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ASIS elevates Women in Security to full council

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01/29/2012

The ASIS Women in Security Group will become an official ASIS Council beginning in February 2012, according to the international organization for security professionals.

State of the Security Profession: A Q&A with ASIS President Ray O'Hara

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12/18/2011

YARMOUTH, Maine—Ray O'Hara began his one-year tenure as president of ASIS last January. Since then, he's helped navigate the organization, which represents more than 37,000 security professionals worldwide, through the shaky global economy, the political turmoil in the Middle East and the professional challenges closer to home.

ASIS round up continues

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09/26/2011

ORLANDO—In a sequel to the ASIS 2012 round up reported here on September 20, the editors of Security Director News and Security Systems News present news and notes from the second and third day of ASIS, which took place here Sept. 19, 20 and 21.

Race day: How NASCAR culture impacts security

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05/09/2011

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.—On Feb. 20 more than 200,000 fans packed the grandstands and infield to watch NASCAR’s most prestigious race, the Daytona 500. However, unlike many major sporting events, NASCAR fans don’t just show up for "The Great American Race" and leave after the last lap.

Away with logic and other advice for security professionals in retail

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Monday, April 4, 2011

By Joe Davis, director of loss prevention for T-Mobile USA.

Having served in retail for 19 years, I’m not big on endorsing vendors or third-party products. The cardinal rule of showing complete objectivity when it comes to outside companies has been deeply engrained in me. Yet, I’m about to share with you rave reviews of the Wharton/ASIS Program for Security Executives: Making the Business Case for Security, which I recently attended. I am making this exception because in doing so, I believe there is enormous benefit to be gained by my peers. This course delivered such a new perspective and practical insights that I believe living by them can advance security in organizations to a whole new level. For my part, I feel as though I went from zero to Ivy League MBA in 10 days. So what exactly, you might ask, did I learn that was so valuable?

Not New Information, But A New Perspective
The program that I attended is the Wharton/ASIS Program for Security Executives: Making the Business Case for Security, or as I like to refer to it, Wharton’s Executive Bootcamp for Chief Security Officers. Like any executive business program, it is designed to lay a foundation for individuals in business who may not have a comprehensive understanding of all the different functional areas. As you would expect, the program is broken down into several different areas: strategic thinking, leadership, essentials of finance, fundamentals of marketing and a few more. My expectation was to walk in and learn an extensive amount of new information about the functional areas to which I am not typically exposed to in my career. Walking out, I realized that the greatest achievement was taking things that I already knew and refining my understanding of the application of these things into my business in a day-to-day process.

While the program is called, Wharton/ASIS Program for Security Executives: Making the Business Case for Security, there is absolutely no material on security presented. A clever approach by Wharton. Why would they need to teach security experts about security? What they want to do is teach security experts how to most successfully achieve their goals in the whole business environment. I did not necessarily learn new information; what I learned was how to look at my job from a new perspective. Think about the difference in climbing into a helicopter and taking an aerial tour of the Grand Canyon as opposed to experiencing it as a hiker at the bottom of the canyon. Let me tell you, the perspective is starkly different.

Here are some examples of insights I took away from the program that you can bring to your organization as well.

The Need To Define Strategy Differently
Think of how many different books and articles are written on strategy: what it is, how to define it, how to create it. At Wharton, they teach that the definition of strategy is simple: “A plan to win.” Too often, business executives focus on strategy as a process: A means to an end rather than the end itself. But strategy is ultimately about achieving outcomes. In security, that means reducing losses, expanding the revenue model, increasing sales, or any other number of enterprise business objectives. If you don’t infuse your team with the ultimate goal, strategy quickly digresses into the realm of implementing tactics, with focus lost on winning. We don’t want participation trophies, we want championship trophies.

Too often we are overcome with the process that may hold us captive. At Wharton they encourage the development and implementation of a sound business strategy, but, more importantly they stress the critical nature of defining what winning looks like to you and your business. In my business today winning is hitting key financial metrics as well as the overall protection of the assets of my company. Taking strategy out of the visionary realm and placing it into the tactile world of specific outcomes will drive ownership and accountability within your business.

