ideal number of camera placements while confirming overlap in the recording range between cameras.
The i-PRO Configuration Tool (iCT) allows integrators to configure cameras and AI applications. A new feature is an AI camera’s ability to learn and recognize unique objects on-site. Integrators can utilize the iCT tool to teach each camera the unique object without going to each camera individually. Additionally, the i-PRO Technical Support YouTube channel provides How-To videos on all the above tools, including information about setting up specific AI applications. — Adam Ring, senior. manager, tech services and sales engineering
Omnilert
At Omnilert, our mission is to protect people from gun violence by transforming existing security cameras into a proactive, AI-driven monitoring force. We envision a future where AI visual gun detection is as ubiquitous as fire alarms. To make this a reality, integrating AI into security systems must be seamless for both integrators and end users. That’s why we developed the Omnilert Gun Detect Appliance — a compact, easy-to-deploy solution that turns standard security cameras into real-time gun detection systems.
Designed with integrators in mind, the Appliance simplifies installation by combining hardware, AI software, monitoring services, and off-the-shelf integrations into a small, self-provisioning device. It eliminates the need for complex server setups, making deployment effortless, whether managing 10 or 10,000 cameras.
Integrators value its ease of deployment, quiet operation, low power consumption, and seamless integration with existing infrastructures. By addressing common IT challenges, the Appliance enables partners to quickly implement powerful AI capabilities without significant technical requirements.
Omnilert also offers extensive technical resources and training. Our webinars and hands-on sessions help integrators with topics such as optimizing camera performance, integrating with third party systems like VMS and ENS and understanding threat escalation workflows. With cutting-edge technology and comprehensive support, Omnilert helps integrators stay ahead in the evolving security landscape. — Mark Franken, vice president of marketing
Verkada
We’re just beginning to realize AI’s potential to enhance safety and security solutions. As we rapidly innovate and introduce more AI-powered features, we bring our integrators and partners to the forefront with certification programs, hands-on training, and on-demand resources focused on our AI solutions.
Integrators participate in extensive in-person training through Verkada’s Certified Engineer program, building skills and knowledge about AI-powered features on Verkada’s Command Platform, such as Person of Interest/Vehicle of Interest capabilities, AI-Powered Search, and AI-Powered Alerts. This hands-on training equips partners with in-depth knowledge to better support our shared customers.
We’ve also introduced a webinar series called Partner Master Class, providing partners with background and context on new solutions or features, like AI-Powered Search. Through live demos and best practices, these sessions help partners understand and communicate these innovations to end users.
Additionally, partners have access to on-demand resources on our AI solutions through our partner portal, including technical documentation, user guides, white papers, and webinar recordings.
As we continue to innovate and integrate more AI into Verkada’s platform, we’re committed to providing our partners with the tools and resources to capture industry opportunities. By embracing AI, our partners can leverage advanced technology to solve current and future challenges for our shared customers, transforming the industry in the process. — Caleb Augustin, Head of Channel, Americas