SURVEILLANCE TRAINING & SECURITY CONCEPTS
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Apart from Security Concepts Swiss Gaming Corporation also train your personnel:
Why so many are putting so much effort into the wrong type Training!!
Selling fear instead of operational training is hurting our gaming operations!
We have seen the gaming industry explode over the last ten years and with this explosion
a great need has arisen in the field of qualified personnel that truly understands the
concepts behind protecting our table games from cheating and fraud. This need is being
addressed by attempting to train our personnel; both surveillance and table games
supervisors, in how to better protect our games.
This training effort, whether it be delivered by in house staff or outside trainers is
seemingly the way we have to go in this day of rapid casino expansion. Prior to the gaming
explosion, training efforts in this vein were both non-existent and in many cases not
needed. Both surveillance and operations were generally staffed with gaming veterans that
had basically seen it all. This is not the case in today’s casino world. In some cases senior
staff in both surveillance and operations lack the experience that some in the older days
were equipped with.
Sadly though, some training programs and especially some of the so-called game
protection experts in the training business are using a method that is detrimental to this
much-needed training method. These trainers are selling fear as a training mode for
surveillance operators instead of addressing real world casino issues. So many trainers
that are hired by casino gaming commissions and surveillance departments are selling
training programs solely based on cheating and game protection, skipping the all important
basic understanding of game operations. Maybe it is because these trainers do not have
the background in gaming to teach these groups! This selling fear is turning some
surveillance personnel into roles that are detrimental to the success of your casinos
operations.
Selling fear as a casino game protection training method puts emphasis on elaborate
cheating methods that either does not exist in our industry or if they do exist it is on a scale
that is miniscule. On the subject of game protection, both for surveillance and operations,
we need to get back to basics here. We have our operators so frightened that they are
looking for things that do not exist. These operators after this fear-based training become
junior FBI agents, looking for grandiose scams that they have seen in a game protection
seminar produced by a magician or a card mechanic. This kind of operational scenario can
hurt your casino.
Table Games: Cheating & Scams
The Myth and the Methodology.
The basics of casino game protection are pretty simplistic. They are based on both the
operator and the surveillance personnel having a complete and thorough understanding of
both the games and their operations. Without this basic understanding on procedures, the
game protection training programs we run our staff through are a complete waste of time
and money.
A great deal of our surveillance personnel does not understand the basic concepts of
casino games and do not fully understand operational procedures. They do not understand
the basics behind game protection issues. Sadly to say this is true for a lot of casino
supervisors also.
Game Protection Methodology:
The basics of casino game protection are:
1. A full and thorough understanding of casino game procedures.
2. A full and thorough understanding of cheating moves and equipment
3. A full and thorough understanding of how these moves is used when the procedure
breaks down.
4. Full attention paid to the game operation and procedural compliance
5. Accountability by supervisory staff.
Without this methodology the system falls apart and we have operational staff and
surveillance running around like headless chickens. Acting like junior FBI agents or
screaming, We were robbed, at all times.
Game Protection Myths:
Here is a couple:
1. Most cheating involves magic or something similar
2. Cheating is made possible by sleight of hand and moves
3. Game protection is the responsibility of surveillance alone.
Here is a fact that all of us in table games better accept when it comes to game protection:
The Procedure is stronger than the Move!
If your procedures are intact and sound, if all are complying with these procedures and
paying attention, your game, any game, is hard to cheat!
The basics of casino game protection are pretty simplistic. They are based on both the
operator and the surveillance personnel having a complete and thorough understanding of
both the games and their operations. Without this basic understanding on procedures, the
fear based game protection programs we run our staff through are a complete waste of
time and money. Without this basic procedural understanding both surveillance and
operations are meaningless in protecting our games. Procedures placed in our games,
assuming they are correct, are the underlying strength and primary detractor against any
cheating. Any personnel that lack this type thought process or are more in tune with fearbased
training can be both detrimental and seemingly useless to your operation.
We have lost count of how many times we have talked to operators and surveillance that
speak of elaborate cheating scenarios but lack the procedural understanding of how these
scenarios can work. A great many do not fully understand how our games work but can
recites endless rhetorical nonsense on cheating issues. These experts in their own mind
are watching your games on surveillance monitors. Watching for elaborate cheating
scenarios while not fully understanding the concept of procedural breakdown is a waste of
time.
On the subject of game protection training we need to stop selling fear and flash as
training methods. A drastic need to get back to basics is called upon.
Consider this:
Training needs for today’s surveillance and operational personnel:
If enforcement of game procedures is their primary job and if most surveillance operators
lack knowledge of gaming operations, what are we to do with our current staff in this
department? What a lot of surveillance departments hope is their surveillance staff will
learn game operations from observing the action on CCTV. This isn’t going to happen. Did
you ever try to learn how to deal Roulette by watching a game on TV? If this is your hope,
you are better off putting the Flintstones on the screens because that is more realistic.
The following training programs for surveillance operators should be addressed:
1. Game Procedural Training:
All surveillance personnel should receive basic game procedural training. If they are to
follow and observe the dealers operational procedure they should receive the same basic
training. Dealer training for surveillance operators is necessary. Maybe not as lengthy as a
full dealer training course but at least the basics must be covered.
2. Game Play Training:
Surveillance operators must at least know how to play all the games. If observing player
methods and procedures is part of their primary duty, training on this issue is necessary
also.
3. Advantage Play Training:
In Blackjack, the player’s skill level dictates the casinos game advantage. A player with
exceptional playing skill (perfect basic strategy) and tracks card distribution (card
counting), gains an advantage over the house. Surveillance operators must be trained to
identify and assist in identifying these players.
4. Cheating & Scams:
Table game cheating and scams are identified through breaks in procedural adherence.
Without knowledge of the basics of game procedure, training on cheating and scams is
worthless.
A great many surveillance departments offer classes on cheating but neglect to train their
people on the basics. While cheating classes are exciting and interesting, they are a waste
of time and money if the operator does not have the basics of game procedures.
How to accomplish this necessary training:
Some casinos are utilizing table games staff as part of their surveillance operations.
Drafting table games supervisors for part time roles in surveillance in this training capacity
works for some. Skills in procedure can be used and assistance in the advantage play
training is useful. The only problem with this is the need to keep these two departments,
surveillance and operations, separate.
Using training from a casino educational consultant is probably the better way to go. Our
company, Swiss Gaming Corporation, has worked with many casinos to offer this training.
We combine a number of our standardized training programs to work for this group. We
condense dealer/ supervisor training courses and combine them with my surveillance
course to offer the necessary procedural training needed for the success of your
surveillance department. Use a trainer who has a strong casino operational background,
not just a cheating expert. Most of this group are experts in their mind only!
The sooner we stop using fear as a training mode for our surveillance personnel the
sooner we have a surveillance department that is performing their correct mission. Stop
trying to turn surveillance into junior FBI-men and you will have a department that is truly
worth the money you are spending. If magicians or card mechanics were really the experts
in casino game protection as some state they are, why aren’t the major casino companies
using these groups in either their training or operational departments? Major casino
companies do not use fear as a trainer, neither should you.