Access Control

Lunch learning

by Mark Rowe

In London, the Dutch access product company Nedap Security Management launched the first of a series of their CPD approved ‘Lunch and Learn’ seminars to security people of a global Built Asset Consultancy.

This session was for sharing and discussing a ‘different take’ on how physical security could be specified.

Besides a different view on the topic itself, the way of presenting differed from what the consultants in the audience were used to, according to the product firm. They outlined the session had taken a different approach compared to CPD sessions that they’d attended before.

Security performance specifications usually set the framework for the selection, procurement, installation and deployment of physical security systems. Consequently, these specifications have an impact on the performance and the total cost of ownership of security.

Nedap emphasised that requirement specifications should not only allow end-users to implement a security solution that will effectively operate at day-one, but also for many years to come. Nedap elaborated why it’s insufficient to limit security specifications to ‘what’ security solutions should do, and why it’s in the end-users interest to specify ‘how’ these solutions should work, often reflected by a security system architecture.

Nedap is offering lunch sessions for those involved in any part of the process of designing and specifying systems to manage and support organisations’ physical security. The objective is to share knowledge on the latest technological developments and trends from the perspective of a global manufacturer of security management systems. More at: www.nedapsecurity.com/nedap-lunch-learn-sessions

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