Conducting Vulnerability Assessments
As a security guard, your job is to prevent problems before they happen. One of the best tools for doing this is the vulnerability assessment. This is a step-by-step check of your site to find weak spots in systems, equipment, or routines that could lead to security failures.
What Is a Vulnerability Assessment?
A vulnerability assessment is a careful look at the current security setup. It helps you find things that could go wrong. This includes broken locks, blind spots in camera coverage, or even patterns in guard behavior that could be exploited.
Think of it like a safety inspection but for security. You’re not just looking for what is broken—you’re looking for what could be used against you.
Why It Matters
- Stops problems before they start
- Shows your supervisor you’re alert and proactive
- Helps protect people, property, and information
When to Do One
- At shift change
- After an incident
- After major changes (new gates, cameras, or staff)
- On a regular schedule (weekly or monthly)
How to Conduct a Vulnerability Assessment
Follow these simple steps. Always follow site policy and local law.
1. Walk the Site
Start with a full walk-through. Use a checklist (see below) and take notes. Look at doors, windows, fences, lighting, cameras, and alarm systems.
2. Think Like a Threat
Ask yourself: If I wanted to break in, where would I try first? What’s not being watched? What’s easy to climb or hide behind?
3. Check Technology
Are cameras working? Are they pointed in the right direction? Are access control systems (badges, keypads) working?
4. Talk to Staff
If allowed, ask coworkers if they’ve noticed anything odd. They may have seen something you missed.
5. Review Past Incidents
Look at the last few incident reports. Are there patterns? Repeated problems in one area?
6. Report and Recommend
Write a short summary. Include what you found and what you think should be done. Keep it clear and respectful. Use photos if allowed.
Shift Checklist: Vulnerability Spotting
- ☐ Perimeter fencing secure (no gaps, loose panels)
- ☐ Locks working on all gates and doors
- ☐ Lighting functional and covers all key areas
- ☐ Cameras clean, powered, and aimed correctly
- ☐ Alarm systems armed and tested
- ☐ Entry/exit points monitored
- ☐ No objects near fences or walls that help climbing
- ☐ No blind spots in patrol routes
- ☐ Staff ID checks in place
- ☐ Emergency exits clear and unlocked (if required)
Quick Scenario
Situation: You’re patrolling the back lot and see a stack of pallets placed near the fence. They weren’t there yesterday.
What to do:
- Note the location and take a photo if allowed
- Report it to your supervisor
- Recommend moving the pallets or securing the area
Why it matters: Those pallets could give someone a boost over the fence. A simple change like moving them can stop a future breach.
3 Questions Guards Ask About Vulnerability Checks
1. How often should I do one?
Follow your site’s policy. If there isn’t one, doing a quick check at the start of each shift is a good habit.
2. What if I find something but no one fixes it?
Keep reporting issues in writing. If you’ve done your part and followed the chain of command, you’ve done the right thing.
3. Can I get in trouble for pointing out problems?
No. Reporting weak spots helps the whole team. Stay respectful and professional in how you report it.
Action Takeaway
Start every shift with a short vulnerability check. Use your eyes, your ears, and your common sense. Look for what’s out of place, what’s broken, or what could be used against your site. Report it. Stay alert. Stay safe.