INEX Technologies sells LPR-based access control systems into three primary verticals: HOAs, campgrounds, and parking (OEM). During a strategy review in early 2026, Michael Petrov (INEX CEO) and Asymmetric's Mark Hope aligned on concentrating marketing efforts on the HOA segment. The rationale is grounded in a straightforward market-size comparison: HOAs represent a dramatically larger and more search-active addressable market than the other two verticals combined.
This article captures that segmentation analysis and its implications for channel strategy.
| Vertical | Estimated Universe | Viable Prospects | Search Behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| HOA Communities | ~100,000 | High — many board members and influencers per community | Active; decision-makers research access control solutions online |
| Campgrounds | ~20,000 total; ~10,000 using electronic reservation systems | ~5,000 after filtering small/low-quality sites | Very low — yields only a handful of searches per day nationally |
| Parking (OEM) | ~20 companies in the US | Already largely penetrated by INEX | Not search-driven; strategic/trade-show relationships |
"There is like 100,000 of them, lots of board members, lots of influencers of the process… HOAs are more practical."
— Michael Petrov
The campground funnel collapses quickly under scrutiny:
At that search volume, Google Ads and SEO cannot generate meaningful pipeline. The audience is simply too small and too infrequently in-market.
INEX sells into parking as an OEM supplier — meaning it sells components or embedded technology to parking system manufacturers, not to end operators. The ~20 relevant US companies are already known, relationships are managed through trade shows and direct sales, and new entrants are rare. This is a strategic sales motion, not a demand-generation problem. Marketing spend here would be wasted.
The HOA market has structural characteristics that make it well-suited to both search and outbound marketing:
Focusing on HOA has direct consequences for how marketing budget and effort should be allocated:
Google Ads: Narrow keyword targeting to HOA-specific terms. Generic LPR or access control terms attract campground and parking noise, diluting spend. See [2] for current account issues.
ABM Outbound: The HOA market is large enough to support a structured account-based marketing program. CAI web-scrape data (names, emails, phone numbers) provides the foundation for email and LinkedIn outreach to warm decision-makers before they begin searching.
SEO: Blog and landing page content should target HOA-specific queries (e.g., "HOA gate access control," "license plate reader for gated community") rather than generic LPR terms dominated by law enforcement and municipal competitors like Flock Safety.
Retargeting: HOA visitors arriving via any channel (organic, paid, email click-through) should be retargeted to reinforce brand awareness across the long consideration cycle.
The LPR space includes large, well-funded competitors (Flock Safety at ~$7B valuation, Verkada at ~$5.8B) who are expanding from law enforcement into access control. These players compete on brand recognition and scale. INEX's best defense is deep penetration of the HOA niche before these competitors prioritize it — which makes speed of relationship-building a strategic priority.
Smaller direct competitors (Survision, OmniQ, Q-Shield, Inside LPR) are also active in this space and should be monitored for keyword and content gaps.