SDMmag logo
search
Go to Ask SDM AI
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
SDMmag logo
  • NEWS
  • PRODUCTS
  • TOPICS
    • Access Control & Identification
    • Integration & Network Solutions
    • Life Safety & Fire Alarm
    • Monitoring
    • Smart Home
    • Trends & Industry Issues
    • Video Solutions
  • COLUMNS
    • Digital Shuffle
    • Editor's Angle
    • Insider News & Business
    • Integration Spotlight
    • Marketing Madmen
    • Security & the Law
    • Security Comings & Goings
    • Security Networkings
    • Technology @ Work
    • Technology Solutions & Skills
    • SIA Waypoints
    • Cybersecurity Chronicle
  • EXCLUSIVES
    • Annual Industry Forecast
    • Dealer of the Year
    • Project of the Year
    • SDM 100
    • State of the Market Series
    • Systems Integrator of the Year
    • Top Systems Integrator Report
    • TMA Excellence Awards
  • BLOG
  • MEDIA
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
    • Polls
    • White Papers
  • EVENTS
    • Industry Calendar
    • Webinars
  • MORE
    • Classified Ads
    • Newsletters
    • SDM Store
    • State of Security eBook
    • Sponsored Insights
  • BUYERS GUIDE
    • Buyers Guide
    • Take a Tour
  • EMAG
    • eMagazine
    • Archive Issues
    • Monitoring Today
    • Advertise
  • SIGN UP!

Plain Talk: Swimming in the Funnel

July 29, 2004
There are certain dilemmas that small, medium, and large companies face. A small company can keep their nose to the grindstone, be nimble and versatile. Usually as you’re building up a business you’re willing to investigate anything in your adjacent field to see if there is a niche market you can fill. A lot of dealers have custom skill sets that were developed to satisfy client needs, especially because the low-voltage industry has diversified.

What should your low voltage company be in today’s market? You can cherry-pick some of your core profit centers and you could then venture into other areas and total solutions that many businesses and high-end residential clients are looking for.

We’re not in the alarm business anymore. We’re in the low-voltage solutions business. Picture a big funnel and at the very bottom of the funnel are the client’s desires and the dollars they’re willing to spend. At the top of the funnel are high-end integrators who refer to themselves as all-in-one solutions. That is your highest dollar yield. It’s also the most effort, time, and coordination. You absolutely have to appear to be at the very top of your game regarding any tangent in the low-voltage world. It’s clouded with a certain level of mystique, because clients may part with over a half-million dollars to automate their homes.

Visualize the top of the funnel, where you’re putting in all types of ingredients – smart controllers, plasma TVs, infrastructure wiring, telephone systems, cameras, and the lonely little alarm system. Somewhere in that funnel is a bottleneck. That’s where your core skill sets start to leave off, depending on whether you’re a top-down selling company or you’re starting at the bottom of the funnel with an alarm system, trying to sell up. You will reach that choke point wherever it may be, because very few companies possess the entire range of low-voltage skill sets.

We all know that clients expect alarms to be insignificant amounts of money, and you’re like a salmon swimming upstream as you try to upsell your clients from a basic alarm. The problem is you don’t have the expertise and the years of experience in some of the newest consumer whiz-bang technologies. This is if you’re at the bottom of the low-voltage funnel.

The clients’ interests – whether they can afford it or not – are in the top down. So the small company’s dilemma is: Do you diversify and swim upstream in this funnel and start to capture other marketplaces just so the client considers you for a guaranteed alarm sale, which is the RMR business? The answer is that the consumer market is demanding it.

Normally what happens is you’re swimming upstream and cherry-picking what seems to fit your marketplace. You certainly have the client’s ear because you’re their trusted security provider. Being an existing client, you have the floor to sales pitch them on anything and everything you think they might be interested in. The clients are nodding because it all sounds good and exciting, and as you start to talk considerable dollars, as you approach your choke point, out of the blue the client may say, “What about an entire home theater, with the theater seats and a Star Wars theme?” All of a sudden you find yourself speechless. What do you say? “We have people we are affiliated with who can do that for you.” You just shot yourself in the foot! Now you put your entire job at risk, because without prior notice, the client has upsold themselves to a top-down solution.

