How to prepare your home for emergencies (like the one we’re going through right now)

Smart home technology isn’t just about convenience. A smart home can be a safer and more secure home, too. We’ll show you how to leverage both old and new technology to make novel coronavirus-induced stay-at-home orders and social distancing more tolerable and easier to accomplish, now and in the future.

Want to avoid touching surfaces? A smart speaker can help. Need to keep distance from a delivery person? Check out a video camera and smart lock. Can’t visit an emergency room for that nasty cut? You better have a fully stocked first-aid kit on hand.

The good news is that this kind of preparation is instructive for all kinds of catastrophes, be they viral pandemics, natural disasters, or the threat of intruders. We might not be able to cover you for the zombie apocalypse, but these 15 tips will help you prepare for whatever Mother Nature throws at us next.

1. Voice tech reduces the need to touch anything

google home beauty 100691268 orig Jon Phillips / IDG

A smart speaker like the Google Home shown here is the anchor of the typical smart home.

Every time you say, “Alexa, turn on the light!” is one less time you need to touch a light switch or the pull chain on a lamp. Voice-activated systems like these can be a real boon in households where multiple people are touching everything, especially in high-traffic areas like the living room and kitchen. Fewer touches equal a lower risk of spreading germs—and one less surface you need to remember to clean.

Voice-activated smart speakers powered by Alexa and Google Assistant readily connect to dozens of smart switches and smart bulbs. With Alexa, just download the appropriate skill, connect it to your smart device’s app, and you can begin using voice commands right away. (You’ll need to place a smart speaker near wherever it is you plan to be speaking, but not necessarily near the devices you’re controlling.) Leviton’s Decora Smart Voice Dimmer combines an Amazon Echo with a light switch, reducing Alexa’s footprint to zero.

Pro tip: Give devices short and easy-to-remember names when you first set them up, group multiple smart devices into virtual rooms, and use routines to automate several devices with shortcuts, like shutting off all lights and arming your security system with “Alexa, good night.”

2. Connected smoke alarms provide peace of mind whether you’re home or away

nest protect Nest Labs

The Nest Protect is our favorite smart smoke and CO detector. If you also have a Nest smart thermostat, the smoke detector can instruct the thermostat to shut down your HVAC system if there’s a fire, so smoke isn’t circulated to every room.

The days of the $10 smoke detector that shrieks every time you cook bacon are numbered. Smart technology has come to the smoke alarm, and it’s arguably proving its worth more clearly here than anywhere else.

For starters, connected alarms such as the Nest Protect—easily the best product in this category—can talk to one another. If the alarm goes off in the kitchen late at night, the alert will also be relayed to the bedroom, so there’s no way you’ll sleep through it. Nest uses its own proprietary network for this, so even if your Wi-Fi goes offline, you’ll still get multi-room alerts.