Letting the right people through the right doors at the right times is what access management is actually about. The hardware is only part of it.
Card readers, keypads, biometric scanners and mobile credential readers are where a person interacts with the system. The right device depends on the security level and traffic volume of each door.
A door access management system ties everything together. One place to manage credentials, review logs, set schedules and respond to events across every controlled door in the building.
Not every door has the same requirements. Our door access control devices range from simple standalone keypads to networked readers that integrate with larger platforms.
Access management works best when devices, software and door hardware are chosen to work together. We carry the components to build a complete setup from the reader to the lock.
Access control is the hardware on the door. Access management is how you administer it, who gets in, where and when.
You can set access by individual user, specific door, time of day and day of week. A cleaner might have access to the building after hours but not to the server room.
Most door access management systems store logs locally on the device and sync back to the software once the connection is restored.
It depends on the platform. Some are designed for a handful of doors, others scale to hundreds of entry points across multiple buildings.
Some platforms do. When a new employee is added to HR the system can automatically create their access profile, and when they leave it revokes it.
A standalone keypad works independently with no central oversight. A managed device is part of a system where all doors are controlled and monitored from one place.
Thanks for subscribing!
This email has been registered!