Most security companies will tell you their guards are “professional” and “reliable”. Fair enough - but those words don’t mean anything until you see what sits behind them. For us, three do: briefed, supervised, documented. Here’s what each one actually means on the night.
Briefed
Every guard arrives knowing your venue before they walk in. Not “turns up and figures it out” - briefed. That means the uniform standard, the communication codes, a map of the venue with muster points, the house rules, and any known risks. Where we can, the supervisor walks the site with new staff beforehand. Staff sign off that they’ve read and understood the brief, and the supervisor runs a pre-shift briefing on site.
Why it matters: a briefed team makes fewer mistakes, reacts faster, and represents your venue properly from the first minute.
Supervised
Supervision runs at every level - the site supervisor on the ground, the operations manager across all active sites, and management reachable for anything serious. Nobody is left to make a big call alone in the heat of the moment, because the structure already tells them what to do.
Why it matters: structure is what keeps a situation from becoming an incident, and an incident from becoming an emergency.
Documented
Before the team leaves, the paperwork is done - incident reports, sign-on/sign-off records, and a summary of the night for the venue manager. Same night where possible, never beyond 24 hours.
Why it matters: a thorough record protects your venue if an incident is ever disputed - and your licence with it.
The point
Any provider can put a person at your door. The difference is whether that person was briefed, whether they were supervised, and whether you get it in writing afterwards. That’s the standard, and it’s the backbone of our CONTROL Method.
Want to see it applied to your venue? Get in touch.