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ADT is in the news again, this time in a story highlighting one of their competitors – and exposing a very profitable segment of the alarm industry known as national accounts. ADT is a dominant player here as in home security, but they have far fewer competitors for national accounts. Why is this important? If you are a homeowner looking for alarm services, you may be interested in how some security companies “rank” their customers. Here’s a link to the article from an alarm industry publication, and a telling quote:
Taking market share from ADT is at the top of the to-do list for industry veteran Gary Fraser who joined Vector Security two weeks ago as Director of North American Sales for Vector’s National Accounts Division. He estimated that ADT owns about 50-55 percent, Checkpoint has 20-25 percent market and the remaining 25 percent is split among five or six players.
National accounts are a little-known and less understood segment of electronic security. The customers are companies with hundreds or even thousands of locations across the US: examples are banks, retail stores, and restaurant chains. Intrusion monitoring, fire monitoring, video monitoring, and even EAS (electronic article surveillance) are standard services. The national account sector brings in hundreds of millions of dollars every year, but there is a dark side – for a company like ADT, these efforts can also siphon off some of the best talent and focus. Here is a statement from ADT’s own web site, describing their National Account Division:
Our National Account Division is comprised of our most experienced security consultants and personnel hand selected to service our top clients on a one to one basis to ensure the highest level of satisfaction.
My own personal experience has shown this to be the case: at ADT, national accounts get the mot attention. What ADT doesn't talk about is what I found to be an unwritten but clearly understood “pecking order” of service priority and customer satisfaction:
Wireless Home Alarms – ADT competes for National Accounts

By:
Peter M. Rogers
|December 1, 2010
- National accounts customers come first.
- Commercial accounts come second.
- Residential accounts come last.