Posts

What the Weather and Weekend Security Shift Have in Common

Image

storm chaser security guard
There is no obvious path that leads a person to become both a security guard and a storm chaser. But spend time with someone who does both seriously and a clear picture emerges, not of two separate skill sets awkwardly combined, but of one underlying way of engaging with the world that happens to work in two very different settings.

The Most Important Skill is Observation

Security work at its best is a continuous process of noticing what is normal so that anything deviating from it registers immediately. The same is true in the field. An experienced storm chaser is not simply watching a tornado. They are watching everything around it, the color of the sky, the behavior of the wind, the way conditions on the ground either confirm or contradict what the storm above suggests. Both jobs punish the person who only looks at the obvious thing.

Patience is the Second Skill

A security shift can run twelve hours with very little happening, followed by two minutes that require total clarity and good judgment. Storm chasing has exactly the same rhythm. You may drive 300 hundred miles and watch a storm collapse before it does anything significant. Staying mentally present through long stretches of nothing is what separates effective practitioners from people who simply show up.

Risk Assessment is the Third

A security guard is constantly making calculations about whether a situation needs intervention or will resolve on its own. A storm chaser makes the same calculations with higher physical stakes, deciding where to position, when to move, and when gathering more data becomes an unreasonable gamble. Both jobs require good decisions with incomplete information.

What the two pursuits share, finally, is a working relationship with uncertainty that most people spend their lives avoiding. The skill, built over years, is learning to be useful when the outcome is not yet known.

Riding the Next Wave: Security Guards and the Financial Industry

Image

security guard sharking riding wave
Banks, fintech firms, hedge funds, and crypto exchanges are expanding fast, and demand for skilled security professionals are rising with them. New branches, corporate offices, and trading floors are opening across the country, each one requiring trained personnel who understand the weight of the environment they are protecting.

Money moves through these buildings, sensitive client data lives on every server, and the stakes of a single security failure can ripple across entire institutions. For security professionals willing to put in the work, it is one of the most rewarding places to build a career. If you want to ride this wave, start preparing now.

Why Finance Is Worth It

Financial institutions need more than a warm body at the door. They need professionals who can handle high stake environments, protect clients, manage sensitive access points, and respond to everything from robbery to corporate espionage. That skill set commands better pay, better benefits, and stronger job stability.

What You Need

A guard license is just the starting point. From there, get comfortable with surveillance systems and access management platforms. Pick up the basics of financial compliance, including anti-money laundering procedures, so you can hold a credible conversation with clients. Equally important are the intangibles: discretion, composure under pressure, and a polished professional demeanor. These are what financial institutions are actually paying a premium for.

How to Break In

This sector runs on relationships, not just job postings. Pursue assignments in environments that mirror the culture and expectations of financial clients and give you credible ground to stand on when the right opportunity arrives.

It takes patience. But the discipline you put in now is what makes you ready when the opportunity arrives.

Bo Knows Security: Banks Are Sold, Not Bought

Image

bo knows security
There is an old saying in finance: banks are sold, not bought. Customers do not wake up one morning and decide on their own to open accounts or take out loans. They are guided, persuaded, and moved to act by someone with intention and skill. Left alone, most people never act.

The Same Truth Applies to Bad Actors

Bad actors need to be sold on an opportunity before they act. A propped open door sells them on easy entry. A guard staring at a phone sells them on distraction. A predictable patrol route sells them on a window. Remove the opportunity and you remove the sale. No sale, no headaches.

This is Exactly Where Bo Knows Cross Training Comes In.

Bo Jackson became a legend not because he mastered one sport, but because the skills from each sport made him better in all of them. Bo Knows Security teaches guards the same way. A security professional who understands customer service reads people better. One who understands sales psychology knows how bad actors scout and select targets. One who understands banking operations spots suspicious behavior that a purely tactical guard would possibly miss entirely.

Cross-trained guards do not just watch a space. They understand it. They think like the banker who knows a customer must be moved to act, and they think like the bad actor who needs the right conditions before making a move. That dual awareness is what shuts liability down before it starts.

The best security professionals borrow from every discipline available to them. They sell safety to the environment before anyone else can sell an opportunity to a threat.

That's why Bo Knows Security. That is Cross-Training in Action.

Bo Knows Security & Cross-Training

Door Is Open: Recognizing the Moment to Step Into a New Security Guard Role

Image

open door security guard
There comes a point in every person's life when an opportunity presents itself so clearly that ignoring it feels like a mistake. For many people in local communities, that moment arrives when a security guard position opens nearby. The question is not just whether you are qualified. The question is whether you can recognize the signs that this is your time to walk through that door.

So how do you know when the opportunity is truly calling your name?

The Community Needs Security

One of the clearest signals is simply that your neighborhood or town is actively hiring. Local businesses, schools, hospitals, housing communities, and shopping centers regularly post openings for security personnel. When you start seeing multiple listings in your area, that is not coincidence. That is your community saying there is a gap to fill and that someone trustworthy is needed to fill it.

You Already Carry the Right Qualities

You do not need a badge to already think like a security professional. If you are naturally observant, calm under pressure, and dependable, then the role is not asking you to become someone new. It is simply putting a formal title to who you already are.

The Timing Lines Up With Your Life

Sometimes the opportunity is confirmed not just by what is available externally, but by what is happening personally. Maybe you are looking for stable income, a structured schedule, or a career that keeps you physically active and engaged. When the position on  an offer matches what you actually need at this stage of your life, that alignment is not something to overlook.

Your Local Advantage Is Real

Working as a security guard in your own community comes with a genuine edge. You know the area, the people, the patterns of daily life, and the subtle things that feel off when they are off. That local knowledge is something no outside hire can replicate on day one. Employers value it, and you should value it too.

