Every warehouse has cameras. Almost none have early warning.
A Los Angeles cold-storage warehouse burned for eight days. The hard lesson for safety teams isn't about fire codes: it's the gap between a camera that records an incident and one that catches it early enough to matter.
Nobody answers the alarm anymore
When 95% of camera alerts are shadows, rain, and headlights, your team learns to ignore all of them, including the one that mattered. Why alarm fatigue is a detection problem, not a discipline problem.
Use the guide, then validate it on your cameras.
Don't let the guide be the end of it. Take the checklist, a clear deployment path, and a direct line to ask implementation questions.
The checklist is built for operators evaluating a live pilot in the next 30 days.
Request a demo
See the flow on a real operating scenario and scope a pilot around one facility or corridor.
See deployment architecture
Review camera ingest, edge inference, alert routing, and what stays on-premises.
Get the implementation checklist
Download the deployment checklist buyers use before green-lighting an industrial AI pilot.
Talk to an engineer
Bring camera count, VMS constraints, latency expectations, and privacy requirements to a technical review.