Changing Channels

Convergence is writing new rules for vendors, distributors, integrators and dealers

Converging IT and IP disciplines have made their way into the once analog-only video security market, firmly establishing new criteria for business relationships among the industry's traditional and emerging vendors, distributors, systems integrators, resellers and dealers.

And by all accounts, the integration of computers, communications and video imaging will accelerate within many of the indirect sales channels as enhancements progress in digital cameras, broadband networking, video management software and open standards.

That has led manufacturers, distributors and systems integrators to impose on each other new sets of qualifications that entail technology efficacy, personnel training, education programs and official certifications. The benefits that accrue for participants who pass muster include customer referrals, potential sales leads, joint sales calls, major project participation, spot price breaks, volume discounts and capital financing aid. But the clear aim of these programs is to push third-party resellers and dealers to adapt to security and IT convergence.

Conventional supply chain strategies need to be restructured to accommodate customers, resellers and new technologies and products driving the video surveillance and security market, said Frank DeFina, president of Panasonic System Solutions Co. of Secaucus, N.J. Its sister unit, Panasonic Security Systems, developed a multi-tiered supply chain structure that encompasses manufacturers' representatives, authorized dealers/systems integrators and authorized national distributors, along with the dealers who purchase through them.

DeFina posits that the distributor channel has always been "a powerful go-to-market solution" for manufacturers looking to gain access to a wide cross-section of industries and to make products more readily available to resellers serving the core security industry.

"As video surveillance and security system design continues to shift to a network-based platform, the sales channels supporting these systems also are changing," DeFina said. "Traditional security dealers/integrators are facing new competition from several different and formerly non-competitive resellers from a range of industries, including IT, telephony, cabling and electrical contractors. Additionally, systems designers and installers must familiarize themselves with new technologies, such as IP/networking and software management, to take advantage of new systems capabilities and interoperability."

A New Core Competency

"In addition to a complete understanding of the products and technologies, security integrators' ability to react quickly to the emerging IP technology applications in the market and meet the demand of their end users is essential to staying competitive," said Tim Holloway, vice president of technology and security solutions at Anixter International Inc., Glenview, Ill. "This technology shift is going to require security integrators to respond now—to devote all their available capital, human and technical resources to learning a new core competency of IP design, integration, deployment and installation."

The once-separate distribution channels associated with physical security and IT have started converging to the point that each side is now aggressively seeking the other's knowledge base and expertise on a regular basis. Eric Fullerton, president of the U.S. office for Brondby, Denmark-based Milestone Systems, said, "They do this by partnering with each other, employing each other or educating each other."

One trend in IT has resellers looking at video and control as a new industry.

"The ability to help that market with channel partners is important," said John Gaillard, president of security distribution at value-added distributor ScanSource Inc. of Greenville, S.C.

ScanSource's value-add proposition to the business includes "ease of doing business" measures such as Web-based tools for accessing product information, assessing prices and conducting procurements, as well as account management, consulting and education programs, the latter involving technology, marketing and sales.

"We want to be more than a transaction-only distributor," Gaillard said.

Scott Schafer, vice president of sales and marketing at Pelco, a video management system vendor in Clovis, Calif., said their goal is to make sure their products can be sold and used by international reseller partners.

"We have to build the product the right way and provide the training and support beyond the traditional CCTV business. How do we take these technologies and prepare ourselves and our resellers to take advantage of what's coming up? This is a lot of what we've been working on," he said.

Pelco also operates a special Web portal for reseller education material and runs a video security institute for training. Resellers of the Endura product line for major products and larger customer installations, however, must be certified by the company; this is significant particularly because the technologies embrace both the Linux operating system and Microsoft X clients.

"We cannot just give it to anybody, but that doesn't mean we can't train," Schafer said. "The resellers have to make a commitment to the infrastructure and the people that are different from CCTV. There are a lot of things they need to do."

Coordination Linked to Growth

Fredrik Nilsson, general manager of Americas for Lund, Sweden-based Axis Communications, indicated that sales channel coordination by this maker of IP network cameras, video servers and video management software is linked intrinsically to marketplace growth. Its two-tier model involves about eight distributors funneling product to resellers and systems integrators, with some of its big-name relationships being with Ingram Micro, Tech Data, Anixter, Securitas Systems, Lenel Systems International Inc., Honeywell and Milestone Systems.

"With distributors, the focus is on their markets and their expertise to educate resellers and systems integrators," Nilsson said. "Some distributors are from the traditional security side interested in IT and IP, some are from the network side interested in security, and some are traditional IT looking at video as the new element."

With a background in manufacturing and factory automation, Robert Lecher, owner and president of value-added distributor RepLogix LLC in Shelby Township, Mich., said his firm is leveraging technology know-how into video surveillance for production plants, the food processing industry and utility market verticals.

Such applications as supervisory control and data acquisition for large-scale, distributed measurement and control, as well as management execution systems (MES), are intrinsic to the RepLogix niche business, and the company is seeing a good deal of action in the water utility and treatment areas.

"A lot of security people don't understand SCADA and the integration with MES," Lecher said, suggesting a broad trend of merging security, data collection and plant/process/quality control is making its way into the distribution channel.

Among the RepLogix video security partners are Milestone Systems, LongWatch and Mobotix. Lecher maintains that despite the disruptive potential of IT and IP, the security business is generally holding true to its traditional model of using systems integrators and distributors to reach end-user buyers.

