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Security integrators losing ground PDF Print E-mail
Associations - News
Written by Neil Sutton   
Tuesday, 18 November 2008 13:02
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Bill Bozeman
Bill Bozeman, president and CEO of the PSA Security Network, called out the security industry on the “cliché of convergence” at the Securing New Ground Conference held in New York City, Nov. 11-12.

That was the term he used to describe the lack of readiness in the security industry for the influx of IT integrators into the business. Bozeman predicted as many as 25 to 30 per cent of traditional security installers may have to shut their doors due to increased competition in the market. “It’s difficult to keep up,” he said.

According to Bozeman, the problems aren’t limited to fundamental changes in the security business. Installers aren’t receiving sufficient or appropriate training, he said.

“The education system is broken for the integrator. . . . There’s such a huge need to bring integrators up to speed,” he said, adding that the profusion of certificates and designations available to security professionals has made the training process too confusing. “The integrator doesn’t know which one to get.”

He also said that the security channel’s relationship with manufacturers has soured recently due to direct selling and the perception that installers are now competing with manufacturers for the same business. “This is conflict I handle on a daily basis.”

Physical security integrators will have to take a cue from their IT counterparts and adapt to their business model of managed services and shrinking profit margins, he said. “It isn’t that the technology isn’t there. The physical security integrators are very slow to adapt but when their margins are getting smaller, they are going to have to adapt.”

Bozeman wasn’t the only Securing New Ground speaker to sound the alarm. “We’re going into the fourth quarter and we’re down by three touchdowns when it comes to the security guys and IT guys working together,” said Dan Dunkel, president of New Era Associates, a consulting firm that specializes in IT and physical security convergence.

Steve Walker, vice-president of convergence solutions for Stanley Works’ customer service centres, said enterprise end users are already beginning to adapt to convergence issues, even if integrators aren’t. “The boundaries are blurring between corporate IT infrastructure and corporate security infrastructure,” he said. “In the not-too-distant future, we will see those two organizations come together and managed as a single entity.”

He also said Stanley has had greater success training IT professionals on physical security requirements than vice-versa.

Jeff Kessler, formerly with Lehman Brothers and now managing director of Imperial Capital, was more positive about the outlook for security integrators. He said that the “IT IQ” of security integrators is improving and, despite Bozeman’s claims, educational opportunities are beginning to open up for security professionals looking to augment or update their skills. “With the number of young people entering this industry, I am positive we are going to get there.”

That said, Kessler warned integrators not to rest on their laurels. “You don’t have to be a 20 or 25 per cent wire and camera hanger,” he said. But “if you don’t get your IT IQ up there, you’re going to lose out to the IT people.”

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