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Vendors
Given a Reality Check at Homeland Security Summit
Muphen Whitney www.HomelanDefenseStocks.com
June 30th,
2004
Vendors who think their products and services are absolute
necessities within the Homeland Security and Defense industry were given a
reality check by one of the industry’s heavy-hitters at the recent McGraw-Hill
Homeland Security Summit.
Dennis Treece, Director of Corporate Security for the
Massachusetts Port Authority, acknowledged that “the feeding frenzy for
Homeland Defense dollars is intense.” Many of those seeking to get some of the
hundreds of millions of dollars that the Massachusetts Port Authority spends are
barking up the wrong tree, however, according to Treece.
“Vendors throw things over the transom that they have
developed, with the idea that if they have built it, I will buy it. They don’t
seem to develop things with buyers in mind,” Treece told his audience in a
packed conference room at the
Summit
.
Chris Nichols agrees, “this has been a lot of the
problem.” Nichols, Director/Vice President Strategy of MDM Group, Inc. (a
development stage advanced technologies Research and Development Company focused
on business risk management, IT security, software development, non-lethal
weapons, and security solutions for law enforcement agencies, military and
Homeland Security), adds that it is a two-way street because sometimes “the
buyers don’t know what they want and sometimes can’t define what they need
as there are often too many overlapping requirements across numerous
departments, divisions, or agencies. There often is a big disconnect between
what theoretically an organization should do to protect themselves across the
board and what can actually be done at an acceptable cost to reach a certain
level of compliance within each department, division, or agency.
Nichols asserts, “sometimes buyers are too reactive and
look to the market for solutions in response to an incident. Organizations that
take a more proactive approach are far better off and are better prepared to
mitigate risk and meet compliance. Further, proactive organizations can work
much closer with vendors to develop/customize solutions that fit their needs,
rather than trying to force a solution to fit." Organizations need to also
take responsibility for clearly defining solutions that fits their needs to help
guide vendors.”
Roaming Messenger’s Vice President of Corporate
Development, Bryan Crane, said that where his company is positioned in the
development process keeps them from encountering this problem. Roaming Messenger
has developed a breakthrough wireless communication system that provides
powerful intelligent mobile messaging immediately to ‘on-the-scene’ decision
makers in the homeland security, emergency response, military and enterprise
automation arenas.
“We work hand in hand working on pilot programs with
software application providers in their particular market niche,” Crane said
recently. “Because we are a platform, we can build for many diverse vertical
markets.”
Aethlon Medical, Inc., which develops therapeutic devices
that treat HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis-C and other infectious diseases, is another
company that has a strong position when it comes to knowing and developing what
the market wants and needs. The company has carried its philosophy into the
development of its newest products, which are pathogen filtration devices for
use by military and civilian populations to combat infectious agents used in
biological warfare and terrorism.
Founder, Chairman, President, and CEO James Joyce explains,
“We operate on known fact. Our reality is that the federal government has made
it clear that the number one threat in the war against terror is biological
agents. ”In this regard, we are developing viral filtration systems that are
specific to treating the pathogens that our Federal Government considers to be
the greatest threats.”
Joyce furthers, “the issues and candidate pathogens have
been defined for us, we certainly are not guessing. We are focused on filling
the need for treatment counter measures that can be effective against a wide
range of ‘class-A’ pathogens. ”
Although focused and experienced companies such as MDM,
Roaming Messenger, and Aethlon Medical, do not follow the ‘over-the-transom’
method, used by some of the newer companies, trying to hit their target market,
Treece’s advice should be heeded by those new to the Homeland Security and
Defense industry.
In addition to desiring products and services tailored to
his needs, Treece wants vendors to provide good answers to the following
questions when he evaluates a product or service:
·
Are there reliability figures from prior testing or use?
·
What are the maintenance costs?
·
Does the system use proprietary or open architecture?
·
What training is needed? How will it be provided? How much
will it cost?
·
What are the licensing arrangements? Is leasing available?
Is financing available?
Treece also wants vendors to keep the following realities in
mind, when they are formulating their marketing strategies:
·
Buyers are looking for accurate systems at a low price;
·
Outmoded standards – or no standards at all – from the
federal government make any security investment decisions risky and
·
Buyers need more information than just manufacturers claims
for their products and services.
Finally, Treece cautions vendors not to get enraptured with
pie-in-the-sky technology that may not work in real-word situations.
“It is not just new technology, “he said, “but good
policies and procedures that are key to improving homeland security and
defense.”
The principals of Roaming Messenger and MDM concur with
Treece’s priorities.
“I agree wholeheartedly, “said Roaming Messenger’s
Crane. “We have designed the backend of our system with a comprehensive
reporting and audit trail. We tailor it to what the end-user needs to carry out
good policies and procedures.”
“At Solutions International (a wholly-owned MDM Group
subsidiary) we leverage our business risk management expertise to help
organizations prioritize their needs over time and to guide the implementation
of new solutions. Further, we fully acknowledge technology is not a panacea. As
a result, we actively help organizations better integrate IT with policies and
procedures to create a more effective and efficient business practice that
wherever possible exceeds compliance,” said MDM’s Nichols.
Muphen R.
Whitney
Miss Whitney brings a background in systems analysis,
journalism, and marketing/communications to her work with ECON. For more than
three decades she has provided marketing/communications consulting services and
writing/editing services to companies in the high tech, biotech, financial,
medical, and legal fields.
Her recent work as Acting Executive Director of the
Alliance
for
Homeland Security gave her invaluable background, experience, and contacts in
the areas of homeland defense and security. Miss Whitney’s degree in Economics
is from
Columbia
University
(she began
as a Biology major, however, and has maintained a lifelong interest in science,
technology, and medicine).
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