Logic is not always the best tool
Security professionals have a tendency to respect logic above all else. After all, it’s essential to success in our own jobs. We have to follow a path of facts to their logical conclusion to identify and solve problems. And while logic is a critical tool in security, it is not always the best tool when working with other functional areas in the organization.
Sit down. This isn’t going to be easy. But sometimes you have to let go of logic and focus on relationships. While it might sound eerily like something off of the Oprah Winfrey show, it’s the truth. When it comes to getting buy-in from different groups or winning over skeptics to your way of thinking, logic is not necessarily the most effective tool. It is true for communities, families, businesses and any human network: people do things for people they know and like. Asking for a favor as a friend is likely to yield better, quicker results than trying to enforce action through formal channels. What does this mean for security professionals? Well, it means getting out and getting exposure to colleagues across the organization and interfacing with them on a regular basis. Often, security professionals limit their exposure to executive leadership and other functional areas unless it’s required by a specific project or event. This is often done in the name of efficiency. So when security needs or wants something, they are reduced to delivering dry arguments for action, which produce little enthusiasm and gain a paltry following. An investment in colleagues and relationships is an investment in your strategy.

Let’s say you want to change the way you are protecting a distribution center and want to increase guard coverage. Many times, a security professional will pull together a plan and give a list of reasons why additional guards are needed. But without relationships, the executives see you as a walking blank check. Knowing you personally, and the value you are adding, and what you are trying to accomplish for the organization, makes accepting your proposal much easier, a more personal affair.

How to Ask for Money

Our instructor for this session, John R. Percival, PhD is a professor of finance at Wharton. Dr. Percival provided some excellent case studies on building shareholder value within your business. His real life examples and engaging delivery had me more interested in Finance than I thought was actually possible. Asking for budget dollars in the security realm is a tedious annual process that is many times bane of a CSO’s existence. I learned that it’s easier to ask for funding if you can do it in a manner that drives value into your organization by delivering the message in the language of the finance team. Shift your focus from asking about financing for your project to telling how your project will positively impact financials. This is about communicating in the language of your audience. Instead of asking for money and justifying why it should be spent, position your projects in light of the value they will drive to the bottom line: the reduction in loss, the savings in personnel, the increase in time spent focusing on the customer.

Security is often pigeon-holed as a cost center, when in reality it can and should be marketed as a competitive advantage. Think about how security positively impact the business. For example, by mitigating risk, the company can deploy more stores in the market. By reducing shrink, the business can invest in growth initiatives. By streamlining operations to reduce loss, security improves efficiency and helps save labor costs. It’s easy for security professionals to focus on what’s inside their area instead of focusing on their true impact to the outside organization.

Prepare for Meetings
“Really?” you’re asking. “Prepare for meetings?” It seems obvious, but amidst the frantic pace of business today, think of how inefficient most meetings are. How many times have you been to a meeting at a set time and the only preparation time you have is the time it takes from you to walk from the last meeting into the next? The executive course really delves into the value of being prepared for meetings. The prepared person is more effective at gaining their expected outcome than the person with no agenda. It’s a small, seemingly unimportant concept, but the result of poor preparedness is simply that all your time spent in meetings gets thrown down the drain. When you think about how many meetings you have each week, that’s a significant loss.

In Conclusion: Escape out of the security silo
In short, the big lesson I learned was how to avoid getting caught up in the security silo and how to start viewing my work as a program that aligns with the company’s strategy. I know that what I am doing in security is helping the organization achieve its goals, but often I reduce my programs to tactical plans that I fail to communicate to others in the organization on a regular basis.

Security is its own animal. It’s not like sales or marketing and will not be treated like those things. In some ways, it’s the least understood function in the organization. Therefore, our job of explaining how security supports the overall strategy of the organization is much harder than it is for others. We have to look for points of integration as opposed to points of differentiation. The good news is that as security professionals, we have many strengths that we can leverage to better communicate our messages and objectives. We know people. We understand interviewing and picking up on body language and other clues. We can easily tell how people are responding to our interaction. Use this skill to guide you when presenting proposals and communicating with others.

The program’s academic director, Mario Moussa, told us, “Reality is a liquid, not a solid.” It’s the truth. In the security world, we pine for a firm foundation from which to work. We must learn to be willing to step into the liquid and immerse ourselves in the fluid reality in which business exists. We have to gain flexibility outside of the self assurance that we have developed in our specialty over the years and recognize that there is a different way to doing things. Failure to do so limits our success and that of our companies.

