Camera Monitoring: 24×7 Live vs. Reactive; Internal vs. External Third Party

This VERSUS document is provided to you and your organization as a starting point or maturity checkpoint for existing policies, procedures, and equipment. It is brought to you on behalf of Jim McConnell, Principal Owner, and Ask McConnell, LLC — A Converged Security Services Provider. The content is not meant to cover every circumstance, industry, law, regulation, contractual requirement, threat, environment, or risk, but it provides a starting point for any organization. Please consult with your legal counsel and insurance provider about added requirements. We are not legally protecting these documents; we just ask for credit, shout-outs, and referrals if you find them helpful.

Jim McConnell | info@askmcconnell.com | askmcconnell.com


Camera Monitoring: 24×7 Live vs. Reactive; Internal vs. External Third Party

Updated: 14 June 2026

One person’s perspective — weigh it against your law, insurance, culture, and context.

Camera systems are among the most powerful tools available for security, safety, and incident response — but the system is only as effective as the decisions behind how it is monitored. Two related but distinct decisions must be made: whether cameras are watched continuously or reviewed only when needed, and whether monitoring is handled internally or by an external supplier typically operating as a Security Operations Center (SOC) or Global Security Operations Center (GSOC). This document helps you think through all four approaches honestly.

One point applies regardless of which model you choose: policies, procedures, and training must be maintained year-round. A retention policy and the technology to support it are not optional — they are foundational.

For context, these are the definitions used throughout:

  • Security — The prevention, detection, and response to a crime or a violation of organizational rules.
  • Safety — The prevention, detection, and response to an accident (spilled water, broken glass, a trip hazard, etc.).
  • Camera — Fixed-location cameras specifically designed for security monitoring, sometimes called CCTV or surveillance cameras. Placement should be driven by a thorough site assessment. Image quality varies significantly. If you lease your facility, cameras already installed may or may not be accessible to you — confirm this before planning your program.

24×7 Live Human Monitoring

Pros

  • Provides continuous coverage of all camera areas with the potential to record every event as it happens.
  • Safety, security, and medical incidents — both potential and active — can be spotted and escalated in real time.
  • During an active incident, the ability to support the incident command system and feed information to responders is significantly stronger.

Cons

  • Without strong policies, the assumption that “everything is being watched” creates false confidence — sustaining 24×7 monitoring requires serious time, expertise, and budget.
  • All shifts must be staffed, ideally with at least two people per shift for accountability and sustained attention.

Also Consider

  • What is your coverage plan when monitoring staff call in sick, leave unexpectedly, or a shift cannot be filled?
  • Are your cameras positioned and maintained to actually support real-time monitoring — or are blind spots making the effort less effective than it appears?
  • How are monitoring staff trained to escalate, to whom, and under what circumstances?

Reactive Viewing

Pros

  • Lower cost — no dedicated monitoring staff or ongoing third-party monitoring contract required.

Cons

  • Footage and evidence access is limited to whoever holds access credentials — at 3 a.m. on a Sunday, that is a significant problem.
  • Camera or recording failures may go undetected until someone manually checks the console — which may happen weekly, monthly, or not at all.

Also Consider

  • This model depends entirely on someone remembering — or being triggered — to look. What is the mechanism that prompts that review?
  • Is this a deliberate security posture, or a budget constraint being rationalized as a policy decision?
  • If an incident occurs overnight, how long before you can confirm what happened and preserve the footage?

Internal Monitoring

Pros

  • Your team knows the people, the environment, and what “normal” looks like — contextual awareness that an external supplier cannot replicate.
  • Better positioned to support internal investigations and incident reviews without dependency on outside parties.
  • When an accusation arises that intersects with camera coverage, your team can access and interpret footage immediately.

Cons

  • All shifts must be staffed, ideally with at least two people per shift for accountability and sustained attention.
  • Significant W-2 costs — salary, benefits, training, turnover, and overtime.
  • Significant legal and insurance obligations that must be addressed in written policies before monitoring begins.

Also Consider

  • What is your protocol when the subject of an investigation is the person — or a close colleague of the person — who monitors the cameras?
  • How do you maintain chain of custody for footage used in an incident review or legal proceeding?
  • Do your written policies address who can access footage, under what circumstances, and for how long?

External Third-Party Monitoring (SOC / GSOC)

Pros

  • Costs, while significant, are defined by contract and therefore more controllable than open-ended W-2 overhead.
  • Expertise can be substantial and scalable — including specialists in video analytics, escalation protocols, and multi-site operations.
  • The supplier brings licensing, insurance, written policies, procedures, and training programs already in place.

Cons

  • Monthly contract costs are ongoing, and a call tree of two to three people reachable around the clock is still required on your end to receive and act on alerts.

Also Consider

  • Remote monitoring is typically less expensive than on-site monitoring — clarify scope, response protocols, and capabilities before committing to either model.
  • Verify that the supplier carries adequate errors-and-omissions and general liability insurance for your jurisdiction and use case.
  • What are the contractual response-time guarantees — and what remedies are available if they are not met?


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