Educating End Users
Underquoting a system will cause nightmares for everyone
- By Scott Seraboff
- Apr 01, 2017
As a provider of storage for video surveillance systems,
the hardest part of my job is educating end-users, integrators
and consultants on the best way to purchase
storage for their systems. Very often you find that a
request for quote or email requesting information on
storage provides the vaguest level of information, which allows every
storage provider to deliver a different quote on the storage requirement.
This is a recipe for disaster, an invitation for storage providers to
under quote their systems in the hope of winning jobs, and all but a
guarantee that the actual end-user will spend more time and money
down the road bringing their storage up to par with what they needed
in the first place.
Storage is a physical thing. It involves mathematics and physics;
if every single storage provider was asked to quote a project with
100 cameras operating at 15 frames per second using three megapixel
cameras with 100 percent motion, storing for 30 days, the numbers
should be close if not the same. If the answer to the above was 100
TB, then every storage provider should quote approximately 100 TB.
This is unfortunately not often the case. It is more likely that you
will see as a part of a storage RFP a requirement shown in the document
as “we have 100 cameras and we’d like to store them for 30
days.” This allows the storage provider unbelievable latitude in determining
what amount of storage will be provided. One company, conservative
in its approach, might decide to quote that line by making
assumptions—no motion, full frame rate, three-megapixel cameras.
Another company, desirous of winning the job and not caring
that the storage they quote will almost certainly not be the storage
that’s required, will quote the above request on 75 percent motion,
4CIF and one quarter frame rate. The end-user, seeing a price from
the second quote tens of thousands of dollars lower than the price
from the first quote, jumps on that quote and says “That’s the winner,
that’s our guy because they’re so inexpensive.”
What they don’t realize is that when they fire up their system they
will have awful video quality and the slightest change to those quality
settings will suddenly mean that the 30 days of retention is reduced
to 25. They will run their cameras at a higher frame rate and guess
what. The retention time goes down again. The end-user goes to their
integrator and says “Hey I told you I needed 30 days of retention and
my systems only giving me 20.” The integrator responds “Well, you
accepted the bid. The fact that you want something more or better is
not our fault.”
See below for various camera manufactures and the impact various
settings have on the bit rates.
For the end-user to be possessed of the right and proper storage
calculations they must either deliver to the integrator a properly
detailed RFQ or be taught by the integrator how to write a detailed
RFQ when it comes to storage. As was written earlier it is a matter
of physics; you can’t put 40 gallons of water in a 30 gallon bucket no
matter how hard you try and the same thing applies to storage. So,
the smart thing for the end-user to do when preparing to put out a
request for quote on a video surveillance storage system? Make sure
that the storage requirement is exceptionally detailed, leaves no room
for interpretation, and allows every single storage provider to quote
exactly the same things.
See below for the impact of storage required based on various bit rates.
Apples to apples, folks.
For example, if an end-user needs to have a quote delivered for
100 cameras and 30 days of retention, the way they should approach
this is to provide significant detail. So, instead of “30 days and 100
cameras,” what they would say is “30 days, 100 cameras, 11 frames
per second, camera manufacturer A, running in the crowded station
scene, 100 percent motion, low light condition.”
This makes every storage provider look at this information and
provide a storage calculation based on the same information. There
is no wiggle room. Each storage provider should return to the enduser
almost the same number. Any ambiguity is removed by providing
of detail. Even if the end-user has not chosen a camera, it would
behoove that end-user to pick a camera as a “baseline” device to be
used to make sure that every storage quote is the same and that every
proposal can be compared apples to apples.
The market for storage today is changing, and it is changing in
a fairly dramatic way. Retention times are slowly but surely creeping up. What used to require 30 days of retention
is now requiring 90. What used to
require 120 days retention is now requiring
one to two years of retention. All over the
world, retention times are going up as legal
authorities are issuing directives to security
managers that require them to provide a longer
history in the video record.
While retention times have increased, the
technologies surrounding the compression
of video data have simply not kept up in the
same way. The net effect is that more storage
is being required, and this means more
physical storage. Networks are under strain,
IT managers must determine how to move
literally millions of bytes of data across networks
that were never designed to support
such data transfers, and all users are struggling
to determine the most economical way
to improve and increase retention without
breaking the bank.
One of the surest ways to overspend is to
be vague to the potential provider of storage
about precisely what is needed. The world’s
oldest adage is almost always applicable
in these cases; if the price seems too good
to be true, it most likely is too good to be
true. If one storage provider says you need
one petabyte, and the next provider says you
need 500 TB, the first response should not
be “The former is way too much and too expensive,
let’s choose the lower number.” The
first response should be “Why is there a 500
TB difference between the first provider and
the second provider. What’s the difference in
their quotes? Which interpretation did each
provider use?”
The simplest methodology is often the
best, easiest, and simplest way to buy what
you need. Get the provider to answer one
simple question: “What do you charge me
for one terabyte of storage?” You can interpret
cost per terabyte in a multitude of ways;
it can just be the cost of storage with hard
drives, it could include the server, it can include
the camera, but there is an easy way
to break this down and be able to determine
cost per terabyte. Eliminate the server, eliminate
everything else, and look at the cost of
the storage box plus the cost of the hard
drive. What’s the cost per terabyte? Such a
breakdown gives you a really good idea of
whether or not your chosen provider is expensive
or not expensive.
Philosophically, storage should be less
expensive and not very complicated. After
all, all you really want to do is record
your data and be guaranteed that you can
retrieve the data once it has been recorded.
System complexity is often used as a sales
tool. You, the end-user integrator may not
understand how complex my system is,
and therefore you don’t understand why
we must charge as much as we do for the
system. Certainly different systems provide
different benefits and carry with them advantages
and disadvantages, including our
own, but what you should be able to do is
make a value decision.
Consider this, am I willing to spend more
money to use a system provided by Company
A over a less expensive system provided by
Company, because I am convinced that the
value of Company A’s system is worth the extra
money? If you don’t take the time to force
all storage providers to quote you based on
the same specifications, you render yourself
in capable of making a value decision.
The providers of storage systems owe it
to the end user and the integrators that service
them to provide the right system for the
needs of that end user. You can play a major
role in making sure that you get precisely
what you need by forcing us all to play by the
same rules. Instead of this being the hardest
part of the storage sale, (determining what
you are actually asking for) make the hardest
part of the sale what it should be. Namely,
showing you why my system is going to serve
your needs better than anyone else’s and why
my Company is a better
choice as a partner than
any other.
Do that and buying
storage is easy.
This article originally appeared in the April 2017 issue of Security Today.