

Company-monitored security systems are installed and monitored by professional home security companies. They can include things like cameras, motion detectors, door sensors, glass-break sensors, silent alarms, and not-so-silent sirens to scare off intruders. While each system operates a little differently, a company-monitored security system is usually set up to send a signal to the company’s call centre when someone enters your home while the system is engaged. Then, you’ll receive a phone call to make sure the alarm wasn’t set off accidentally. If you don’t answer or if you aren’t home when you receive the call, the police will be dispatched.
A company-monitored home security system is usually set up to cover every room in your house, so there won’t be any “blind spots.”
Self-monitored security systems are exactly what they sound like — they’re security systems you monitor yourself. These can include motion sensors, silent alarms, sirens, door sensors, and security cameras that send text or push notifications or call your mobile phone when they’re set off — and most connect to smartphone apps that allow you to monitor them remotely and give access to neighbours or other emergency contacts. If you receive a notification when you’re not home, you can call 911 yourself or have a neighbour look for signs of a break-and-enter. Some of these systems (like Nest Cam This is an external link, for example) even come equipped with a speaker, so you can tell the burglars they’ve been caught on camera and police are on the way.
Picture your self-monitored system in action: You’ve headed up to your cottage for the week, and just as you get comfy in front of the campfire, your phone sounds an alert that someone is inside your house. You open your home security app and see footage of a stranger walking around your living room. You quickly call 911 and then watch as police come in and arrest the burglar on camera (and save your TV and stereo from being stolen in the process).
Most self-monitored home security systems connect to smartphone apps that allow you to monitor them remotely, so you can call 911 when an intruder has entered your home.
While company- and self-monitored security systems both offer some way of monitoring your home while you’re not there, unmonitored alarm systems are simply intended to scare off intruders as soon as they step foot in your home — but you’ll have to rely on one of your neighbours to call the police if they hear the alarm. While an unmonitored alarm-only system can make quite a racket and scare off those pesky burglars, it’s safe to say that some form of monitoring adds an extra layer of security, whether it’s done professionally or you do it yourself.
Did you know that installing a security system in your home could qualify you for a discount on home insurance? If you’re thinking of installing a new home security system, reach out to your licensed broker to find out how much you could save.
Source: Economical
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