Managing director

Author Bio ▼

Since 1998 Frank has held senior-level positions in the security and CCTV market. After several years growing CCTV equipment manufacturer Charles Grant Limited as managing director there and sealing OEM supply agreements with the likes of Axis, Panasonic and Vicon, he co-founded IP video specialist NW Systems Group in 2004. As managing director there he has led the creation and consistent growth of the UK’s leading online IP camera store NetworkWebcams; cloud-based remote video monitoring service RemoteManager; and live video streaming service Streamdays for the tourism and leisure markets. He also leads NW’s successful systems integration business with enterprise clients in a wide range of sectors including transport, ports, manufacturing and education. NW Systems now employs more than 20 people and is headquartered in Wirral.
January 30, 2015

Download

Whitepaper: Enhancing security, resilience and efficiency across a range of industries

I Back CCTV Commissioner Tony Porter’s Prescription for Eradicating Pointless Cameras – But we Need Action, Not More Debate

cctv camera

I read with interest about current CCTV Commissioner Tony Porter’s comments made in a BBC Radio 5 interview this week.

For those that missed it Mr Porter pressed for increased regulation to deliver more effective surveillance and end the industry’s legacy of poorly-specified and maintained systems.

Mr Porter stated he is in favour of well-run surveillance systems that serve a clear purpose. By the same token he has clearly seen far too many poorly-run ones in his brief time in the job.

He is not alone.

I agree with him that it is time to push for tighter and more effective, centralised regulation of the surveillance world to root our poor CCTV deployments and systems management.

The fact that today’s fragmented security market is currently held to account by an equally fragmented and largely toothless collection of trade bodies does not help.

I don’t agree with him that we need another ‘public debate’. This is a political phrase which normally leads to inaction.

To me it indicates an unwillingness to actually tackle the root cause of a problem and potentially kicks it into the long grass.

The debate about the need for modernisation of the security industry has not moved on in any meaningful way in more than 10 years, if not longer. We now need action to prevent further compounding of the problem and start to put it right.

Spot on

Mr Porter was spot on when he said councils and private organisations need a regular CCTV system review regime to ensure existing cameras are working well; recordings are still working properly; quality is maintained; user access is properly controlled; and their intended purpose is still being achieved and remains valid.

Systems which fail these tests should be upgraded. Or if the security requirement has changed and they are no longer doing a job they should be scrapped or redeployed elsewhere. This review process should the responsibility of the system user and should be more strictly regulated.

Having been in the industry for 15 years it is clear that our sector as a whole does not have a good reputation amongst its customers. It sometimes feels like we operate under a gathering cloud of suspicion.

One of the key problems is that it is difficult for an end-user to establish whether he or she has found a provider which is up to the job and will be able to help with any on-going review requirement after the system has gone live.

Correct design, configuration, installation and maintenance are all important considerations for any specifier but many firms are unable to cover off all these aspects which keep the system delivering security benefits year in year out.

There are industry CCTV certifications and accreditation schemes for end-users to turn to for guidance but their codes are largely meaningless and have definitely fallen far behind the technology curve as IP video systems have begun to be deployed in much greater numbers.

There is also a need for the industry to both keep up-to-date with these technology developments and to simultaneously professionalise. We need to recognise that the technology that is now available is both highly sophisticated and potentially very powerful.

But equally, it is only effective if designed and commissioned correctly and managed properly. This requires an advanced skill-set, knowledge-base and on-going training regime, ideally all professionally certified. But there is not enough of this around and little incentive to get it done as buyers rarely demand it of their suppliers.

Analogue sales

In a recent IHS report it was stated that 75% of CCTV camera units sold in the UK are still analogue, which is ‘old technology’ according to Mr Porter, whilst over 50% of sales (by value) are now IP-based with the balance being analogue-based. If these figures are correct the cheaper (often inadequate) analogue devices are still being installed in large volumes.

Why is this still the case when most other Western European countries have 80% or more IP video penetration?

This is an important question because, we believe, there is a strong correlation between high quality deployments of the latest IT technologies and highly efficient, targeted and effective surveillance? The answer is effective regulation, which is far more prevalent in those countries than it is in the UK.

So what action is needed now to begin to move the needle in the right direction? We need to professionalise and fast.

Without concerted action by Mr Porter, our law makers, law enforcers, industry bodies and other influencers we will fail to professionalise as a sector. The result: increasing numbers of useless cameras which fail to meet basic requirements and are poorly managed.

Evidence of these poor systems will continue to prompt the public and media alike to question the value of many cameras they see in their daily journeys around our towns and cities.

I’ll be pleasantly surprised if anything changes in the next 10 years. Let’s see!

Free Download: The Video Surveillance Report 2023

Discover the latest developments in the rapidly-evolving video surveillance sector by downloading the 2023 Video Surveillance Report. Over 500 responses to our survey, which come from integrators to consultants and heads of security, inform our analysis of the latest trends including AI, the state of the video surveillance market, uptake of the cloud, and the wider economic and geopolitical events impacting the sector!

Download for FREE to discover top industry insight around the latest innovations in video surveillance systems.

VideoSurveillanceReport-FrontCover-23

Related Topics

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
3 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Luiz Lemos
Luiz Lemos
February 3, 2015 6:31 pm

Good point Mr. Frank, but the same way you argue about “political phrase” without action, we need to establish the parameters to be verified. I don´t think it is easy, and will demand a “Wide Debate”. I’m not in UK, but, everything done in UK could be a starting point for the rest of the World in terms of CCTV. Let’s do it!

TonyGilbertUK
TonyGilbertUK
February 4, 2015 10:49 am

The increase in IP outside the UK is down to the individual Countries broadband infrastrutures which are a lot more advanced than that of the UK. Its OK to tell companies/councils that their systems are not fit for purpose but that doesn’t automatically give them a budget to spend on upgrading the equipment and in these times when budgets are being cut, spend in sectors that do not provide revenue is pushed back. Education is the key with not only the security divisions but with their IT people. The fear factor of moving IP on to their prescious networks is one of… Read more »

securityguard
securityguard
February 4, 2015 1:37 pm

More regulation – yet again! These civil servants perpetuate their role by persuading governments to sign up for more red tape to justify their existence. The Data Protection Act provides the Commission with adequate powers already – if he wants to spend more of our money on issuing guidance then I will have to put up with it, but please do not encourage them to try and impose yet more regulation. Meanwhile, I’m will try and grasp the sense behind the Commissioner banning Police from putting up ANPR cameras around a town so that criminals are deterred (and detected!) as the… Read more »