
BCD Video has an interesting take on the things to come in 2026 for the physical security industry. The company has adopted a mindset of going “Beyond Computer Design”, an approach that looks past hardware engineering to deliver reliability, lifecycle stability, and long-term value. Innovation remains vital, but according to BCD in 2026, growth will favour ISVs with a combination of vision and execution. Innovation continues to accelerate, but market share increasingly follows those who can execute with stability and reliability.
The company has looked at what will define success in 2026, and shares that the answer is both strategic and straightforward. The companies that will lead the next chapter are not necessarily those that innovate the fastest, but those that deliver the most predictably.
According to BCD, the past year revealed how critical hardware stability and lifecycle management have become for ISVs. Software vendors that relied on uncontrolled hardware supply chains often faced inconsistent performance, project delays, and growing support costs. By contrast, ISVs that approached hardware as a core element of their value chain experienced smoother deployments and higher customer satisfaction. Predictability translated directly into revenue protection and stronger brand reputation.
In a marketplace shaped by component shortages, shipping constraints, and compressed product lifecycles, operational control is now a cornerstone of resilience.
In earlier years, ISVs differentiated themselves primarily through software innovation. Today, as analytics, AI, and edge computing converge, customers expect integrated systems that solve business problems rather than fragmented products that require assembly. This shift requires a more profound form of collaboration between ISVs and their OEM partners.
Leading ISVs are moving beyond transactional hardware procurement to co-develop validated platforms that ensure consistent performance and align lifecycle roadmaps with customer needs.
That collaborative model, often delivered through OEM-as-a-Service, is quickly becoming the foundation of stability and long-term growth across the ISV ecosystem. BCD predicts that the ISVs that succeed in 2026 will be those that embed resilience into every stage of development and delivery.
Their focus areas include:
● Validation: Ensuring consistent performance through pre-tested, workload-specific platforms.
● Lifecycle Management: Planning proactively for component changes and product continuity.
● Partnership: Working with OEMs that provide lifecycle assurance, configuration stability, and end-to-end support for both their system integration partners and their end users.
● Predictability: Treating consistency as a business differentiator and a driver of customer trust.
According to the company, reliability is becoming the new reputation. Every deployment that performs as expected reinforces customer confidence and strengthens the ISV’s competitive position.
For BCD the approach of going “Beyond Computer Design” is a demonstration of its commitment to helping ISVs bridge the gap between innovation and execution. The company’s OEM model helps partners to move from vision to validation to value through hardware solutions that perform consistently and scale intelligently.
As we begin our journey into 2026, one insight from BCD stands out: innovation earns attention, but predictability earns trust. ISVs that master both could be shaping the future of the industry.








