21/05/2026
It's not the sexiest part of running a venue. Nobody gets excited about asset depreciation schedules or technology roadmaps. But it's one of the most important conversations a venue owner will have, and almost always, they're having it too late.
There's a version of this story that plays out constantly across hospitality, entertainment, and performing arts. A system gets installed. It works well. The venue moves on. And then, three or four years later, something starts to slip. A display that flickers, an amplifier that drops out, a control system that won't talk to the new booking software. By the time anyone pays attention, the hardware is discontinued, the firmware hasn't been updated in two years, and what looked like a simple repair has become a much bigger conversation.
The failure wasn't the equipment. It was the plan. Or the absence of one. See, most AV installations are treated as a one-time capital investment. The system goes in, the invoice gets paid, and it disappears from the budget conversation entirely. No depreciation. No technology reserve. No roadmap for year six etc.
What makes it complicated is integration. These systems don't exist in isolation. Every component is talking to something else. Swap one piece and you're not just replacing hardware. You're reopening a design conversation about protocols, compatibility, and what the venue actually needs now.
The venues that navigate this well aren't the ones with the biggest budgets. They're the ones who planned ahead, who treated their AV like the depreciating asset it actually is, and had a conversation with their integrator that looked beyond the install.
Your venue isn't static so your AV shouldn't be either. So plan ahead for your next AV system, and get in touch with our team.
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