Making the business case for integrated security

September 2015 Integrated Solutions, Security Services & Risk Management

We live in a world where technology has become part of our lives, enabling us to do more and more with less and less both on a personal level and within the corporate environment. In the latter, once disparate systems now reside on a common IP network, providing access to information, greater levels of control and additional opportunities for improvement across multiple business operations.

Security systems are part of this renaissance. Indeed, security systems work best when functioning as an holistic solution to meet site-specific risks, where their full potential can be realised. This often means integrating with other systems such as electronic visitor management, lighting, fire alarm, elevator control and even corporate IT applications to identify and to drive a range of business benefits, including reduced hardware requirements, improved workflow management and more effective use of personnel.

One of the main challenges security managers face is that organisations often focus on quick returns on capital investment, rather than the collateral long-term benefits from investment in security.

Although a typical investment case may be made on the basis of risk management, demonstrating what value an integrated security system will bring to the wider business is more likely to generate interest and support from senior management. They will naturally be looking for profitability as a benchmark of success.

Security for efficiency

With the implementation of integrated building solutions, operators across industries have experienced the value of leveraging security technology to increase efficiency and streamline workflows.

On a wider organisational scale, however, we are increasingly seeing these systems deliver benefits to other areas of the business outside of security. Creating links across the business provides opportunity for revenue generation for the business. By getting buy-in from other departments and stakeholders within the organisation, security managers can begin to formulate a business case for investment that goes beyond security risk aversion.

While the level of sophistication will vary in accordance with budget and requirements, given the modularity of today’s security offerings, it is now much easier to steadily build up an integrated solution in line with requirements and budget availability. Organisations can implement different parts of the core access, video and intruder systems over time, knowing that they are interoperable, and can eventually be combined into an holistic security system. So an integrated solution is now within any company’s reach and is undoubtedly the new standard for modern security applications.

Beyond the security need

With a focus on improving business process management, it is worth looking holistically at how security systems can impact the workflow of a company. This includes increasing operational efficiency, streamlining processes so that resources are being optimised, improving time management, improving standard procedures for documentation and automating reporting processes – thereby removing the manual element and removing the risk of human error.

With years of experience in evaluating these processes across several industry sectors, we have also seen improvements in business outcomes for areas outside of the traditional realm of security.

By leveraging the capabilities of a powerful integration platform, organisations are able to increase productivity through event-based, automated workflows, which in turn reduces errors and minimises manual intervention.

The outcome is that resources are made available where needed most. Additionally, centralised coordinated monitoring, control and reporting provides an enterprise view of the facility, simplifies everyday tasks and reduces response times.

There is now a greater desire than ever to identify ways in which the benefits of integrated security solutions can contribute to improved profitability across business areas. Most notably, these include health and safety, emergency management, HR, sales, marketing and legal departments.

Digital video management solutions, either standalone applications or integrated with building management systems, are able to provide vital video information with advanced capabilities including scrollable timelines and multiple-camera playback. Customers who implement this type of solution discover they can deliver operational efficiency improvements in areas outside of security.

Value across the business

Improved awareness and coordination of day-to-day operations creates more time for preventative monitoring. As a result, operators are better prepared to anticipate and therefore prevent accidents and issues before they happen. This has residual benefits for occupational health and safety, staff productivity and business compliance requirements.

Sales, marketing and advertising activity is another area where integrated security technology can be leveraged to generate revenue. In this case, technology is not just a tool for monitoring, but for collecting and storing data that will inform business operations.

In a shopping centre for example, cameras can be used as sensors to monitor the level and locations of foot traffic through different entrances and within stores. Interpreting this information for marketing purposes allows the centre to justify charging premium advertising rates for digital signage or increasing rent for well situated tenants, determined by the recorded ‘hot spots’. The same methodology can be applied to identify and monitor the best product placements, by brand, price or trend and thereby help to drive in-store advertising and purchase effectiveness.

The IT industry understands the role of data in the enterprise sector from a business management perspective, especially for operations like sales and customer management. But the security surveillance industry increasingly is becoming a part of this conversation. And it’s not just shopping centres that are seeing this shift – critical infrastructure and transportation hubs like airports can also use data obtained from security systems to drive revenue or decrease costs.

Traffic flow data obtained from camera sensor technology can be used to inform a range of decisions, such as where to place ATMs or understand crowd movements during evacuations within the surveillance zone, and what to charge tenants for retail space based on mass consumer movements.

Outside of benefits to other business areas, security technology can also be leveraged to strengthen customer relationships. There is a growing appreciation of the value in delivering a tailored and personalised experience for customers that in turn drives loyalty. The gaming industry is naturally a heavy investor in security. But it is now looking at how this technology can be leveraged or modified to improve the customer experience.

