How To Choose Facility Management Solutions
Make your monitoring more effective by choosing facility management
solutions with these key features...
- Facility access: How do you know what's going on
at your sites? Make sure your system allows you to fully customize
your site security options and keeps complete historical records of
site and equipment access.
- Keyless entry: Where security is concerned, keycards
are as bad as keys-they get misplaced, lost, broken, and even
stolen. With keyless entry, a user-defined code allows site access
and records the time and date of site occupation. Codes
are easily updated and changed, and the keypads themselves are virtually
tamper-proof.
- Video surveillance: Added security for sites can
now be provided using video surveillance. Network managers are able
to view live streaming video of their sites and equipment through
their web browser.
Select one of the following options to start evaluating facility management
solutions...

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"Every facility management solution I make is backed
by my no-risk, money-back guarantee.
If you buy my equipment and you're not satisfied for any reason
during the first 30 days, simply return it for a full refund.
If my product doesn't solve your problem, I don't want you to
have it."
- Bob Berry, CEO, DPS Telecom |
Facility Management Solutions Checklist:
Facility management solutions are just
the start of what you should be looking for in a remote network alarm
management system. Here's a handy checklist of all the essential
features you should look for. Print this checklist out and use it to
rate the systems you're evaluating. If a system can't meet these basic
requirements, cross it off your list.
Make sure your system supports these essential facility management
functions:
- Alarm presentation and notification: Send detailed
alarm descriptions and correction instructions to NOC and field techs
via pager notifications and web interfaces.
- Alarm sorting and analysis: Make sense of alarm
cascades with automatic intelligent alarm sorting, filtering, processing,
and trend analysis.
- Alarm collection and device management: Don't
settle for a limited remote alarm network monitoring system.
Get multiprotocol support for every monitoring device in your network,
plus discrete alarms, analog alarms, ping alarms, and redundant path
reporting.
Essential alarm sorting and analysis functions
- Root cause analysis: Finding the underlying cause
between alarm cascades can take hours of patient detective work. Look
for a system that can automatically correlate repeated combinations
of alarms.
- Nuisance alarm filtering: Even the best NOC staff
stops taking alarms seriously if they're bombarded with status alerts,
oscillating conditions, and unimportant alarms. Look for a system
that filters these out.
- Alarm sorting: A large, complex network can create
a cascade of alarms. Some are unimportant, but others are critical.
Look for a system that can automatically sort and prioritize this
flood of information for you.
- History and trend analysis: Identify
problem areas and eliminate recurring problems with a system that
keeps a complete alarm history that's exportable for trend
analysis.
- Custom combination alarms: A low battery isn't
a serious problem, and neither is a failed generator, but they're
pretty serious when the happen at the same time. Look for a system
that can watch many different alarm inputs and spot critical alarm
combinations.
Key alarm presentation and notification functions
- Alarm correction instructions: Detailed
instructions included in alarm notifications ensure that system operators,
without extra training, will know precisely what to do and who to
call if an alarm happens.
- Detailed alarm notifications: Summary "major/minor"
alarms don't give you enough information to make dispatch decisions.
Look for a network alarm monitoring system that includes detailed
diagnostic information in each alarm.
- Web interface: Everybody knows how to use a Web
browser. A Web interface makes sure all your field techs can access
your alarm system, from any computer from any location.
- Pager and e-mail notifications: Pager and e-mail
notifications let your field techs respond to alarms while they're
still in the field, speeding repairs and reducing windshield time.
Look for a system with SMS support, which can send detailed alarm
notifications to alpha pagers, cell phones, and PDAs.
Critical alarm collection and device management functions
- Multiprotocol support for your existing devices:
Make sure your next master system collects alarms from all your existing
devices, including your older legacy gear. You can get rid of all
your specialized consoles and monitor your network from one screen.
- Live analog monitoring: You can't adequately monitor
battery levels, temperature, and humidity with one-threshold contact
closures. Look for support for analog inputs, including live monitoring
of actual analog values.
- Back-up dial-up reporting: Don't rely on your primary
network to bring back alarms. If anything goes wrong with your transport,
you'll lose your telemetry data just when you need it the most. Look
for a system that supports dial-up alternate path reporting.
- Control relays: Many common site problems, from
power outages to high temperature alarms, can be solved by quickly
turning on a generator or an air conditioner. Remote
operation of site devices is the best way to eliminate unnecessary
site visits and it's a lot faster than going in the truck.
- SNMP support and ping alarms: If you're responsible
for both telecom and IP equipment, consolidate all your monitoring
on one system.
This is just a checklist of basic monitoring functions. If you want
to find a facility management system that meets and exceeds your requirements,
select one of the options below...