Day-2 support is the ongoing managed operation of an AV system after installation and commissioning: remote monitoring, proactive alerts, firmware updates, user issue resolution, and regular health reporting. AI-enabled platforms are now taking this further, with the ability to self-correct certain issues before anyone is ever notified. What organizations should expect from their integrator is a defined support contract with specific response time SLAs, named contacts, remote monitoring coverage of all networked devices, and quarterly firmware update cycles. Anything less is not a managed support model. It is a warranty with a phone number.
Blog 7 of 8 in the series: What AV Topics Should I Be Paying Attention to in 2026?
Warranty support is reactive. Something breaks, you call, a tech shows up or connects remotely, the failed component gets repaired or replaced. It waits for failure. It does not prevent it.
Day-2 support is proactive. A monitoring platform watches every networked device continuously. When a display goes offline, a DSP loses connection, or firmware falls behind current release, the monitoring system generates an alert before the user ever notices. In some cases, AI-enabled platforms can self-correct the issue entirely, restarting a frozen device, re-establishing a dropped connection, or rolling back a failed update without any human intervention. The support team resolves what remains remotely in most cases and dispatches on-site only when necessary. That is a fundamentally different operating model.
Modern AV monitoring platforms go well beyond telling you whether a device is online. The best platforms today run scheduled room sweeps that actively verify end-to-end functionality: confirming that a camera is not just connected but producing a usable signal, that a display is not just on but receiving and rendering content correctly, and that a DSP is processing audio as configured. A device can show green on a status dashboard and still have a functional problem. Room sweeps catch what device status alone misses.
The platforms most commonly deployed in enterprise AV environments today: Domotz, NetSpeek, Xyte, Q-SYS Reflect Enterprise Manager, Extron GlobalViewer Enterprise, and Crestron XiO Cloud. Each has different strengths depending on the equipment mix and the depth of integration required.
Meeting room utilization data, specifically how often rooms are used and average session length, is often overlooked but genuinely useful. It informs space planning decisions and helps organizations avoid building rooms nobody uses or running out of the ones everyone wants.
Standard response time SLAs for managed AV support in enterprise environments:
All of that should be in writing in the support contract. Verbal commitments about response times are not enforceable.
Not every organization needs the same level of ongoing support, and good integrators structure their offerings to reflect that. There are three tiers worth understanding.
Reactive coverage with remote support. The monitoring platform is watching, alerts come through when something fails, and the support team responds remotely. Right for organizations with lower AV complexity or internal IT teams that can handle basic on-site tasks.
Proactive coverage with priority response and a hybrid remote plus on-site model. The integrator is actively managing system health: running room sweeps, managing firmware on a schedule, and dispatching on-site when remote resolution is not sufficient. This is the right tier for most enterprise environments with meeting-critical AV infrastructure.
Dedicated or embedded support with on-site presence and full ownership of the AV environment. The integrator operates the system as an extension of the internal team, covering all pillars of support from monitoring and maintenance to user training and space planning input. Right for large campuses, command centers, or organizations where AV downtime has direct operational impact.
Collaboration platforms like Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Cisco Webex update their software 4 to 6 times per year. Every update can introduce compatibility requirements for the hardware running in meeting rooms.
AV devices that are not kept current may lose compatibility with platform features, experience authentication issues, or fail certification checks. AV devices on enterprise networks are networked endpoints with operating systems and software stacks. They have the same vulnerability management requirements as any other networked device, and they are often the ones that get overlooked because they sit in conference rooms rather than in the data center.
A quarterly firmware update cycle, coordinated with the collaboration platform update calendar and scheduled during off-hours, keeps everything current without disrupting meeting operations.
Organizations that invest in managed Day-2 support consistently see lower total cost of ownership over a 5-year system lifecycle compared to those relying on break-fix support.
The organizations that treat Day-2 support as an optional add-on tend to find out why it matters about 18 months into owning the system.
For context on what to look for when selecting an integrator, read How Is the Role of the AV Integrator Changing in 2026?.
For a full overview of DGI's managed services offering, visit Support & Maintenance. For the full series overview, see What AV Topics Should I Be Paying Attention to in 2026?.