During periods of economic pressure, leadership teams inevitably begin asking the same question: “Where can we cut security spend without increasing risk?”
Diagnosis may describe part of a person’s condition, but it is a weak operational guide for prevention. Strong security programs focus on behavior, escalation, reporting, and coordinated intervention.
Through perimeter protection, layered safety measures and systemic security, security leaders can protect an essential element of the supply chain: warehouses.
When public agencies and private organizations sit down with a clear, mutually agreed-upon problem to solve, the resulting collaboration tends to be more durable, effective, and beneficial to the communities they serve.