ADT joins Connectivity Standards Alliance Board to shape smart home future
ADT Inc. has joined the Connectivity Standards Alliance Board to influence the future of connected home standards. The company's representatives, Alexander Crettenand and Tai Nguyen, will work alongside major tech firms to enhance interoperability and security. This move aligns with the growing smart home market, projected to reach $633 billion by 2032.

*this image is generated using AI for illustrative purposes only.
ADT Inc. has joined the Board of Directors of the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA), the global organization responsible for Matter, Zigbee, and Aliro standards. This strategic move places ADT alongside technology leaders such as Apple, Google, Amazon, Samsung, and LG, reinforcing its role in guiding the development of secure smart home experiences. Alexander Crettenand, ADT's VP of Software Engineering, and Tai Nguyen, Senior Director of Firmware Engineering, will represent the company on the CSA Board.
Market Expansion and Security Trends
The smart home market is experiencing rapid growth, with 63% of U.S. households owning at least one smart home device. Global spending is projected to reach $633 billion by 2032. Concurrently, home security adoption has increased, with 61% of U.S. households now possessing at least one security camera, up from 52% in 2024. Approximately 40% of security device owners now subscribe to premium services, indicating a shift toward continuous protection models.
Key Market Statistics
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| U.S. households with smart home devices | 63% |
| Global smart home market projection by 2032 | $633 billion |
| U.S. households with security cameras (2026) | 61% |
| U.S. households with security cameras (2024) | 52% |
| Security device owners with premium subscriptions | 40% |
Addressing Industry Fragmentation
Fragmentation remains a significant challenge in the expanding smart home ecosystem. Without interoperability and common standards, consumers often face inconsistent experiences and reduced reliability. For security applications, these gaps can have serious consequences. ADT's involvement with the CSA focuses on ensuring that systems agree on events and actions during critical moments, such as alert verification and emergency response.
"Open standards are the foundation for a smart home that truly works for the people living in it," said Gilles Drieu, CTO, ADT. "As the industry embraces Matter and other shared protocols, our role is to make sure security, the layer where seconds matter most, is built into that foundation from the start, not added on afterward."
How will ADT's board membership influence the specific security protocols within the upcoming Matter standards?
What impact will interoperability standards have on the conversion rate of security device owners to premium subscription services?
How might ADT's collaboration with tech giants like Apple and Google reshape the competitive landscape of the professional monitoring industry?





















