Introduktion
Då sätter vi igång!
Upptäck möjligheterna med SafeLine Orion
Boka en demo med vårt team och upptäck hur realtidsövervakning av hissar kan öka effektiviteten, minska kostnaderna och ge dig full kontroll.
- Gå igenom viktiga funktioner och användningsområden.
- Lär dig hur Orion passar in i dina hissystem.
- Få svar på dina tekniska och praktiska frågor.
Det är kostnadsfritt att boka en introduktion – och du får en komplett översikt av produkten samt tillgängliga prismodeller.
Se vad oplanerade hissavbrott faktiskt kostar dig.
Oväntade driftstopp blir snabbt dyra. Använd vår kalkylator för att uppskatta de verkliga ekonomiska konsekvenserna av serviceavbrott – och upptäck hur prediktiv övervakning kan hjälpa dig att sänka kostnaderna.
Har du frågor? Vi har svaren.
FAQ
Why do we lack transparency in lift condition and service delivery?
Short answer: Because lift data and service documentation are often fragmented across suppliers, sites, and formats—making it hard to verify what’s happening and why.
Details:
-
Information lives in emails, PDFs, service portals, and site logs.
-
Mixed fleets (different brands/ages) make consistent visibility harder.
-
Outcomes become hard to benchmark across buildings.
What does “portfolio control” mean in practice?
Short answer: Portfolio control means you can view lift performance and issues consistently across buildings, not one site at a time.
Details:
-
One reporting structure across the whole estate
-
Easier prioritization (critical buildings, recurring issues, worst performers)
-
Fewer “blind spots” when staffing changes or suppliers rotate
How do we get a “single source of truth” across multiple buildings?
Short answer: Standardise how lift events, actions, and outcomes are captured so reporting is consistent and comparable across the portfolio.
Details:
-
Use one common reporting model for all sites
-
Ensure every action has: what/when/why/result
-
Keep owner-accessible records independent of any single supplier portal
Why do maintenance costs keep rising and still feel unpredictable?
Short answer: Costs become unpredictable when issues are detected late, repairs are reactive, and evidence is insufficient to prevent repeat callouts.
Details:
-
Breakdowns create premium (urgent) work and disruption costs
-
Root causes can be missed when documentation is inconsistent
-
Hard to forecast when you can’t see trends portfolio-wide
How do we reduce unplanned repairs without increasing risk?
Short answer: Move from “react after failure” to “act on early signals” with prioritized interventions and verified outcomes.
Details:
-
Identify recurring fault patterns (by building/lift type)
-
Prioritize actions by criticality (hospital vs office vs residential)
-
Track whether a fix actually reduced incidents
How do we reduce unnecessary maintenance visits?
Short answer: Base visits on need and evidence—so the right work happens at the right time, with fewer wasted callouts.
Details:
-
Use consistent triggers for “send a technician.”
-
Validate outcomes: what changed after the visit?
-
Reduce repeat visits by documenting the root cause and resolution
What’s the fastest way to reduce downtime across the estate?
Short answer: Improve early detection, triage faster, and prioritize fixes using consistent portfolio visibility.
Details:
-
Downtime reduction is usually a process problem, not only a technical one
-
“Same day visibility” beats “end-of-month reporting.”
-
Benchmark worst performers and address systemic causes
How do we prioritize actions when multiple lifts have issues?
Short answer: Rank issues by safety/criticality, building impact, and recurrence—then allocate service capacity accordingly.
Details:
-
Critical buildings first (healthcare, mobility access, public sites)
-
Repeat incidents next (high recurrence = high cost)
-
Then optimize the “long tail” of low-frequency issues
How do we reduce tenant complaints related to lifts?
Short answer: Reduce recurring faults and improve response predictability—then communicate transparently when issues occur.
Details:
-
Track complaint drivers (type, building, time)
-
Reduce repeat callouts (same issue returning)
-
Provide consistent status updates internally so front-line teams can respond
Why is compliance harder with multiple buildings?
Short answer: Because evidence is scattered and practices vary between sites and suppliers, making it difficult to demonstrate control consistently.
Details:
-
Different service providers = different documentation styles
-
Local “workarounds” emerge over time
-
Audit readiness becomes manual and fragile
What compliance reporting should we be able to produce quickly?
Short answer: You should be able to show what was done, when, why, and with what outcome—per lift and across the portfolio.
Details:
-
Service/incident history per asset
-
Proof of corrective actions and follow-up
-
Trends and risk areas across buildings
How do we reduce compliance work that’s currently manual?
Short answer: Standardize documentation and reporting so evidence is created as part of operations—not retrofitted before audits.
Details:
-
Define mandatory fields for every action/event
-
Ensure ownership: who signs off and who stores evidence
-
Use consistent naming and categorization across the estate
What do boards/management usually want to know about lifts?
