Security technology is genuinely accessible now. Smart locks, wireless CCTV systems, app-controlled alarms — these can be purchased, delivered, and installed without specialist involvement. Some of these self-specified systems do meaningful security work. Others look like security systems and function as reassurance rather than protection.
The gap between those two outcomes isn't usually about product quality. It's about whether the technology was specified for the property's actual vulnerability profile or selected from a product listing. A high-resolution CCTV camera at roofline height produces excellent footage of what happened after the fact. A camera at the right angle and height produces footage that identifies who was there. The same hardware. Completely different utility.
Bowman approaches advanced security installation as an extension of the locksmith discipline — starting with the physical envelope of the property, working outward toward technology, and only specifying hardware that addresses a real gap.
Bowman installs smart locks with complete setup: backup entry provisions tested before sign-off, connectivity requirements confirmed for the property's network environment, user account security addressed, and battery management planned. A smart lock with a dead battery and no override key creates a lockout that's considerably more frustrating than the conventional kind.
Fingerprint and biometric access for residential and commercial applications. Bowman specifies biometric hardware appropriate to the environment — reader performance varies significantly with humidity, traffic volume, and UV exposure, and those factors matter to the specification.
Camera placement for identification value at the relevant access points — angle, height, field of view, and ambient lighting all factored into the placement decision. Bowman positions cameras to capture something useful, not to provide the visual impression of coverage from the street.
Zone configuration designed around the property's actual access pattern and occupancy habits. An alarm system whose sensitivity or zone logic produces false alerts becomes a system that gets permanently disarmed. Bowman designs alarm systems that get used consistently — the only version with deterrence value.
Wired and wireless intercom for residential and commercial properties, including video intercom integration with smart access control for managed remote entry.
Standalone property assessments before any technology is purchased or specified. Bowman maps physical vulnerabilities, access control gaps, and existing technology adequacy — and produces a prioritised recommendation list with reasoning. The technology specification follows the assessment.
The smart lock that becomes the barrier. A flat battery, a connectivity failure, a forgotten code — these are all failure modes of a smart lock without proper setup. Bowman tests the backup entry method before any smart lock installation is signed off, because an untested backup is an unacknowledged lockout risk.
The alarm whose signals become background noise. A system that produces false alerts trains the household to ignore alerts. An ignored alarm system has no deterrence value. Bowman configures sensitivity and zone logic specifically for the property's movement pattern, so that an activated alert means something.
The CCTV footage that proves something happened but can't say who. Post-incident footage of a blurred figure at the edge of frame is evidentially limited. Bowman positions cameras with the identification objective explicitly in mind — the specific placement decisions that distinguish useful footage from documentation that something occurred.
Commission the consultation before purchasing anything. A single hour of property assessment from a specialist who understands physical security shapes every technology decision that follows — and prevents the common pattern of purchasing a system and then discovering it doesn't address the actual vulnerability.
Ask about integration before committing to individual components. Three separate systems from three separate platforms create three separate management burdens. Platforms that integrate reduce complexity and increase the likelihood that all systems are used correctly over time.
Understand the failure mode before the installation is confirmed. Bowman explains how every system it installs fails — what happens when connectivity drops, when the battery is low, when the sensor has a false trigger — and what the fallback is. A system without a tested fallback has a vulnerability that won't appear until it's relevant.
Smart locks have one setting that matters more than any other for everyday security, and most homeowners never look at it: the auto-lock timer.
Most smart locks allow the door to be locked remotely via app — which users configure and use regularly. What's often overlooked is whether the lock is set to auto-lock after a period of inactivity. Without auto-lock enabled, a door left unlocked stays unlocked until someone manually locks it via app or keypad. In a household where the door is frequently opened and the app isn't consulted every time, this creates extended periods of an unlocked but visually closed front door.
Bowman recommends the following during every smart lock installation: set the auto-lock timer to a period appropriate to the household's routine — typically five to fifteen minutes — and confirm that the lock engages with an audible or visual confirmation each time. Test this manually before considering the installation complete.
Also worth checking: the list of active user codes. If a temporary code was issued to a contractor, a houseguest, or a letting agent, and was never removed, it remains active until deleted. Most smart lock apps show this list in the settings menu. Reviewing it takes two minutes and closes an access gap that most households don't know they have.
The immediate action: open your smart lock app now and check both the auto-lock setting and the active user list. If either reveals something unexpected, Bowman can advise on the appropriate response.
A: Bowman advises based on the property's requirements — door configuration, backup entry needs, connectivity environment, and integration requirements. Brand recommendations follow the specification, not the product margin.
A: In many cases, yes — depending on the compatibility of the existing system. Bowman assesses what's in place before specifying any additions.
A: Most residential consultations take 60–90 minutes and cover physical security, access control, and existing technology. Commercial premises vary with size and complexity.
A: Yes. Commercial biometric installations require higher-throughput hardware ratings and more robust environmental performance than residential systems. Bowman specifies for the application.
A: Book a consultation. The assessment identifies what the property actually needs — and what it doesn't — before any hardware is purchased. That hour typically saves considerably more than it costs.
★★★★★ Petra H. — Vernon
"I'd already decided on a smart lock model before calling Bowman. Worth calling before buying. The technician looked at the door, tested the frame condition, and explained that the lock I'd chosen required a specific door thickness the door didn't have. Suggested an alternative, fitted it correctly with a working key override, and tested the backup before leaving. The consultation before the installation saved me from an installation that wouldn't have worked properly."
★★★★★ George N.
"Bowman installed a CCTV system after a van was broken into on our street. What surprised me was the amount of time spent on camera placement before any hardware was touched. The technician walked the property, assessed the ambient lighting at each point, and repositioned two of my planned camera locations because they would have captured the approach path but not at identification height. The final placement does what it's supposed to do. That's not true of every CCTV system I've seen installed."
★★★★★ Donna F. — Vernon, TX
"Had a full security consultation before a home renovation — wanted to integrate security into the build rather than retrofit it. Bowman produced a mapped access plan that informed where door openings were positioned, which areas needed dedicated access points, and where a smart lock was appropriate versus where a standard key system made more sense. That input at the design stage saved changes that would have been expensive after the fact."
Bowman Locksmith Co builds security systems from an assessment of what the property actually needs — and installs them with the care that makes them work correctly over time.
Book a security consultation with Bowman Locksmith Co in Vernon — an honest assessment of your property's security before anything is purchased or installed.
Already have a system in place? Ask Bowman to audit it. The gaps people discover are usually smaller than they feared and occasionally larger than they assumed.