CIOReview
| | January 20166CIOReviewCopyright © 2016 CIOReview. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof.CIOReviewJANUARY- 25 - 2016Mailing AddressCIOReview44790 S. Grimmer Blvd Suite 202, Fremont, CA 94538T:510.402.1463, F:510-894-8405 January - 25 - 2016, Vol 05 SE-03 Published by CIOReview To subscribe to CIOReviewVisit www.cioreview.com Video Surveillance Solutions SpecialCIOReviewEditorial StaffSalesT:510.556.2400 Alex D'Souza Niko Alton Shirley Faith Frank Collins Ramasagar.MSophia AndersonJessica Stanleyjessica@cioreview.comVisualizersStephen ThomasVishal IssacManaging EditorJeevan GeorgeThe combination of world events, new use cases, and video analytics applications today are ensuring a healthy and innovative growth for the video surveillance market. According to Markets and Markets report, the video surveillance systems market that was valued at $13.89 billion in 2013 is supposed to touch $42.06 billion in 2020, growing at a CAGR of 16.97 percent from 2014 to 2020. This growth rate puts video surveillance in the same league as that of the "high growth" markets like drones (28 percent), big data (25 percent), and e-books (18 percent) for the same period. Globally, Americas accounts for the highest Video Surveillance Technology market today, standing at 39.6 present. This huge growth is partially powered by a shift from analog to IP cameras. With lesser operational cost and higher flexibility as compared to analog cameras, IP cameras are witnessing a huge demand in the market. Moreover, the built-in servers in IP cameras enable image encryption, multi-level user access control, and easy analysis of the videos with the help of data analytics applications. With IP cameras and full HD recording becoming the industry standards, the professionals in the video surveillance market are now looking beyond that. The next thing could be cloud computing and storage solidifying their presence in video surveillance space. Video surveillance and storage on the cloud brings several advantages by reducing the amount of technical resources required to set-up and maintain the systems, and streamlining the security operations in a centralized data center. According to a new market research report by Markets and Markets, Video Surveillance as a Service Market (VSaaS) consisting Hosted, Managed, Hybrid models and components such as camera, storage, server, video analytics is expected to reach $2,390.9 million by 2017. The key factors driving the VSaaS market include IT cost containment by major corporates, emergence of data centers, need for centralized data and application management, and technologies like IOT and Field of View (FOV). Our goal with this special edition is to help organizations discover best-of-breed video surveillance solutions. This special edition blends thought-leadership from subject matter experts with real stories on what selected vendors are doing for their clients, including exclusive insights from CIOs and CXOs. Let us know your thoughts.Jeevan George Managing Editoreditor@cioreview.comEditorialInto A Solid Growth Path
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