Had
a busy day zipping around the D.C. beltway recently. Checked my e-mail a dozen
times on my PDA, which gets the e-mail feeds from an outsourced mail server and
reflected on the beauty of outsourcing. When I stopped in at Brivo’s office in ,
Steve Van Till, CEO of Brivo, told me the story of how integrators over the
years have complained steadily and loudly about the problems associated with
the PCs they deploy to support various security applications, like access
control. PCs need frequent updates, suffer crashes and hard drive failures,
fall prey to viruses, and more. Dedicated PCs get used for other applications,
which cause conflicts and other errors, too. Maintaining PCs is the bane of
many security resellers’ existence.
Remarkably, it never
seems to dawn on the security dealer to turn to software as a service – or SaaS
– to outsource it.
Chuck Teubner, CEO
of Vidsys, reminded me in his ,
, office that early IT
outsourcing faced similar oblivion. “Look,” the outsourcer would say to the
customer, “managing servers is not your core competence, but it is our core
competence – it is a small and tedious part of your business, but it is the
most important thing to our business. So why don’t you focus on your business
and let us manage your servers. After all, making sure your systems are working
well is as important to us than it probably is to you.”
That argument
usually worked and outsourcing became standard procedure in most companies.
Heck, my company, Hunt Business Intelligence, outsources Microsoft Exchange
like many other small firms. Large or small, companies understand the value of
outsourcing.
So why doesn’t the
physical security industry outsource access control and video? It can make
oversight of many geographically distributed sites much easier. What are you
worried about? The security of your data? Give me a break. You personally
outsource your data to banks and insurance companies and stock trading firms by
the gigabyte, and your company outsources HR data, payroll and retirement data
to companies that in turn outsourced data storage to private data centers. Each
of those companies has more to lose if something were to go wrong than you do.
Your data is usually safer with the outsourcer.
But I guess that’s
the difficulty: data. The physical security industry has had a love-hate
(mostly hate) relationship with the concept of data. We like to think in terms
of events (door openings) or video streams. It usually doesn’t cross our minds
that those things are actually data, especially if it is digitized on a hard
drive or through a video encoder. If we as an industry could wrap our heads
around this, then we could realize the tremendous benefits of data management.
What did you do the
last time you were faced with millions or billions of bits of information? You
organized it and made sense out of it and made use of it with computer
software. Applications like word processors and Internet browsers take that
overwhelming volume of data and turn it into pictures of your kids, e-mails to
your boss or magazine columns like this one. It is the most natural thing in
the world and one of the most common ways we add value to our personal lives
and to our business. So why not do the same with access control, video
surveillance, event management?
If you had been a
part of the SecurityDreamer PSIM technology summit in ,
in June, you would have come to an epiphany or two about the power and
potential of the data at our disposal. That deluge of data is ready to be
organized by some very cool software available today from companies. Vidsys’
situation management console aggregates and correlates data from dozens of
sources; Cernium’s analytics digest video into action packed moments of
interesting information; Vialogy’s software translates just about any kind of
sensor into a data source; Axis Communication’s network cameras turn video
images into data at the source; and Cisco’s video transmission and management
infrastructure speeds the flow of access and video event data across any
network. So many resources are available to you.
You have all the
tools at your disposal to turn the “stuff” of security into information for
your business. So do it already!