You may easily lose not only all you’ve been talking about, but it will be a lateral pass to the company equipped to handle this client and they may not be including you in the alarm portion.

Looking for quick answers on security topics? Try Ask SDM, our new smart AI search tool. Ask SDM →

You really thought you were doing great until you hit that block point, and now a top-down company comes in and compresses you right back down to where you were – to the lonely RMR alarm company. Although their bottleneck is at the bottom of the funnel, they can easily navigate their way through this bottleneck, either because they’ve subcontracted the alarm or installed it illegally themselves (if they are operating without an alarm contractor's license in a state that requires one) – because their client has been sold from the top down.

My advice is try to assign recurring revenue to whatever type of system you do. It doesn’t mean you have to give a bumper-to-bumper warranty on every consumer product. Maybe it’s an extended warranty on the wiring for 15 years. If you assign that value to your services, then you will be able to train your way up to the next plateau, because you can afford it.

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
to unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • SDM 100

    SDM 100: Top 100 Security Dealers of 2026

    The top 100 security dealers navigated a complex...
    Exclusives
    By: Karyn Hodgson
  • Security camera

    State of the Market: Video Surveillance

    As video surveillance shifts from siloed systems to...
    Video Solutions
    By: Brianna Wilson
  • 2026 Industry Forecast

    SDM 2026 INDUSTRY FORECAST

    Rapid technology advances meet shifting economic...
    Annual Industry Forecast
    By: Karyn Hodgson
Manage My Account
  • SDM Newsletters
  • Online Registration
  • eMagazine Subscriptions
  • Subscription Customer Service
  • Manage My Preferences

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to the SDM audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company and any opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily reflect the views of SDM or its parent company, BNP Media. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep!

close
  • Doctor examining child patient with mother present in medical clinic
    Sponsored byHID

    The Human Side of Hospital Security: How Modern Visitor Management Protects People First

Popular Stories

Video surveillance camera

Why Video Health Monitoring Is a ‘No Brainer’

ESA Board of Directors Q2 26 Elections

Electronic Security Association Announces 2026 Board of Directors Election Results

TMA & SDM Logos

Becklar, Elite & Puget Win 2026 TMA/SDM Monitoring Center Excellence Awards

SDM Dealer of the Year 2026 Promotion

Poll

What’s the most promising trend in the industry?

What’s the most promising trend in the industry?
View Results Poll Archive

Products

Physical Security Assessment Handbook An Insider’s Guide to Securing a Business

Physical Security Assessment Handbook An Insider’s Guide to Securing a Business

See More Products
SDM 100 2026 Rankings

Related Articles

  • Swimming in the Alphabet Soup of Home Area Networks, Wired and Wireless Services

    See More
  • Plain Talk: Join the Best

    See More
  • Plain Talk: Surf, Dont Swim Against the VoIP Current

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • Physical Layer Security in Wireless Communications

  • Hospitality Security: Managing Security in Today's Hotel, Lodging, Entertainment, and Tourism Environment

  • Physical Security and Safety: A Field Guide for the Practitioner

See More Products

Events

View AllSubmit An Event
  • March 12, 2026

    Top Trends and Tips for Working in the Multi-Family Space

    ON DEMAND: The multi-family market is one of the fastest-growing verticals for security integrators. In this webinar, SDM will discuss the forces shaping today’s multi-family security landscape.
View AllSubmit An Event
×

Be in the forefront of security intelligence when you receive SDM.

Join over 10,000+ professionals when you subscribe today.

SIGN UP TODAY!
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Directories
    • Store
    • Want More
  • SIGN UP TODAY
    • Create Account
    • eMagazine
    • Newsletter
    • Customer Service
    • Manage Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing