Go Inside the Mind of a Security Customer

Do you have clients buying security products, systems and solutions? You’ll want to take a look at the results of the 2014 Commercial End-User Study.

How well do you know your commercial clients’ and prospects’ corporate cultures, operations, challenges, needs, pain points and opportunities for improvement?

If the answer is not “intimately” (particularly for larger customers), and you own or manage an installing security systems business, then prepare to be outflanked by more conscientious competitors.

In return for investing limited and scrutinized funding, today’s end users expect and deserve security providers to invest the utmost attention in helping them realize their overall organizational objectives. They seek solutions partners and relationships they can count on. The good news is when properly structured this model also behooves the vendor.

To help security dealers and integrators be as prepared as possible to engage in those conversations, instill confidence and perpetuate a personalized approach, 10 years ago CI sister publication Security Sales and Integration launched the Commercial End-User Study.

This extensive and unique research brings to bear the logistical pressures these customers face, and how they view security technologies and providers. Conducted in cooperation with SSI parent company EH Publishing‘s end-user properties and ISC/Reed Exhibitions — the 2014 Commercial End-User Study’s industry-exclusive data lends itself to being analyzed in myriad ways to render superior insights.

Related: Security Industry Association to Host New Conference in October

While the news is not great for those anticipating purse strings being loosened (six in 10 identified budget as the top security obstacle, up 10 percentage points since 2012), many positive and promising findings abound elsewhere. More than eight in 10 (84%) believe security systems can reduce manpower needs; 74% plan more security in the near term; and only 14% intended to reduce this year’s security budget. Some operational shifts of note include decreased confidence in level of safety; 78% ranking physical security as equal or higher priority than IT security; and owners/CEOs tied with security directors for security decision authority.

On the technology and systems front, video surveillance is asserting itself more than ever as the dominant area, with command centers and cloud services in particular piquing interest.

Among the rising demand seen elsewhere was access control integration, smart cards, mass notification and heat sensors. In assessing their security providers, nearly nine in 10 expressed some level of satisfaction. And while cost was the leading knock, customer service complaints saw a sharper increase.

To learn more, view the slideshow on Security Sales and Integration and tell us what you think on our comments page.

Next: Security Integrators Learn From Operations & Opportunities Report

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