Joe Davis is a director of loss prevention for T-Mobile USA. He manages a team of corporate and field level investigators focused on enhancing profitability within the enterprise. Joe’s team is responsible for all internal and external operational improvement and investigative programs in the business. Since joining T-Mobile in 2008 Joe has designed and implemented numerous cutting edge programs from risk mitigation in the retail stores, to reducing operational expenses by $30MM.

A step toward improving the image problem for private security providers

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01/24/2011

WASHINGTON—On Jan. 21, ASIS International announced its intent to develop two American National Standards Institute directed toward improving business for private security service providers. “The industry has bit of an image problem and I think [these standards] will actually raise the whole level of professionalism in the industry and will, in the long run, help improve the image of the industry,” said Marc Siegel, commissioner of the ASIS International Global Standards Initiative.

ASIS is upon us - Let the madness begin

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Thursday, October 7, 2010

Every time I look at my schedule for ASIS International's Annual Seminar & Exhibits next week, I feel exhausted. Once again, my schedule is jam packed with 20-minute booth appointments, which, no matter how well I plan it, often leaves me running around the convention center like a madwoman, trying desperately not to be late ... again.

While booth appointments are an opportunity for me to catch up with company executives and see what new products and services they're offering, it's not really my thing. I mean, I like to see demos and "touch and feel" products, but really, I want to talk to the end user community. I want to learn who's using these systems. I want to know what their primary challenges are and what they're doing to solve them. Pretty simple and straightforward, really.

At ASIS this year, I'm excited to be able to talk with more end users than ever before. And the best part is, most of them have agreed to sit down with me on camera to tape segments for sdnTVnews. While the majority of SDN's articles include the end user voice, getting security practitioners on camera gives you out there an opportunity to hear their story directly from them, without my involvement. And while I think I do an excellent job of sharing their conversation with the readers of SDN, nothing beats hearing it straight from someone's mouth, with no interpretation.

And, just to wet your whistle about what to expect from upcoming sdnTVnews postings, here's a few conversations I'm particularly excited about:

- Steve Wrightson, director of security for the America’s for Christie’s auction house about securing some of the world's most valuable artwork

- Jeff Cantrell of Corrections Corp of America (they provide detention and corrections services, bet there's some cool stuff there)

- JJ Murphy from Wilkes Barre, Pa. about their approach to municipal security

- Captain Don Farrell of the Los Angeles Police Department. (Lest you forget how much you love hearing from these guys, check out the number of hits from our last interviews with them here and here)

Pretty good mix and a little something for everyone, I'd say.

And, as a reminder, if you're going to be at ASIS in Dallas on Oct. 12-14, be sure to stop by our booth (4143) and say hi. No matter how famous I become from all my star-studded sdnTVnews appearances, I'll always have time to talk with my readers. Heck, I may even convince you do to a spot with me. We'll get famous together.

Despite poor economy, it still pays (more) to be in security

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08/09/2010

ALEXANDRIA, Va.—Despite ongoing discussions that security budgets are being slashed, the salaries of security professionals continue to rise. According to an annual survey conducted by ASIS International, the U.S. Security Salary Survey, the median compensation for security professionals in the United States increased 6 percent from 2009 to 2010 to $93,000.

Stadium security and sports fans: Time to be jealous

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Tuesday, April 27, 2010

So here I am at the Portland Jetport for the fourth time in the last five weeks. I've been doing some crazy traveling lately, but this trip is something I've been anticipating for months now. As part of ASIS International Seminar & Exhibits, scheduled for Oct. 12 -15, I get to participate in a media preview event where they basically take us media all around the host city, showing us some of the cool things the city has to offer. It's one of the few perks of the profession and I must say, I do enjoy it.

As I'm sure many of you are aware, ASIS will be held in Dallas, Texas this year. I've been to Dallas a lot since beginning my security career (largely because it was the former home of TechSec Solutions), but to be honest I've never loved the city. However, I'm hoping this trip will be different. As part of the media junket, ASIS folks have scheduled some seriously awesome security tours. The one I'm looking forward to most is the behind-the-scenes security tour of the new Cowboys Stadium. Now, I'm not a huge sports fan and have no affiliation with the Cowboys, but I've heard a lot about their new stadium and I'm guessing they have some pretty sophisticated security technology in place. I also got permission to interview an executive for sdnTVnews, so be on the look out for that video.

In addition, we also get a tour of the Children's Medical Center. I've heard over and over that healthcare is one of my most up and coming verticals in terms of security insatllations (and even ISC Solutions has chosen healthcare to be one of four verticals to focus its upcoming conference).

