Weather data is useful on its own.
But its real value comes from how it’s used.
For teams using ArcGIS, that happens when weather is connected to the systems, assets, and decisions organizations rely on every day — turning it from something you monitor into something you can act on.
Where Weather Becomes More Useful
Weather becomes significantly more valuable when it’s viewed alongside the assets and infrastructure teams are responsible for.
When those datasets are combined, teams can start to answer more meaningful questions:
- Where is severe weather intersecting with critical infrastructure?
- Which locations are most exposed right now?
- Where should resources be prioritized first?
This is where weather data moves beyond visualization and becomes a driver of operational awareness and real-time response.
It Doesn’t Have to Be Complex
Bringing weather into ArcGIS workflows doesn’t have to mean building complex dashboards or custom applications.
In many cases, value comes from something as simple as applying symbology to highlight where weather is impacting assets.
By visually identifying areas affected by conditions such as lightning, heavy rainfall, or severe storms, teams can quickly understand where attention is needed—and respond accordingly. That simplicity is what makes weather data more usable across a wider range of teams, not just technical users.
Built to Work Inside ArcGIS
For weather data to be truly useful in GIS, it needs to integrate seamlessly into the systems teams already use.
Baron’s ArcGIS-ready weather layers are built to fit directly into existing workflows — working out of the box as GIS services that can be quickly added to ArcGIS Online, ArcGIS Pro, or ArcGIS Velocity. Organizations can choose the specific layers that matter most, with a flexible à la carte, subscription-based model.
Whether teams are visualizing impacts, applying symbology, or triggering alerts based on thresholds and timing, the data is designed to support real-time decision-making without adding complexity.
Making Weather Part of the Workflow
Weather data becomes most valuable when it’s not separate from your workflows but part of them.
When weather is integrated into ArcGIS, it becomes easier to connect conditions directly to the assets and operations they impact — turning context into action.
That’s how teams move from monitoring weather to acting on it in real time.
Set up a demo with our team here.
Watch the full webinar replay here.
