 
        
        
        The Game Changer
        IP and cellular fire alarm communications make a difference
        
        
			- By Stacy Deveraux
- Jun 01, 2012
What hasn’t already been said—
  numerous times—about the
  supposed imminent demise
  of the U.S. hardwire public
  switched telephone system and new fire
  alarm communications technologies?
  About four years ago, IP fire alarm
  communicators came on the market,
  followed by cellular devices becoming
  more readily available two years later.
  
Dealers’ use of IP and cellular communicators
  picked up slowly. Adoption
  by what NFPA calls an Authority Having
  Jurisdiction (AHJ)—an individual such
  as a fire alarm inspector—was even slower.
  However, manufacturers of the more popular
  IP/GSM devices are seeing huge upticks in demand
  as many dealers across the country have
  reportedly started to use this new technology to
  their advantage to expand current customer offerings
  and, more importantly, win over new accounts.
  
“Once a couple facilities near to each other cut
  the phone lines and go with IP or cellular fire alarm
  reporting, it seems word of the big cost-savings
  benefits starts to spread quickly among local
  property owners,” said Gene Pecora, director
  of customer marketing at Honeywell Fire
  Systems. “And once dealers understand
  how easy some of these communicators
  like the IPGSM-DP are to set up,
  this ‘new money-saving technology’
  becomes a top-selling tool for them.”
  
Concern over GSM communications
  and recent claims of its possible
  “sunset” or discontinuation is a topic
  currently creating a lot of controversy
  within the fire alarm industry. The GSM Association
  estimates 80 percent of the world currently uses
  GSM technology when placing wireless calls, which
  amounts to nearly 3 billion people worldwide.
  
“There are other types of cellular technologies
  out there, but none have the proven track record of
  GSM. This tried-and-true method is not going away
  anytime soon,” Pecora said.
  
Fire alarm and security integrator ASG Security
  in Wilmington, N.C., pitched the cost-saving benefits
  of transmitting fire alarm signals via GSM to
  the owner of a large apartment complex protected
  by 17 fire alarm control panels. By eliminating two
  phone lines per control panel, ASG illustrated a
  cost-savings of nearly $18,360 a year. This not only
  won the company the job, but the fire alarm maintenance,
  testing and monitoring contracts for the
  whole complex, too. Soon, others followed.
  
“It’s crazy. Since that time, we’ve made five more
  sales,” said Justin MacDaniel, an ASG sales consultant.
  “We had one small family business call us because
  they wanted to switch their phone over to IP,
  but their fire alarm was the snag. Now their fire alarm
  communicates over that same IP line, and in eight to
  10 months, they’ll see that return on investment.”
  
Dealers are starting to see IP and cellular communicators
  not only as valuable sales assets but also
  as problem solvers that are less challenging than
  dealing with plain old telephone service (POTS)
  lines. Mark Popkowski, president of Modern System
  Concepts in Houston, describes a current project
  involving the monitoring of fire alarm systems
  throughout a high-profile company’s multiple highsecurity
  facilities.
  
“When this company upgraded its internal
  communication structure to VoIP, it caused many issues with their monitoring,” Popkowski
  said. “We’re now in the process
  of converting everything to an
  IP solution for them. Considering
  all the issues that we’re seeing pop
  up with changeovers to voice over
  IP, IP and cellular communications
  are proving to be more reliable for
  transmitting data.”
  
Fire alarm communicators capable
  of offering two different communication
  paths—IP as primary and
  GSM as backup—appear to be gaining
  the respect of AHJs. Enhanced
  pathway supervision is another plus.
  
“Initially, our local AHJ was interested
  but hesitant to ditch the
  phone lines. He’s taking a lot of responsibility
  in his hands when signing
  off on this new means of communication,”
  MacDaniel said. “The
  IP/GSM unit we use checks in so
  frequently—every five minutes—
  and that was what made the fire
  marshal comfortable.”
  
As for AHJ approvals, the preference
  is to involve local authorities
  from the start. Many dealers pioneering
  the use of IP and GSM communications
  within their markets
  have reportedly gone so far as to get
  local authority acceptance prior to
  approaching potential customers.
  
Companies looking to grow
  their monitoring business are starting
  to see the growth potential IP
  and cellular reporting offer. Brian
  Sheely, president of Innovative Life
  & Safety Solutions, grabbed hold of
  this concept, and, after nearly three
  years, landed his biggest client to
  date—the federal government.
  
“We approached the head fire
  protection engineer for Government
  Services Administration in 2009,”
  Sheely said. “Using their own data,
  we documented their current expenditures
  and were able to show the
  positive impact these upgrades would
  have on their operational budget.
  The savings start to snowball pretty
  quickly for a federal agency that operates
  and maintains over 3,500 government
  buildings worldwide.”
  
Sheely noted that money-saving
  benefits are available if access to IP
  network lines already exist but cautioned
  that those who take advantage
  of such lines need IT’s acceptance.
  “Be sure the facility’s IT people
  are involved at the beginning and
  they buy into the fire alarm sharing
  that line,” he said.
  
Declining numbers of POTS lines
  aside, the sales potentials IP and
  GSM fire alarm communications
  offer dealers to acquire new customers
  is too big to be ignored. An increasingly
  fast adoption rate by AHJs
  in geographical pockets across the
  United States opens the window for
  virtually any fire alarm application,
  anywhere.
  
MacDaniel summed it up best: “I
  have not seen anything in the market
  that has caught on so fast and offers
  such a quick return on investment
  for end users and installers.”
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        This article originally appeared in the June 2012 issue of Security Today.