Development Partnerships

Like several others in the business, Nilsson underscores the key roles that open architectures and application programming interfaces play in total market success. The company also has an application development partner program that involves complete solution work; there are about 400 ADP partners worldwide, including 100 or more in the United States.

"Open systems and IP integration provide the groundwork for true systems integration and the ultimate convergence and interoperability of all physical security and IT systems," DeFina said. "It is imperative that equipment manufacturers and software developers across all categories of security systems products -- video, access control, fire and life safety -- share protocols to ensure interoperability between systems and products from different manufacturers. Without this fundamental level of cooperation, true convergence cannot take place."

The Panasonic Solution Developer Network is a typical initiative; it provides a platform for companies to share resources and encourage enhanced interoperability across formerly disparate product platforms. At least 24 companies have enrolled in PSDN, with Cisco Systems recently emerging as a partner.

Milestone's Fullerton echoes the corporate message offered by the maker of IP video server/software platforms: the whole video security industry is moving away from the vertically integrated proprietary technology of the CCTV era toward open APIs addressing multiple vertical markets.

"What you will then get is an ecosystem of specializing companies in those market areas," he said.

The business has progressed from a point several years ago when there were concerns over camera quality and bandwidth, but the intelligent products now are "winners," and networks are faster, making installations of 80 to 100 cameras or more commonplace, according to Art Morrison, operations manager at value-add distributor ProTech Security in North Canton, Ohio.

ProTech now looks only at IP and open architecture products, seeks out the appropriate vendors, pursues IT training and strives to be more IT savvy, as the industry moves from dabbling with IP video to jumping into IP video with both feet.

"We are not really in the computer business, but guess what, we are," Morrison said. "The industry is now coming to companies like us with open arms; we are being sought after. They need access control and video in the security mix."

ProTech's relationships have included Dell Computer, Anixter, Axis Communications, Milestone Systems On-Net Surveillance Systems Inc. and Berbee Information Networks, a Cisco Systems contractor.

Robert Hile, vice president of business development at Adesta, an IT, network systems and broadband integrator in Omaha, Neb., said leveraging his company's expertise into IP-centric video security and surveillance is an easy evolution, yet there are challenges in product manufacturer selections and sales channel alliances.

"We are trying to stay with products that are openly integrated with as many protocols as possible," Hile said. "This whole market is changing, and manufacturers before didn't always stand behind their products. We are asking vendors to belly up to the table. If they don't do that, we will walk away. And many systems integrators are becoming more sophisticated and savvy. They want products that work and integrate well; if the products don't, they'll pass on it."

Featured

  • AI Is Now the Leading Cybersecurity Concern for Security, IT Leaders

    Arctic Wolf recently published findings from its State of Cybersecurity: 2025 Trends Report, offering insights from a global survey of more than 1,200 senior IT and cybersecurity decision-makers across 15 countries. Conducted by Sapio Research, the report captures the realities, risks, and readiness strategies shaping the modern security landscape. Read Now

  • Analysis of AI Tools Shows 85 Percent Have Been Breached

    AI tools are becoming essential to modern work, but their fast, unmonitored adoption is creating a new kind of security risk. Recent surveys reveal a clear trend – employees are rapidly adopting consumer-facing AI tools without employer approval, IT oversight, or any clear security policies. According to Cybernews Business Digital Index, nearly 90% of analyzed AI tools have been exposed to data breaches, putting businesses at severe risk. Read Now

  • Software Vulnerabilities Surged 61 Percent in 2024, According to New Report

    Action1, a provider of autonomous endpoint management (AEM) solutions, today released its 2025 Software Vulnerability Ratings Report, revealing a 61% year-over-year surge in discovered software vulnerabilities and a 96% spike in exploited vulnerabilities throughout 2024, amid an increasingly aggressive threat landscape. Read Now

  • Motorola Solutions Named Official Safety Technology Supplier of the Ryder Cup through 2027

    Motorola Solutions has today been named the Official Safety Technology Supplier of the 2025 and 2027 Ryder Cup, professional golf’s renowned biennial team competition between the United States and Europe. Read Now

  • Evolving Cybersecurity Strategies

    Organizations are increasingly turning their attention to human-focused security approaches, as two out of three (68%) cybersecurity incidents involve people. Threat actors are shifting from targeting networks and systems to hacking humans via social engineering methods, living off human errors as their most prevalent attack vector. Whether manipulated or not, human cyber behavior is leveraged to gain backdoor access into systems. This mainly results from a lack of employee training and awareness about evolving attack techniques employed by malign actors. Read Now

New Products

  • ResponderLink

    ResponderLink

    Shooter Detection Systems (SDS), an Alarm.com company and a global leader in gunshot detection solutions, has introduced ResponderLink, a groundbreaking new 911 notification service for gunshot events. ResponderLink completes the circle from detection to 911 notification to first responder awareness, giving law enforcement enhanced situational intelligence they urgently need to save lives. Integrating SDS’s proven gunshot detection system with Noonlight’s SendPolice platform, ResponderLink is the first solution to automatically deliver real-time gunshot detection data to 911 call centers and first responders. When shots are detected, the 911 dispatching center, also known as the Public Safety Answering Point or PSAP, is contacted based on the gunfire location, enabling faster initiation of life-saving emergency protocols.

  • FEP GameChanger

    FEP GameChanger

    Paige Datacom Solutions Introduces Important and Innovative Cabling Products GameChanger Cable, a proven and patented solution that significantly exceeds the reach of traditional category cable will now have a FEP/FEP construction.

  • Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.

    Connect ONE®

    Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.