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Proactive vs. Reactive Thinking: Managing a Guard Working Two Jobs

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proactive vs reactive security guard
As a security guard manager, how you respond to problems often reveals more about your leadership than the problems themselves. The difference between proactive and reactive thinking is not just a management philosophy; it is the difference between controlling your operation and being controlled by it.

Consider this scenario: one of your guards begins showing a pattern of no call, no shows. After some digging, you discover she is also working a second security job. A reactive manager waits until this pattern becomes a crisis. The post goes uncovered. A client calls upset. Scrambling begins to find a last minute replacement, often pulling another guard into overtime and straining morale across the team. The reactive response is to write up the guard after the fact, issue a warning, and hope the pattern stops. It rarely does.

A proactive manager reads the early signs differently. The first no call, no show is not just an inconvenience; it is a signal. Rather than simply documenting the incident and moving on, the proactive manager opens a direct conversation. Questions get asked about the guard's overall schedule, her workload at both jobs, and whether fatigue may be a factor. This is not about being soft. It is about gathering information before a pattern becomes a liability.

From there, a proactive manager may establish clear scheduling expectations around outside employment, review company policy on secondary jobs, and assess whether that guard can realistically remain dependable given her current commitments. If the guard is genuinely stretched too thin between two demanding roles, placing him on critical posts is a risk that should not be taken.

The proactive approach also looks inward at the operation itself. Are scheduling practices creating pressure that pushes guards toward second jobs out of financial need? Are shifts distributed in a way that leaves certain guards overworked while others want more hours? These are systemic questions a reactive mindset never reaches because it is too busy putting out fires.

In security management, an uncovered post is never just an inconvenience. It is a safety gap, a client trust issue, and a liability. The guard working two jobs and disappearing without notice is a manageable problem when caught early. When ignored, it becomes a staffing crisis, a contract risk, and in the worst cases, an incident waiting to happen.

Reactive thinking fixes yesterday's problem. Proactive thinking prevents tomorrow's.

Know Your Market: How Denver Security Guards Can Push Back on a Rent Increase

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securityguard rent
The timing could not be better for renters in Denver right now. Rents across the Denver metro have declined year over year. Many apartment complexes are now offering concessions such as up to eight weeks of free rent. Year over year rent changes show declines of 3% to 7% in many areas, and rent growth is expected to remain modest through the year. In short, your property management company is trying to raise your rent in a market that is moving in the opposite direction. Here is how to handle it.

Pull the Numbers First

Look up comparable units in your neighborhood on sites like Zillow, Apartments.com, and RentCafe. Screenshot everything. When you walk into that conversation with management, you want cold, current data showing what the same size unit is renting for two blocks away.

Write a Formal Response Letter

Do not just call and complain. Put it in writing. Acknowledge the notice, then lay out the market data you gathered. Be professional and respectful, but be direct. Note that nearby properties are actively offering free rent incentives to attract tenants and that the market simply does not support an increase at this time. Property managers are businesspeople. Vacancy costs them more than a steady tenant paying flat rent.

Use Your Value as a Tenant

As a security guard, you likely work odd hours and keep a watchful eye on the property by default. That is worth something. Remind management that you are reliable, you pay on time, and you understand security. Long term, stable tenants save landlords significant turnover costs. Offer to sign a longer lease at the current rate rather than accept an increase. Many management companies will take that deal in a soft market.

Know When to Escalate

If management refuses to negotiate, remind them in writing that Denver ranked among the top metro areas in the nation for the largest decline in effective rents, falling 7.3% at the end of last year. Mention that you are aware of the vacancy rates in the area and that you are actively looking at other options. Sometimes the simple act of signaling you might leave is enough to change the conversation.

Your Bottom Line

You are not at a disadvantage here. The market is on your side. Do your research, communicate professionally, and stand firm. In a city where landlords are competing hard for good tenants, a reliable security guard who pays rent on time has more leverage than they might think.

Covering Security Shifts During a 12-Week Colorado FAMLI Leave

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security guard famli
When a security guard takes leave under Colorado's Family and Medical Leave Insurance (FAMLI) program, their employer must be prepared to maintain continuous coverage across all assigned posts. A 12-week absence is significant in security operations, where gaps in coverage can create liability and safety risks. Here is a practical approach to keeping shifts filled and operations running smoothly.