For casinos, delivering a memorable customer experience is paramount for creating loyalty, which in turn drives repeat business. The secret to their success? Leveraging security capabilities, like number plate recognition, can be used to recognise VIP guests arriving at the premises. This intelligence can then be used to open the gate, display a personalised greeting message on a digital screen at the entry point and the customer (or driver) can be guided to their reserved car bay. Staff can also instantly be alerted with pre-set instructions.

Security driving change

In the current market environment, security managers who are used to making a ‘security’ case for investment in new technology will increasingly need to be able to make a business case for financial profitability. With the advancements in big data analytics, organisations will begin to search and analyse video footage for a wide array of patterns, relationships and trends that will help them improve their customer service offering.

In order to get buy-in from senior management, it is critical for security managers to engage early with third-party experts to develop an understanding of how an integrated solution can be used, not just in a functional way, but also more widely across the business.

Finding innovative ways to leverage the connectivity of an integrated security network requires an understanding of how each element of the system is speaking to the other. It is also essential that the business outcomes being pitched match the unique needs of the organisation.

Another critical step is to identify people outside of security that can help demonstrate benefits to the business and across the organisation. It is important to target the right stakeholders in order to secure internal support for the business case. When pitching, financial profitability should be emphasised with a focus not just on cost reduction for security outcomes, but also a demonstration of a return on investment that will financially benefit the actual bottom line.

For security managers it will be increasingly important to recognise that investment in sophisticated security systems has business justification beyond their traditional uses, including operational improvements, creating cost reduction and generating revenue growth across the business.

For more information contact Honeywell Building Solutions, +27 (0)11 695 8000, [email protected], www.honeywell.com





Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page



Further reading:

The benefits of offsite control rooms
Astrosec Surveillance Integrated Solutions
As the security landscape grows more intricate, control rooms – the crucial hub of security operations – need to adapt. With escalating costs, mounting threats, and a heightened demand for immediate responses, many organisations are reassessing the operations of their control rooms.

Read more...
edgE:Tower video analytics integrated with SEON
Surveillance Integrated Solutions AI & Data Analytics
Sentronics has announced a new integration between its edgE:Tower advanced AI-driven video analytics solution and SEON, a Central Monitoring Software (CMS) platform. This integration enhances real-time situational awareness and automated threat detection for control rooms.

Read more...
SAFPS issues SAPS impersonation scam warning
News & Events Security Services & Risk Management
The Southern African Fraud Prevention Service (SAFPS) is warning the public against a scam in which scammers pose as members of the South African Police Service (SAPS) and trick and intimidate individuals into handing over personal and financial information.

Read more...
Rewriting the rules of reputation
Technews Publishing Editor's Choice Security Services & Risk Management
Public Relations is more crucial than ever in the generative AI and LLMs age. AI-driven search engines no longer just scan social media or reviews, they prioritise authoritative, editorial content.

Read more...
How can South African organisations fast-track their AI initiatives?
AI & Data Analytics Security Services & Risk Management
While the AI market in South Africa is anticipated to grow by nearly 30% annually over the next five years, tapping into the promise and potential of AI is not easy.

Read more...
Efficient, future-proof estate security and management
Technews Publishing ElementC Solutions Duxbury Networking Fang Fences & Guards Secutel Technologies OneSpace Technologies DeepAlert SMART Security Solutions Editor's Choice Information Security Security Services & Risk Management Residential Estate (Industry) AI & Data Analytics IoT & Automation
In February this year, SMART Security Solutions travelled to Cape Town to experience the unbelievable experience of a city where potholes are fixed, and traffic lights work; and to host the Cape Town SMART Estate Security Conference 2025.

Read more...
Stallion repositions itself as a services provider
News & Events Security Services & Risk Management
Stallion has rebranded as Stallion Integrated Solutions to reflect its expanded capabilities beyond traditional security services to delivering integrated solutions that enhance safety, asset management, and operational efficiency.

Read more...
Seven tips to help ensure your backup batteries work
Power Management Security Services & Risk Management
Load shedding is back, officially or not. Lance Dickerson offers seven tips to prolong the life of your power backup systems and ensure they perform as intended when needed.

Read more...
Cybersecurity best practice
Information Security Security Services & Risk Management
Breach and attack simulation has become an essential element of cybersecurity strategies in any modern business by allowing companies to actively detect and resolve vulnerabilities through real-world attack simulations.

Read more...
Historic Collaboration cuts ATM Bombings by 30%
Online Intelligence Editor's Choice News & Events Security Services & Risk Management
Project Big-Bang, a collaborative industry-wide task team, has successfully reduced ATM bombings in South Africa by 30,7% during the predetermined measurement period of November, December and January 2024/5.

Read more...