Economic Daily News industry update: WorldTrend Security has launched an integrated package that combines cloud security with guard services — humans handle access control during the day, cloud systems take over the monitoring at night, and technology supports the people. The security budget goes to where each hour of the day actually needs it.

WorldTrend's read: the key points

Why is neither "all-human" nor "all-cloud" the best answer?

The security industry has often fallen into an either-or debate: go all-in on human patrols, or go all-in on technology. But in real operations, the risk intensity of a site is never uniform across 24 hours. In the daytime — dense foot traffic, visitors, frequent deliveries — the judgment, adaptability, and service warmth of a stationed guard vastly outstrip any camera. At night, with few people around and behavior simple, what matters most is "did something out-of-pattern show up?", which is exactly what cloud AI video does best.

How WorldTrend's integrated package divides the day

In the article, WorldTrend splits the workload across three time slots:

"It's not about machines replacing people — it's about letting each do what they do best."
— From the article, on the design principle behind the integrated package

Why enterprise customers benefit

For chain retail, office buildings, and industrial-site enterprise customers, the biggest value of this integrated architecture is a re-allocation of budget. A costly configuration that used to station guards for all 24 hours can shift the overnight shift to the cloud, and the savings can go into better daytime reception, more sophisticated video analytics, or a bigger response team. For community customers, this echoes the logic of WorldTrend's other combined offering — Huachen Smart Property + AI Eagle Eye CloudPatrol Squad.

What this means for the reader

Whether you're an enterprise security leader or a community management committee member, the takeaway from this article is that security procurement should not be a contract for a "24-hour average unit price" — it should be a plan for "resourcing that matches risk intensity". Next time you compare bids, don't just ask "how much a month?" — ask "what happens during the day, what happens at night, and who's first on scene when something breaks?". Vendors who can clearly answer those three questions are the partners with genuine integration capability.