Take the Leap

Opportunities in your immediate area do not always wait. Once you notice the signs, the best move is to act with confidence. The door of opportunity does not swing open forever, but when it does, it is meant to be quickly walked through.

How to Apply Newton's Third Law as a Security Guard During Mass Layoffs in Finance

Image

Isaac newton security guard
Newton's third law is simple: every action produces an equal and opposite reaction. During mass layoffs at a financial institution, this principle stops being abstract and becomes something you live every shift. Here is how to apply it deliberately.

Anticipate the Reaction Before It Arrives

When layoffs are announced, the reaction is already in motion. Anxiety spreads before the first person is let go. Ask yourself where the pushback will show up. Will terminated employees need escort out? Will remaining staff begin accessing unusual areas out of stress or curiosity? Thinking one step ahead keeps you prepared rather than caught off guard.

Match Your Energy to the Room

Your presence is its own force. If you bring tension to your post, you add to an already charged environment. If you bring calm consistency, you create a stabilizing counter force. A composed, steady guard generates a steadying reaction in the people around you.

Tighten Access Control Immediately

Every termination requires an immediate security reaction. Credentials must be deactivated. Exits must be observed. Keycards must be collected. Apply deliberate force to each personnel change so no gap opens between who has left the organization and who still has access to it.

Communicate What You See

You will notice things management does not. A former employee back in the lobby. A tense exchange near a restricted area. A badge that was never returned. Report clearly and promptly. Your observations close the loop between the organizational action and its real world consequences.

Stay Grounded

Mass layoffs create chaos. Your job is to remain the calm, professional constant that everyone around you can rely on. That steadiness is exactly what Newton's law describes and exactly what the institution needs from you.

Move With the Cheese: A Security Guard's Guide to Leading Through Change

Image

security guard maze runner
Security guards occupy a unique position during organizational change. You stand at the front lines, often the first face people see when they walk in. That visibility gives you quiet influence, and it also means you absorb more anxiety than almost anyone else on the team.

Spencer Johnson's parable "Who Moved My Cheese?" offers a surprisingly useful framework for not just surviving change, but modeling composure for everyone around you.

Know Which Character You Are

The story features four characters who each respond to change differently, ranging from those who adapt immediately to those who dig in and resist. Honestly identifying where you stand is the first step. If you feel resistant, that awareness gives you the power to choose not to perform that resistance in front of others.

Your Calm Is Contagious

People in distress scan their environment for cues about how worried to be. You do not need answers. What you can offer is a consistent, unhurried presence at your post. A steady greeting and a grounded demeanor signal to everyone passing by that the situation is still manageable.

Stop Waiting for the Old Cheese

Clinging to how things used to be prevents you from finding what is available now. If protocols, systems, or structures have changed, the sooner you treat the new way as simply "the way," the more effective you become. Complaining about the old system in earshot of people already struggling adds weight to an already heavy room.

Be Curious Instead of Territorial

Security work runs on predictability, so disruption can feel personal. But curiosity serves you better than defensiveness. Learn the new system before you have to. Volunteer for updated training early. These habits mark you as someone who moves toward change rather than waiting at the entrance for a full explanation before taking a single step.

The Maze Is Always Changing

Whatever the current change is, it will not be the last. Building a personal practice of adaptability, one update at a time, is how you stop being caught off guard. You already know how to stay alert. Apply that same readiness to change itself, and you become something rarer than a rule follower. You become someone people feel steadied by just by being near.

Staying Above the Fray: How Security Guards Can Navigate Office Politics in Finance

Image

security guard office politics
Working as a security guard in a financial institution means operating at the intersection of high stakes, big egos, and tightly wound hierarchies. Banks, trading floors, and investment firms are pressure cookers, and the staff tensions that build inside them can spill over onto anyone nearby, including the people paid to keep the building safe. Fortunately, a security guard who is intentional about their conduct can stay largely above the fray.

Know Your Role and Own It

The single most effective way to avoid politics is to be exceptionally good at your actual job. When you are consistent, reliable, and professional, people have no reason to pull you into their conflicts. Your role is access control, safety, and order, not office allegiances. Let that clarity be your anchor. The moment you start picking favorites among employees or bending protocols for certain people, you become part of the political ecosystem.

Treat Everyone the Same

In financial institutions, title and compensation vary wildly between the person at the front desk and the managing director walking past them. Apply the same professional courtesy and the same rules to everyone, regardless of rank. This earns you a reputation for fairness that quietly protects you. People are far less likely to draw you into disputes when they know you will not take sides.

Keep Conversations Professional and Brief

Gossip is the primary currency of office politics. The long break room chats, the hallway side comments about which executive is on thin ice, the speculation about layoffs, all of it can pull you into dynamics that have nothing to do with your work. Be friendly, be warm, and keep it short. A simple "good morning" and a genuine smile go further than a long conversation that puts you in someone's corner.

Report Up, Not Around

If you witness something that requires reporting, whether a safety concern, a policy violation, or a workplace conflict that affects security, bring it to your direct supervisor through proper channels. Avoid the temptation to share what you have seen with coworkers or other staff, even casually. Discretion is not just a professional quality in this environment; it is a form of self protection.

Build Quiet Credibility

Over time, the guards who are most respected in financial settings are the ones who seem unshakeable. They are not known for what they think about the CFO or which department is feuding. They are known for showing up, handling situations calmly, and treating the building like their responsibility. That reputation is a kind of armor. When politics swirl, they tend to leave people like that alone.

Office politics will always exist in high pressure financial environments. As a security guard, your greatest advantage is that you were never supposed to be part of them in the first place. Stay professional, stay neutral, and let your reliability speak for itself.