Once the scene is stable, the focus shifts to people and process. Staff may need a quiet place, time to call family, or access to support resources. Injured individuals receive care, and witnesses are separated so their statements stay independent.
Reports should be thorough and ready for insurers and counsel. Maps, timelines, badge logs, and camera pulls get preserved promptly. Officers note what worked and what didn’t: Were exits clear? Did radios reach the basement? Did the alert message confuse anyone? Those lessons drive updates to training, staffing, and physical security.
Sometimes the fix is simple, like lighting and landscaping that improves visibility. Other times it’s policy: a new check-in rule for contractors, a second guard posted during high-risk tasks, or a revised procedure for contentious meetings.
Finally, prevention gets measured. Track incident counts, response times, near misses, staff sentiment, and resolved grievances. Over time, these inputs show whether your program is reducing risk and where to adjust next.