Short answer: They want evidence of risk control, downtime trends, cost drivers, and whether suppliers are delivering measurable improvement.
Details:
-
Portfolio KPIs (downtime, incidents, repeat callouts)
-
Cost predictability (planned vs unplanned)
-
Risk hotspots (buildings, lift types, recurring issues)
How do we stop living in spreadsheets and email threads?
Short answer: Create a repeatable reporting system that captures events and outcomes consistently and exports portfolio-ready views.
Details:
-
Agree on one taxonomy (fault types, priorities, outcomes)
-
Require documentation completeness (no “closed” without result)
-
Make reporting a routine, not a monthly scramble
Can we benchmark performance across buildings and suppliers?
Short answer: Yes—if metrics are consistent and data access is independent, benchmarking becomes objective instead of anecdotal.
Details:
-
Standardize KPIs and definitions
-
Compare “repeat incidents per lift” and “time to restore service”
-
Use trend lines, not single incidents
What is “manufacturer lock-in” in lift operations?
Short answer: Lock-in happens when data access, tooling, and processes depend on one manufacturer ecosystem, limiting your freedom to change suppliers or standardize reporting.
Details:
-
Switching costs become operational, not just contractual
-
Mixed fleets become harder to manage consistently
-
Innovation depends on one vendor's roadmap
How do we avoid lock-in while keeping a good supplier relationship?
Short answer:
Keep relationships collaborative, but ensure your organization retains independent visibility, consistent reporting, and decision control.
Details:
-
Independence reduces conflict—because decisions rely on evidence
-
Suppliers can still deliver; you just verify outcomes consistently
-
Helps long-term trust through shared facts
What does “open protocol” mean for a property owner?
Short answer: Open protocol typically means better interoperability and fewer dead-ends when integrating with your building systems or changing vendors.
Details:
-
Easier integration into broader property tech stacks
-
Less dependence on proprietary portals
-
More flexibility as your portfolio evolves
What cybersecurity questions should IT ask before connecting lift assets?
Short answer: Ask how data is protected, who has access, what’s integrated, and how risks are controlled and documented.
Details:
-
Encryption and secure authentication
-
Role-based access and audit logs
-
Clear data ownership and retention policy
-
Security documentation for internal risk assessment
Who owns the operational lift data?
Short answer: For portfolio governance, property owners should retain access and control over operational data so decisions and reporting remain independent.
Details:
-
Enables benchmarking and supplier accountability
-
Reduces switching friction
-
Supports consistent governance across sites
How should we think about GDPR/NIS2 in this context?
Short answer: Treat connected lift data as governed operational data: define lawful basis (if personal data exists), minimize exposure, and document security controls and responsibilities.
Details:
-
Data minimization and purpose limitation
-
Clear processor/controller roles (where applicable)
-
Internal security review and documentation
(This is governance guidance, not legal advice.)
How do we roll out across 24+ lifts without disrupting operations?
Short answer: Start with a representative pilot, establish baseline KPIs, then scale building-by-building with a standard installation and reporting playbook.
Details:
-
Pilot mix: different brands/ages/traffic profiles
-
Baseline first: downtime, incident rate, repeat callouts
-
Scale after measurable improvement and stakeholder buy-in
What’s the difference between non-invasive and invasive installation models?
Short answer: Non-invasive approaches aim to minimize disruption and changes to core systems, while invasive approaches may enable deeper integration but require more planning and approvals.
Details:
-
Choose based on risk appetite, lift type, and governance requirements
-
Document change management and safety considerations
-
Align with compliance and supplier agreements
How do we get buy-in across Operations, Procurement, Technical/Compliance, and IT?
Short answer: Tie the rollout to each stakeholder’s measurable outcomes: fewer disruptions (Ops), clearer supplier accountability (Procurement), audit readiness (Compliance), and controlled risk (IT).
Details:
-
Use shared KPIs across stakeholders
-
Agree on definitions (what counts as “downtime”)
-
Publish a simple governance model (who decides what)
Why should we consider SafeLine to solve our key lift-portfolio challenges—lack of service transparency, rising unplanned costs, compliance complexity, and vendor lock-in?
Short answer: SafeLine is positioned to help property owners improve transparency, reduce disruptions, and maintain flexibility through faster deployment options and interoperability (e.g., open protocol), without forcing a single-vendor operating model.
Details:
-
Emphasis on practical rollout (short installation time)
-
Flexibility options (non-invasive vs invasive models)
-
Focus on interoperability and long-term control
Can we benchmark performance across buildings and suppliers?
Short answer: Yes—if metrics are consistent and data access is independent, benchmarking becomes objective instead of anecdotal.
Details:
-
Standardize KPIs and definitions
-
Compare “repeat incidents per lift” and “time to restore service”
-
Use trend lines, not single incidents