Employ­ee edu­ca­tion is a crit­i­cal com­po­nent of busi­ness secu­ri­ty. If your employ­ees aren’t aware of the pro­to­cols keep­ing your busi­ness secure, it will only increase your risk of theft and bur­glary.

Even if you have a com­mer­cial secu­ri­ty sys­tem or secu­ri­ty cam­eras installed, employ­ees must under­stand how they work and how to oper­ate them, in addi­tion to oth­er secu­ri­ty pro­ce­dures. Oth­er­wise, one small mis­take could cre­ate a sig­nif­i­cant secu­ri­ty lapse.

While every busi­ness is unique, most employ­ee train­ing pro­grams should include fun­da­men­tal top­ics. Here are a few areas to cov­er in your train­ing.

Risk aware­ness & rea­sons for busi­ness secu­ri­ty

Employ­ees must know what’s at stake. Be clear about the rea­sons why your busi­ness secu­ri­ty must be tak­en seri­ous­ly. Please review the spe­cif­ic risks and explain how the train­ing is nec­es­sary for their safe­ty and the busi­ness’s over­all suc­cess.

When applic­a­ble, point out spe­cif­ic crim­i­nal activ­i­ty or vul­ner­a­bil­i­ties to your busi­ness. For exam­ple, a risk of theft from retail areas, intru­sion via unlocked rear doors and receiv­ing areas, etc.

Pro­to­cols for pre­ven­tion

Out­line the spe­cif­ic pro­ce­dures for elim­i­nat­ing those risks and pre­vent­ing crimes from occur­ring in the first place.

Using the exam­ples above, these pro­to­cols could include steps for pre­vent­ing blind spots on the retail floors, secur­ing rear entry points, han­dling cash, accept­ing deliv­er­ies, etc. For many busi­ness­es, these pro­ce­dures will be crit­i­cal for over­all secu­ri­ty, so spend as much time on them as nec­es­sary to ensure employ­ees under­stand them.

Active secu­ri­ty mon­i­tor­ing pro­ce­dures

monitoring

Review the secu­ri­ty pro­to­cols that should be fol­lowed when guests, cus­tomers or oth­er indi­vid­u­als are at the busi­ness loca­tion. The goal of this train­ing is to edu­cate employ­ees on how to spot or pre­vent a crime from occur­ring. Depend­ing on the nature of your busi­ness, these pro­to­cols may per­tain to the fol­low­ing:

  • Watch­ing the sales floor in retail areas
  • Point-of-sale/­trans­ac­tion mon­i­tor­ing
  • Vis­i­tor check-in process­es for recep­tion areas
  • Pro­ce­dures for secu­ri­ty per­son­nel (such as mon­i­tor­ing secu­ri­ty cam­eras, perime­ter access pro­to­cols, etc.)

Secu­ri­ty sys­tem oper­a­tion

If employ­ees are han­dling the busi­ness’s secu­ri­ty sys­tem, cam­eras or oth­er secu­ri­ty tools, train them to oper­ate the sys­tems prop­er­ly.

Even if employ­ees do not direct­ly oper­ate these sys­tems, they should know their exis­tence and under­stand what they do. This will fur­ther help employ­ees under­stand the var­i­ous secu­ri­ty lay­ers and their roles. Addi­tion­al­ly, the mere knowl­edge of these sys­tems can help pre­vent inter­nal theft.

Safe­ty & response to secu­ri­ty inci­dents

Remem­ber that your employ­ees are your most valu­able asset. As such, your secu­ri­ty poli­cies should be designed to ensure their safe­ty – espe­cial­ly dur­ing active inci­dents.

monitoring and dispatch

Based on var­i­ous sce­nar­ios, employ­ees should know exact­ly what to do if a crime occurs.

If their safe­ty is at risk, how should they pro­tect them­selves? What do they do in a rob­bery? How do they report the inci­dent?

This must be clear­ly explained to avoid con­fu­sion if an inci­dent occurs.

Request a com­mer­cial secu­ri­ty audit.

A com­pre­hen­sive busi­ness secu­ri­ty audit can help to inform your train­ing by iden­ti­fy­ing your busi­ness’s unique vul­ner­a­bil­i­ties and secu­ri­ty require­ments. Request a no-oblig­a­tion secu­ri­ty audit from PROTECTION PLUS and one of our pro­fes­sion­al secu­ri­ty con­sul­tants will con­duct an exten­sive site inspec­tion.

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Allan Baum
Allan Baum founded Protection Plus with his wife Neseh in 1994. He has worked in the security industry since 1991. His educational background includes an MBA from York University ( when it was still York) and a B.A. from McGill. Allan and Neseh have three wonderful children who are now considered adults and an equally wonderful dog named Waub.