Here are some of the other tours on our itinerary:
Dallas Fusion Center (I haven't had my fusion center fix in a while)
Dallas Museum of Art
AT&T Performing Arts District
Fort Worth City Center
Frito Lay (food security - that's a new and exciting topic for me)

Needless to say, I'm excited for this trip and it's hard to believe we're going to pack all that in over the course of only two-and-a-half days. To stay on top of my travels, be sure to follow me on Twitter: @Leischen and check my blogs periodically (my goal is at least a post a day). Also, next week's Newswire is sure to be full of great security stuff (per usual, of course).

Awaiting Ben Stein

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Here we are early in the morning (Pacific time, of course) on the second day of the ASIS show floor. We're waiting for Ben Stein, the comedian to come on stage, just a little tardy (but so was I).

9:13 A message from the president of ASIS's certificate program recognizing newly appointed CPP's. They just appeared from behind the curtain. Tricky. Not a whole lot of smiles from this newly certified group, but that's not really expected, I guess. Oh, and I only counted about three women out of, um, about 50 maybe? Not exactly strong numbers.

9:17 Now they're giving awards recognizing different chapters. This time two women out of six. That's better.

9:22 Lots and lots of awards. i love when they pose for the pictures on stage. Awkward, yet necessary, I know.

9:26 Now we're getting to the announcement of Ben Stein. He was valedictorian at Yale, speech writer for Nixon (but didn't write the line, "I'm not a crook" columnist, author. Here he is.

9:28 Can't believe we're here after spending some time in the hotel bar last night. "Thanked God for waking up one more day in the United States" after seeing a food cart waving an American flag this morning.
BS: None of it would be possible without security. You guys make sure we ahve that security in government, corporate, private. That makes you more important than lawyers or accountants.

9:32 Joke time. Lots of laughs.

9:40 Serious time. Economy is obviously bad. Lot of people in country got rich from causing this disaster. Most extraordinary case of Wall Street and government
The four guys who caused this: Allen Greensberg who's now rich; Ben Bernake wrote two chapters of notes impossible for housing bubble couldn't be one and second couldn't be credit bubble or collapse. Theoritical impossibility, he's still chairman; Tim Geitner, couldn't be nationwide capital collapse and he secretary of treasury and Henry Paulson in tax code he got to see $900 million of stock. It's like if you caught someone selling loads of something and then made him president of the company.

9:44 This recession is hurting people. Real estate worst than Great Depression. There will be a recovery, but lot of good people seen lives ruined. Aside from statistics people are suffering terribly. Carelessness and incompetence of people in government and Wall Street has been stupendous.

9:45 How did it happen? How do people get in position in lives that don't know what they're doing?

How to ruin your life:
1. Don't learn any useful skills. Play video games. Don't learn anything. get high whenever can
2. Don't learn self-discipline. '
3. convince yourself your the center of attention
4. Never accept responsibility for anything that goes wrong.
5. Criticize early and often. Do it constantly.
6. Never be grateful for anything that happens.
7. You're the source of all wisdom. You know everything.
8. Envy everything, appreciate nothing.
9. Be a perfectionist.
10. Think too big. You are not going to be happy just ocean breeze, don't appreciate little things. Think going to get rich and famous.
11. Have serious romantic relationship with someone with a lot of personal problems and seriously believe in your heart you can change them.
12. Treat people who are good to you, badly and vice versa.
13. Hang out with the wrong crowd.
14. Stay angry
15. Use drugs and alcohol freely.
16. Don't save any money.
17. Ignore your family
18. Think whatever happens to movie stars means something in your life and follow it obsessively (I like that one).

9:57 Making fun of dumb people. Did you know he hosted a show called "America's most smartest model" (or something like that)? I'm guessing that one didn't run more than one season.

How to ruin America:
- One of them is to pay police, army poorly and treat them badly. Yes, I live near some stars, but the real stars are the ones out there fighting. If walking around in body army in 130 degree heat and getting your leg blown off doesn't make you a star, I don't know what does. If that's not a star, there are no stars.

...listing lots of ways, but can't keep up...

Fix America:
One crucial thing to know about God, you're not him. The essence of life is to respect life in all forms. Be kind in every situation, don't try to be superman, save money, forgive, forgive, forgive. Nothing in life is worth fighting with people you love. Reject envy. Honor and respect family and those who give lives to country.

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