Well planned is half complete

June 2013 Security Services & Risk Management

For good reason, the employee risk assessment environment is becoming crowded with practitioners, equipment and techniques to the extent of bewilderment. As the business world expands, so do the risks associated with it, especially the people risks. The requirement today is for an assessment procedure that is concise, sensibly priced and accessible; one that cuts the time and money such investigation can unnecessarily demand. Are we anywhere nearer such a Golden Fleece?

Perhaps the total solution is still out of reach and will stay that way as long as the industry continues to expand and constantly reinvent itself. For this state of the sector’s development, a tool is needed that guides employers through the risk assessment jungle and delivers them to a place where risks are easier to see and deal with.

iFacts has developed a process that literally arms you with information, in itself proving the adage that 'knowledge is power'.

Complete company security is a labyrinth, but only to be feared if you do not know your way around it. The company says it can show you how and prove its commitment that ‘we remove the people risk’.

iFacts’ independent risk assessment is like a do-it-with-us process that will improve the protection of companies’ staff and assets by examining and evaluating the effectiveness of existing security from intelligence gathering to security vulnerability testing and everything in between. With this information at hand a complete and updated security plan can be prepared.

Throughout the process, the key is thoroughness. For example, in the intelligence category we analyse crime perpetration in all its guises in the area going back over as many years as it takes to complete the picture. Such input is invaluable to the risk analysis itself and the capability of existing systems and their security effectiveness.

This takes us on to an assessment of the security personnel – from the efficacy of its employee screening processes, if any; the calibre of security staff, and implementing training programmes for security staff and employee awareness procedures. An inventory is made of security-related equipment for modernisation and effectiveness. Are security personnel up to standard and is upkeep maintained and costs kept in check?

How the security task is planned and performed is the foundation. Henry Ford remarked when he installed his first motor car assembly line: “Well planned is half complete”. Henry never said anything truer, and it applies in great measure to the company’s security component. Plan it to the last detail and then implement the plan as thoroughly.

Laying the groundwork for the assessment is as important as what goes on top. This includes interviews with management, employees and contractors, with the premises being visited at all hours allowing company security procedures to be assessed, including the security financials.

Adding value to our independent risk assessment and non-financial due-diligence offering, iFacts has joined forces with AfricaEye (www.africaeye.co.za), an online solution designed for investors, businesses, researchers and entrepreneurs. We can now offer clients access to market analysis and demographic insights for a greater number of South African and other African cities.

In its premier offering, AfricaEye gives users access to data from 100 South African and 20 African cities and major towns that provide in-depth information in user-defined catchment areas. It also makes user friendly by offering a more basic product that sources data from 650 South African and 30 African cities and major towns.

“With AfricaEye, any individual or institution around the world now has access to affordable, industry-tested, reliable, granular household income and retail expenditure data to improve planning and map their market potential and African expansion more accurately,” says Sybrand Strauss, MD of Fernridge Consulting.

The AfricaEye dataset makes use of aerial photography, property research, demographic data, global positioning system (GPS) fieldwork and industry-tested consulting experience and methods.

For more information contact iFacts, +27 (0) 82 600 8225, jenny@ifacts.co.za





Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page



Further reading:

Global security in 2026
Editor's Choice News & Events Security Services & Risk Management Industrial (Industry) Mining (Industry)
The World Security Report 2026 states: “In a world of increasing volatility, physical security has evolved. It is no longer just a defensive measure; it is a critical driver of corporate value.”

Read more...
Who is to blame for autonomous mistakes?
Editor's Choice Security Services & Risk Management Industrial (Industry) Mining (Industry)
Most supply agreements for AI-integrated equipment still closely resemble plant hire contracts from ten years ago: bilateral, human-focused, and silent on who bears the risk when a machine makes a decision on its own.

Read more...
Cyber resilience is the real defence
Security Services & Risk Management Information Security Infrastructure
Cyber resilience has evolved into a form of strategic agility, ensuring that when an interruption occurs, the business does not just survive; it snaps back into place before the market even notices a pause.

Read more...
Employees are SA’s biggest cyber threat
Security Services & Risk Management Information Security
South Africa experienced a 46% increase in insider cyber risk in 2026, surpassing the global average of 44%. What is more, 63% of South African companies surveyed expect insider-driven data losses to increase.

Read more...
The post-Q1 security checklist
Asset Management Security Services & Risk Management
By this time of year, employees have changed jobs or roles, suppliers may have changed, and devices have moved between offices, homes, and sites. This is the right time for businesses to run a practical post-Q1 security check.

Read more...
PoPIA turns its attention to gated access
News & Events Security Services & Risk Management
The Information Regulator has gazetted its proposed Code of Conduct for the processing of personal information at gated access points. At 65 pages long, the code signals a significant shift in how personal information is collected and managed at entry points.

Read more...
Your company is already breached, you just do not know it yet
Information Security Security Services & Risk Management
Attackers are no longer relying on sophisticated exploits to break-in. Instead, they are systematically targeting weak credentials, misconfigured systems, and exposed devices stemming from preventable gaps such as identity weaknesses and poor visibility across digital environments.

Read more...
Excellerate Services sets a new standard
News & Events Security Services & Risk Management
Excellerate Services relies on specialist expertise and the sophistication of its operations deployment and management. Central to this is an investment in smarter, data-driven operations through the Velocity and Performance Centre platforms.

Read more...
957 women killed in three months
News & Events Security Services & Risk Management
Despite years of summits, task teams and public commitments, South Africa’s femicide rate remains around five times higher than the global average, and too few are using the legal lifelines available.

Read more...
The security debt hidden in residential estates
Security Services & Risk Management Integrated Solutions Residential Estate (Industry)
Many residential estates undermine their own security not through a lack of technology, but through hidden weaknesses in gate design, fragmented systems, recurring software dependence, weak operational ownership, and insufficient estate management input.

Read more...










While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd. | All Rights Reserved.