How regular optimisation transforms building performance, costs and wellbeing
In most commercial and public buildings, the Building Management System is the unsung hero. It quietly runs heating, cooling, ventilation and lighting behind the scenes. Over time, that same system can become the silent culprit. Many BMS installations run far below their potential as poor configuration, overrides, outdated schedules and unnoticed tenant alterations gradually erode performance. This increases energy costs and triggers comfort complaints.
The result is wasted energy, inconsistent comfort and higher maintenance costs.
Whether you are a landlord or a tenant, understanding the role you play in keeping the BMS running efficiently can deliver significant benefits. At Inteb, we help building owners, occupiers and property managers turn their BMS from static control systems into dynamic performance engines. These improvements drive measurable efficiency gains, carbon reductions and improved comfort.

A well designed office environment showing how an Optimised BMS acts as the building’s central nervous system.
The Role of a BMS: The Building’s Central Nervous System
A Building Management System is essentially the building’s central nervous system. It constantly senses, analyses and controls how heating, cooling, ventilation and lighting operate. It gathers information from hundreds of sensors, makes real time decisions and ensures every part of the building receives exactly what it needs to stay comfortable and efficient.
When a BMS is working well, most people never notice it. When it is not, energy waste increases, comfort drops and equipment strains. A well optimised BMS keeps the entire building functioning smoothly, intelligently and economically.
Over time, buildings and operations change. Floors are reconfigured, occupancy hours shift and equipment degrades. If the BMS is not recalibrated regularly, it continues to think the building operates as it did in the past.

Energy efficiency and carbon reduction performance tracked through an Optimised BMS.
Energy Efficiency and Carbon Reduction
Around 30 to 40 percent of total building energy use comes from HVAC systems. That is why an efficient, well tuned BMS is one of the most powerful tools for reducing consumption and carbon footprint.
An optimised BMS can typically cut energy use by 10 to 25 percent without any capital investment, simply by fine tuning control logic, schedules and set points.
Here is how optimisation delivers results:
Inteb insight: One retail portfolio achieved a 19 percent reduction in energy intensity within six months by correcting scheduling and set points across its BMS network, with no new hardware required.

Improving comfort, wellbeing, and productivity through an Optimised BMS.
Comfort, Wellbeing and Productivity
Energy efficiency is only part of the story. Occupant comfort plays an equally important role. Inconsistent or poorly controlled environments affect wellbeing, concentration and satisfaction. Studies show that temperature variations as small as plus or minus two degrees centigrade can reduce workplace productivity by up to five percent.
A well optimised BMS maintains stable, comfortable conditions by:
Comfort and efficiency support each other. A comfortable building runs in equilibrium, not in constant conflict.

Reducing maintenance demands and extending asset life with an Optimised BMS.
Reduced Maintenance and Extended Asset Life
When systems are unoptimised, equipment runs longer, harder and less efficiently. This leads to premature wear and reactive maintenance. Every unnecessary hour of operation adds cost and reduces equipment life.
Optimising your BMS can deliver:
By monitoring runtime data and using predictive maintenance alerts, facilities teams can shift from reactive fixes to proactive management.
Example:
An Inteb client reduced fan coil unit failures by 40 percent after integrating condition based maintenance via their BMS platform. By enabling real time monitoring of temperatures, valve positions, run hours and fault alarms, the BMS identified units that were starting to underperform long before they failed. This allowed maintenance teams to intervene proactively by cleaning filters, recalibrating valves and resolving minor control issues. The result was fewer call outs, more stable temperatures for occupiers and a significant reduction in unexpected downtime across the building.
Turning Data Into Decisions
A BMS does more than control systems. It collects invaluable data on how those systems perform. When that data is harnessed effectively, it becomes the foundation of strategic decision making.
Optimised systems can:
The challenge is that many buildings underuse their BMS data. Dashboards exist, but trend logs are rarely reviewed and insights often go unacted upon.

Turning building data into confident decisions with an Optimised BMS.
Turning Data Into Effective Decision Making
A BMS collects vital information on temperatures, occupancy, equipment performance and energy use. When used properly, this data enables evidence based decisions that improve operations, reduce costs and support sustainability goals.
Key benefits include:
Too often, BMS data is collected but not interpreted. Leveraging this data proactively turns it into a strategic asset.
That is why Inteb integrates data analysis directly into our optimisation programmes, transforming raw readings into actionable intelligence that drives continuous improvement.

Identifying common barriers that prevent an Optimised BMS from delivering full performance.
Common Barriers to BMS Performance
Even advanced systems can underperform if neglected or mismanaged.
Common issues include:
These issues are not design flaws. They are management gaps, and they can be fixed.
Inteb recommendation: Schedule an annual BMS health check. Optimisation is maintenance, not a one time project.

A structured approach to delivering an Optimised BMS through clear control logic and system alignment.
The Inteb Approach to BMS Optimisation
At Inteb, we combine technical controls expertise with practical energy management experience. We look beyond system settings to understand how your building really operates, then align the BMS to match.
Our health check and optimisation programmes typically include:
The outcome:
• Reduced energy spend
• Improved comfort and productivity
• Lower maintenance costs
• Stronger ESG performance

Moving from static control to continuous improvement with an Optimised BMS.
From Set and Forget to Continuous Performance
A BMS is not a static installation. It is a living system that should evolve alongside the building. Occupancy patterns shift, hybrid working emerges, space layouts change and new equipment is added. All of these factors influence how the BMS should operate.
Without continuous review, performance erodes year after year.
Continuous optimisation includes:
Think of BMS optimisation as an ongoing conversation between your building, your people and your goals.

Moving from static control to continuous improvement with an Optimised BMS.
Final Thoughts
Your Building Management System should be more than a background control tool. It should be the engine of your building’s efficiency and comfort.
When optimised, a BMS can:
When neglected, it quietly undermines performance, increasing both cost and carbon footprint.
If your BMS has not been reviewed or optimised within the past year, there is likely hidden potential waiting to be unlocked.
At Inteb, we help organisations rediscover that potential through insight, expertise and a commitment to making every system perform better.
Talk to our experts
Efficient buildings start with effective control.