Public safety agencies operate under constant pressure: shrinking budgets, growing compliance requirements, and increasing community expectations. When the time comes to consider new technology, leaders often face a tough question — how do you prove the investment is worth it?
A cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is the answer. By putting numbers to both the risks of staying the same and the advantages of upgrading, agencies can make data-driven decisions that resonate with leadership, finance teams, and community stakeholders alike. Here’s how to build one tailored to public safety technology.
Step 1: Define the Scope of the Upgrade
Start by identifying exactly what technology you’re evaluating. Are you replacing your CAD or RMS, moving from on-premise servers to the cloud, or adding mobile access for officers in the field?
Equally important, clarify the objectives: faster dispatch, compliance automation, stronger cybersecurity, or enhanced reporting and analytics. Finally, involve stakeholders early — chiefs, IT staff, dispatch supervisors, compliance officers, and frontline users — to ensure the goals reflect real-world needs.
Step 2: Establish Baseline Costs
A strong CBA begins with a clear picture of what you’re currently spending. This includes:
- Licensing fees for legacy systems.
- Maintenance and server costs, including patching and downtime.
- Staff time spent on manual reporting or duplicate data entry.
For example, if your officers collectively spend 10 hours a week manually compiling Clery reports, multiply that by their average hourly rate and annualize it. Those numbers become part of your baseline cost — and a key area where new technology could save money.
Step 3: Quantify Risks of Staying the Same
Doing nothing is not free. Agencies need to assign real costs to the risks of relying on outdated systems:
- Compliance fines: Clery Act penalties can reach $71,545 per violation, and NIBRS noncompliance can jeopardize grant eligibility.
- Cybersecurity breaches: State and local municipal governments faced an average recovery cost of $2.83M from ransomware in 2024.
- System outages: Downtime during 911 outages has led to fines, investigations, and public backlash.
By estimating the probability of these events and multiplying by their potential cost, you can calculate a risk-adjusted annual cost of inaction.
Step 4: Measure the Benefits of Upgrades
The benefits of modern technology extend well beyond simple cost reductions. Automated reporting, real-time field updates, and integrated systems reduce staff workload and free officers to focus on policing rather than paperwork.
At the same time, shifting to a SaaS model eliminates the need for on-premise server maintenance, simplifies licensing, and removes the expense of hardware replacement. These upgrades also reduce risk by lowering the likelihood of compliance failures, cyber incidents, and costly system outages.
Beyond efficiency and protection, modernization delivers strategic advantages: richer analytics and improved interoperability help agencies qualify for grants, allocate resources more effectively, and strengthen trust with the communities they serve.
Step 5: Calculate Financial Metrics
Once you have costs and benefits defined, calculate the financial outputs:
- Payback period: How long it takes for savings to exceed the investment.
- Net Present Value (NPV): The estimated return over 3–5 years, discounted for time.
- Internal Rate of Return (IRR): A clear measure of investment attractiveness.
- Sensitivity analysis: Show best-case and worst-case outcomes based on different assumptions.
To ensure these numbers are accurate and meaningful, it’s important to align them with the agency’s broader project management plan, which keeps timelines, resources, and implementation milestones on track. These metrics, paired with structured project oversight, transform the case for modernization from “we need new tech” into a business decision that finance teams understand.
Step 6: Present the Narrative to DM’s
Numbers matter, but presentation is key. Create a one-page summary that highlights the key metrics, supported by a more detailed appendix.
Frame the investment as both a financial decision and a mission-critical one: improved officer morale, faster response times, stronger compliance, and increased public trust. Decision-makers should see the upgrade not as an expense, but as an investment in safety and accountability.
How ARMS Supports Cost-Benefit Outcomes
ARMS is built to deliver measurable returns that agencies can highlight in their cost-benefit analysis:
- Lower Operating Costs: SaaS eliminates server maintenance, patching, and hardware expenses.
- Compliance Savings: Automated NIBRS and Clery tools cut manual reporting hours and reduce fine exposure.
- Cybersecurity Protection: Cloud hosting on Microsoft Azure Government with advanced security features reduces breach risk.
- Integrated Efficiency: Open APIs and cross-module integration services eliminate duplicate data entry.
- Actionable Insights: Real-time analytics empower leaders to allocate resources based on accurate, up-to-date data.
From Numbers to Action
A cost-benefit analysis helps public safety leaders make clear, evidence-based decisions about technology upgrades. By weighing baseline costs, risks of inaction, and the measurable benefits of modernization, agencies can present a compelling case for investment.
When you run the numbers, the outcome is clear: upgrading with ARMS delivers both financial savings and mission-driven impact. The sooner agencies take action, the sooner they begin reaping the returns. Contact ARMS today to start building your agency’s path to smarter, safer operations.