Understand the Timeline Early

As soon as an employee provides notice of an upcoming FAMLI leave, begin building a coverage plan. Colorado FAMLI generally requires 30 days of advance notice when the leave is foreseeable, so managers typically have time to act before the first day of absence. Use that window to assess how many weekly shifts need to be covered and whether any overlap with holidays or high-traffic periods requires extra attention.

Lean on Current Staff First

Before hiring externally, review the availability of existing guards. Many security officers are willing to pick up additional shifts for overtime pay, especially if the arrangement is temporary and clearly defined. Be transparent about the duration, approximately 12 weeks, so staff can make informed decisions. Document any voluntary agreements in writing to avoid scheduling disputes later.

Create a Rotating Coverage Schedule

Rather than placing the full burden on one or two people, build a rotating schedule that distributes the extra shifts across multiple team members. This reduces fatigue, prevents burnout, and keeps morale higher over the course of 12 weeks. Post the schedule at least two weeks in advance so officers can plan around their personal commitments.

Communicate with the Client or Site Management

If your guards are assigned to a specific client site, notify that client as soon as a coverage plan is in place. Clients want reassurance that their post will not go unstaffed. Share the names and qualifications of any replacement officers ahead of their first shift, and confirm that all licensing requirements are met under Colorado law.

Plan for the Return

As the 12-week leave period nears its end, begin coordinating the employee's return. Confirm their anticipated return date, brief them on any changes to post orders or procedures, and taper the temporary coverage schedule to avoid overstaffing during the transition week.

A well-organized coverage plan protects your client relationships, supports your team, and ensures the employee on FAMLI leave can focus on recovery or family care without worrying about their job security upon return.

The Security Guard's Playbook: Combining Flex Shifts and 2 Part-Time Days With Multiple Security Companies

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security guard flex shifts
More security professionals are discovering a work model that offers the best of both worlds: two guaranteed part-time days each week with a steady employer, plus flex shifts scattered throughout the week with one or two additional companies. It's not a hustle, it's a strategy. Here's why this hybrid approach is one of the smartest moves a security guard can make.

1. Guaranteed Base Income with Built-In Flexibility

Having two set days locked in each week provides a reliable income floor. You know those shifts are coming regardless of season, site changes, or staffing fluctuations. The flex shifts you pick up throughout the rest of the week are gravy,  extra income on your own terms. This combination removes the all-or-nothing anxiety that comes with purely on-call work while avoiding the rigidity of a full-time schedule.

2. You Work More Without Overcommitting

The beauty of this model is that it scales with your life. When things are busy at home or you need a lighter week, you lean on your two set days and keep the flex shifts minimal. When you want to earn more, you pick up extra shifts from your other companies mid-week. You're never trapped at 40 hours, but you're never sitting idle either. The workload flexes around you, not the other way around.

3. Multiple Employers Mean Multiple Safety Nets

Relying on a single security company is a gamble. Contracts get lost, sites close, budgets change, and management turns over. Working with two or three companies simultaneously means no single employer controls your financial stability. If one company loses a contract or reduces available hours, your set days and flex relationships with other firms keep income flowing. That kind of resilience is invaluable in an industry known for unpredictable staffing changes.

4. Flex Shifts Keep Skills Sharp Across Different Environments

Picking up flex shifts throughout the week often means working a variety of posts; corporate lobbies, event venues, retail centers, construction sites, healthcare facilities, or residential properties. Each environment demands different skills: crowd management, access control, patrol techniques, emergency protocols, and client communication. Guards who work across multiple settings consistently develop faster than those parked at a single site year after year.

5. You Become a High-Value Asset to Every Company

Security companies love reliable flex guards. When a site calls out sick or a last-minute event needs coverage, you're the person they call. Being that dependable, available presence; without being a full-time financial burden to any one employer, puts you in a position of quiet influence. Companies compete for your available days, often leading to better assignments, preferred scheduling, and in some cases, higher hourly rates for your willingness to fill gaps.

6. Negotiating Leverage Increases

When you're in demand at multiple companies, you have something most guards don't: options. That gives you quiet leverage when it comes to scheduling preferences, shift assignments, and even hourly rates. Companies that know you're reliable and working elsewhere tend to treat you better — because they know you can simply reduce their days and add shifts elsewhere.

7. Stay Sharp Without Burning Out

Security work can be monotonous when you're at the same post, same shift, same routine for months on end. Rotating between companies and sites keeps the work mentally stimulating. You're learning new protocols, meeting different teams, and adapting to new environments regularly. That variety is a natural antidote to the burnout that plagues full-time guards stuck on a single post.

8. More Time for Life Outside the Uniform

This arrangement typically keeps total weekly hours manageable,  without sacrificing income. That leaves meaningful time for family, education, a side business, physical recovery, or simply enjoying life. Security work is physically and mentally demanding; this model respects that by preventing the grind that wear guards down over time.

Making It Work

Success with this model comes down to three things: reliability, communication, and organization. You need to show up when you say you will, communicate your availability clearly to each employer, and keep your schedule straight across multiple companies. Guards who manage these well find that word travels fast and your network of opportunities only grows over time.

The combination of two set part-time days and flex shifts throughout the week isn't just a scheduling trick, it's a professional framework that puts you in control of your income, your growth, and your time. In a field where most workers trade all three for a single paycheck, that's a significant advantage.

Not Too Little, Not Too Much: The Goldilocks Strategy for Flex Security Guards

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goldilocks security guard
Once upon a time, a security guard walked into the job market. There were hundreds of companies posting shifts, dozens of apps promising steady work, and no shortage of options. But just like Goldilocks wandering through the bears cottage, she quickly discovered that not every option was just right.

The Three Bears of the Security World

Here's the thing most flex guards don't realize early enough: you get to choose your three bears. And locking in your top two or three preferred companies isn't playing it safe, it's playing it smart.

Why Locking In Your Top Companies Pays Off

1. You Become a Known Quantity

Security companies favor guards they recognize. When you consistently pick up shifts with the same company, schedulers remember your name, your reliability, and your performance. That familiarity turns into priority scheduling.

2. Better Sites, Better Shifts

New guards get whatever's left. Trusted guards get options. By building a track record with a select group of companies, you earn access to preferred sites; better hours, better locations, and clients who are actually organized and respectful of your time.

3. Steadier Income Without Sacrificing Flexibility

The whole appeal of flex work is freedom. But income instability can undercut that freedom fast. Locking in two or three reliable companies gives you a safety net; if one company is slow, the others can carry you. You're flexible and protected.

4. You Learn the Sites, the Clients, the Quirks

Every post has its own culture, its own rules, its own cast of characters. The more time you spend with a company, the faster you learn their sites and that knowledge makes you more confident, more effective, and more valuable. Companies notice guards who already know the drill.

Finding Your "Just Right"

Not every company deserves a spot in your rotation. Before you commit to working with anyone regularly, ask yourself:

  • Do they communicate clearly and quickly? A company that ghosts you on scheduling is not worth your loyalty.
  • Do they pay on time, every time? Non-negotiable.
  • Do their sites match your skills and preferences? Working posts you hate makes every shift harder.
  • Do they treat guards with respect? You'll know within the first few shifts.

The Moral of the Story

Goldilocks didn't settle for porridge that burned her mouth or a bed that broke beneath her. She found what worked and she stayed.

As a flex security guard, your greatest professional asset isn't just your license or your experience. It's your reputation with the right companies. Spread yourself too thin across every platform and every agency, and you're just a name in a database. Lock in with two or three companies that treat you well, show up consistently, and perform at your best and you become someone they actually show dignity and respect.

More Than a Uniform: The Benefits of Letting People Know Who You Are as a Security Guard

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understanding security guard
Security guards are often trained to project authority, maintain a neutral expression, and keep a professional distance. While those instincts have their place, there's a compelling case for the opposite approach, letting the people around you actually know who you are. Being approachable and personable isn't a compromise of professionalism. In many ways, it's the smartest security strategy of all.

Trust Is the Foundation of a Safe Environment

When people know your name, recognize your face, and feel comfortable talking to you, they are far more likely to report something suspicious. A tenant who has exchanged small talk with you in the lobby will stop to mention the unfamiliar person they saw lingering near the stairwell. A coworker who sees you as a real person, not just a figure in a uniform, will flag the package left unattended by the entrance.

Anonymous authority figures breed silence. A guard people trust breeds information and in security, information is everything.

De-escalation Becomes Natural

Many tense situations never become incidents because a familiar, calm presence intervenes early. When you're known to the people in your environment, you carry social weight. A calm word from someone people recognize carries far more gravity than a command barked by a stranger. Familiarity softens confrontations before they escalate.

You Become an Effective Deterrent

Criminals and bad actors look for predictability and anonymity. When a guard is just a uniform; interchangeable, unnamed, unnoticed,  it is easier to dismiss or avoid them. But a guard who knows faces, greets people by name, and is clearly embedded in the social fabric of a space signals something different: this person pays attention. That awareness alone discourages opportunistic behavior.

Morale and Workplace Culture Benefit Too

In corporate, retail, or residential settings, a security guard who people know and respect contributes positively to the overall atmosphere. People feel safer, not in an anxious way, but in a settled, reassured way. That sense of calm reflects well on the organization and makes your presence a genuine asset rather than just a compliance checkbox.

Knowing the Environment Means Knowing When Something Is Off

The deeper benefit of being known is that you, in turn, get to know the people and rhythms of your environment. You learn who belongs and who doesn't. You learn normal behavior, normal hours, normal routines. And when something deviates from that baseline, you notice, faster and more accurately than someone who keeps everyone at arm's length.

Professionalism Doesn't Require Distance

None of this means abandoning boundaries or becoming everyone's best friend. Professionalism remains essential. But professionalism and warmth are not opposites. The best security guards understand that their greatest tool isn't their badge or their radio, it's the trust they build with the people they protect.

Let them know your name. Learn theirs. The safety that follows is no coincidence.

The Art of Actually Getting Through to People

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communicator security guard
Effective communication is less about what you say and more about how well you listen first. Most people assume they are reasonably good communicators. And most people are at least partially wrong about that. The gap between what we mean to say and what another person actually receives is wider than we tend to think, and bridging it takes more deliberate effort than simply speaking clearly or choosing the right words.

Start by Listening: Really Listening

The single most underrated communication skill is not speaking at all. Before you can communicate effectively with someone, you need to understand where they are coming from, what they already know, and what they actually need from the conversation. That requires listening with genuine attention rather than simply waiting for your turn to talk.

Active listening means making eye contact, acknowledging what the other person has said before responding, and resisting the urge to formulate your reply while they are still talking. It means asking follow-up questions that show you absorbed what was said, not just that you heard the sounds. When people feel genuinely heard, they become dramatically more receptive to what comes next.

Match Your Message to Your Audience

How you explain something to a colleague who shares your background is not how you explain it to someone encountering the topic for the first time. Effective communicators constantly adjust; their vocabulary, their level of detail, their tone, and their pacing based on who is in front of them. This is not about talking down to people. It is about meeting them where they are rather than where you assume they should be.

A useful habit is to check in as you go. A simple "does that make sense so far?" invites the other person to redirect you before the conversation gets too far down the wrong path.

Be Clear About What You Actually Need

Many communication breakdowns happen not because of misunderstanding, but because nobody clearly stated what the goal of the conversation was in the first place. Are you sharing information, asking for advice, looking for a decision, or just venting? The other person cannot respond appropriately if they don't know which mode you're in.

Stating your purpose up front, even briefly, saves enormous amounts of time and prevents the frustration of walking away from a conversation feeling like you talked past each other. "I want to run something by you and get your honest opinion" lands very differently than launching straight into the situation and hoping the other person figures out their role.

Watch What Your Body Is Saying

Words carry meaning, but tone, posture, eye contact, and facial expression often carry more. You can say "I'm happy to help" in a way that communicates the complete opposite, and most people will trust what they see over what they hear. In face-to-face communication, consistency between your verbal and non-verbal signals builds trust. Inconsistency erodes it, usually without either party being able to name exactly why the conversation felt off.

In written communication, which now accounts for an enormous share of daily interaction, the equivalent is tone. Emails and messages strip out most of the warmth and nuance of spoken language, which means a perfectly neutral sentence can easily land as cold or dismissive. Reading what you've written from the recipient's perspective before sending it is a small habit that prevents a surprising number of misunderstandings.

Handle Disagreement Without Shutting Down the Conversation

Disagreement is not a communication failure, it's a normal part of exchanging ideas between people who have different experiences and perspectives. What matters is whether the disagreement is handled in a way that keeps the conversation productive or one that causes people to dig in and stop listening.

Acknowledging the other person's point before offering a counter-argument goes a long way. "I understand why you see it that way, and here's where I land differently" is a fundamentally different opening than "No, actually..." One signals that you are engaged in a real exchange. The other signals that you were never really listening to begin with.

Follow Through on What You Communicate

Trust is built over time through consistency between what people say and what they do. The most eloquent, well-structured communication in the world loses its value quickly if the person delivering it regularly fails to follow through. Reliability is itself a form of communication, it tells the people around you that your words mean something.

In the end, effective communication is not a performance skill. It is a relationship skill. It requires genuine curiosity about the people you are talking to, enough self-awareness to notice when you are not landing, and the willingness to adjust rather than simply repeat yourself louder and hope for a different result.