
23 May 2025
As housing providers make the move to digital telecare, what do you need to consider to ensure your new systems will meet your needs now and in the long-term?
Our latest guide examines the key elements of future-proof telecare,
so you can feel confident about what to include when specifying your
digital telecare system.
What to expect...
This guide delves specifically into future-proofing and explores:
Download your copy today: https://appello.co.uk/resources/guide-future-proof
As you make the move to digital telecare, you want to feel confident your new systems will be long-lasting. But it can be tricky to compare the different products on the market – and to know what questions to ask suppliers during the procurement process.
Your new digital telecare system needs to work for you today and in the long term. It must be straightforward to update, so you can adapt to changing organisational requirements, as well as future developments in technology.
This practical checklist focuses on the main elements of a future-proof digital telecare system:
Our aim is to help you have informed conversations with suppliers.
You can use these questions when talking to suppliers and as a guide when creating your digital telecare specification. Each question includes an explanation for why this is important and what to look for in suppliers’ answers.
Q1: What options are there for expanding the system's capacity, including scaling for future growth and adding customisation to meet individual's specific needs?
Why this matters: Your resident numbers and requirements will change over time, so your system needs to be flexible and adaptable. You need to know you can add more devices or users – or increase the scope of your services – without having to start from scratch or interrupt your existing service. The right digital infrastructure gives you the strongest foundations for a future-proof system.
Look for:
Q2: How does the system connect with third party devices and services?
Why this matters: Interoperability gives you more flexibility and choice. This means you can use existing or additional telecare peripherals, medical devices or smart home technology from third parties, without being locked into one supplier’s products.
Look for:
Q3: How do you keep up with new technology and what are your plans for developing the system?
Why this matters: You're making a long-term investment. You need to know your system can keep pace with advances in technology and that your supplier is committed to ongoing innovation to develop their products.
Look for:
Q4: Can you show that every part of the system is digital, with no analogue components?
Why this matters: Not all digital telecare systems deliver a fully digital service from start to finish. Some still send the alarm call as an analogue signal, which is then converted to digital. But systems relying on analogue technology, even in part, risk obsolescence once the digital switchover is complete.
An end to end digital system is designed specifically for the digital network. This is much more reliable and offers improved functionality, making it a better long term investment.
Look for:
Q5: What Standards do you use in your product development and how do you meet these?
Why this matters: Standards set out agreed specifications, procedures and best practice for manufacturers. These address real-world risks and incorporate relevant regulations, protecting your customers and organisation. Standards also enable you to work with third parties following the same frameworks.
Look for:
Upgrading to digital telecare isn't just about replacing old equipment. You need to make sure your new system will remain effective and relevant over time, so you can avoid:
This means selecting a flexible digital infrastructure, checking you're getting a fully end to end digital system and confirming compliance with relevant standards.
Use this checklist to have the right conversations with suppliers. Then you can make decisions with confidence – choosing future-proof digital telecare that will serve your customers and organisation for many years to come.