What it Takes to Make a Smart Home
A true smart home is more than simply connecting a handful of devices to the internet for control – it is an automated ecosystem of devices customized to enhance the homeowner’s lifestyle.
While popular smart consumer products like Philips® Hue smart LED light bulbs or Nest® thermostats are affordable and effective at performing their task, these products have limitations, especially without a deeper knowledge of technical programming and networking. This is certainly true when attempting to integrate devices from different brands.
For example, one brand may have a great light bulb product and an intuitive user interface; however, that same brand may not have its own thermostat product. So, if you want these two separate smart products, you’ll need two individual user interfaces to control each. You can see how this can quickly snowball into a far too complicated system as you add more devices to your home.
In a truly smart home, devices can work both independently and interdependent of one another to automate activities, create scenes, measure the environment, and notify residents of events with or without user interaction. This type of system sophistication can be customized to the user’s specific preferences and has the flexibility to reconfigure settings based on the users' needs in different scenarios.
It takes more than a trip to the local big box store and an internet connection to accomplish this caliber of high-end home automation. A real smart home system requires a professional systems integrator to install and configure the system based on the user’s preferences.
A professional integrator can help guide you toward the right technologies to fit your needs and preferences. You’ll want to have an in-depth conversation with them to give them insights into questions like:
- Is this a new build or an upgrade on an existing home?
- What are the pain points that you want to solve in your house?
- What is your project budget?
- What is your desired timeline?
- What kind of technology are you currently comfortable with using?
Once the initial conversations are out of the way, your integrator can start to piece together the best devices to help you achieve your goals. Smart devices, also known as Internet of Things (IoT) devices, could include any of the following: