The ever-increasing threats from rising civil unrest and organized crime impact the manufacturing and industrial sector in a variety of ways. Our professionals work diligently to stay on top of these changes and develop strategic response procedures in order to minimize your potential risk and losses.

Enhancing Safety Through Security

Security Stops Threat Before It Becomes Harm

Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

Universities such as University of Michigan and Texas A&M have been recognized for successful community-oriented safety initiatives that significantly reduce assault and theft on campus.

Campus protection officers at a large university noticed suspicious behavior near a residence hall during late-night patrols. Following established protocols, they conducted a welfare check, coordinated with campus police, and safely intervened. The incident was resolved before any students were harmed, highlighting the value of proactive patrols and situational awareness.

Many universities maintain their own campus police focused on:

  • Building trust with students
  • Preventing crime before it happens

Offering safety programs like escort services

Impact: Threat mitigated early, campus operations uninterrupted, student trust reinforced.

#SecurityProfessionals #PublicSafety #HealthcareSecurity #CampusSafety #EventSecurity #RiskManagement #CommunityProtection #SafetyLeadership

 

Strong security protocols that helped limit violence

Security Teams Protecting Patients and Staff

Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

Boston Medical Center implemented strong security protocols that helped limit violence in and around the facility, allowing clinicians to focus on patient care. A trained protection services team identified escalating behavior in an emergency department waiting area.

 Using verbal de-escalation techniques, coordinated positioning, and rapid communication with clinical staff, the team resolved the situation without injury or disruption to patient care. Medical staff later reported improved confidence and reduced stress knowing a capable security presence was in place.

Impact: Patient safety preserved, staff supported, zero use-of-force incidents.

Security personnel at hospitals have intervened to de-escalate violent situations, safeguard vulnerable patients, and ensure smooth operations. In many large medical centers, trained teams help:

  • Escort patients through emergency departments
  • Monitor visitor access
  • Reduce disruptions in care areas

Outcome: Across hospitals, universities, and major public events, protection services have repeatedly demonstrated their role in keeping people safe—before, during, and after potential incidents. These positive outcomes show that with proper planning, training, and collaboration, large gatherings and sensitive environments can be both accessible and secure.

#SecurityProfessionals #PublicSafety #HealthcareSecurity #CampusSafety #EventSecurity #RiskManagement #CommunityProtection #SafetyLeadership

 

 Attackers

Attackers Plan Around Your Holidays—Have You?

Holidays are a peak time for both retail activity and criminal targeting. While your team is focused on sales and customer experience, attackers are planning their moves around predictable patterns—higher foot traffic, stretched staff, and festive distractions.

The question isn’t whether threats exist—they always do. The real question is: have you prepared your security strategy to match the season?

Key steps to holiday security readiness:

🔹 Staff training & awareness: Ensure employees recognize suspicious behavior and understand reporting protocols.
🔹 Enhanced visibility: Increase floor presence and monitor high-risk areas, especially near entrances, checkout zones, and high-value items.
🔹 Technology & surveillance: Utilize cameras, alarms, and point-of-sale monitoring to detect unusual activity in real-time.
🔹 Communication protocols: Establish clear lines for staff to alert security or management quickly.
🔹 Scenario planning: Conduct tabletop exercises and drills focused on seasonal risks to ensure swift, coordinated responses.

Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services, we help retailers and organizations align their security posture with seasonal patterns, minimizing losses, protecting staff, and maintaining a safe environment for customers.

Remember: attackers plan for your busiest times. Your readiness can turn a potential loss into prevention and peace of mind.

 

#RetailSecurity #LossPrevention #HolidaySafety #AssetProtection
#SecurityTraining #ShrinkReduction #SecurityStrategy #WorkplaceSafety

 

APA Source
National Retail Federation. (2023). National Retail Security Survey. National Retail Federation.

Avoiding a “Failure of Imagination”

Protecting American Flyers & Airport Staff — Avoiding a “Failure of Imagination”

The phrase “failure of imagination” entered the national lexicon after the 9/11 Commission concluded that U.S. intelligence agencies didn’t anticipate terrorists using commercial aircraft as weapons — not because it was impossible to imagine, but because it wasn’t adequately planned for ahead of time. Wikipedia

Today, preventing another tragic lapse in foresight requires forward‑thinking security strategies — not just reaction. For aviation security, this means embracing layered defenses that protect passengers, employees, and facilities from evolving threats before they materialize.

Key components of effective airport security include:

  • Proactive threat screening: Implementing advanced screening for aviation workers and passengers to detect a wider range of dangers, including weapons and prohibited items, helps strengthen defenses against insider and outsider threats. Security Magazine
    Training & preparedness: Security personnel trained to recognize subtle indicators of risk are more likely to detect unusual behavior — bridging gaps before problems escalate.
    Collaboration & intelligence sharing: Seamless communication between airlines, private security, federal agencies, and local law enforcement improves situational awareness and response times.

Avoiding a “Failure of Imagination”

Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services, we help organizations think ahead, train proactively, and act confidently. Security is not just about responding — it’s about anticipating. By embedding forward‑looking practices into aviation security plans, we strengthen safety for flyers and airport employees alike.

#AirportSecurity #AviationSafety #SecurityLeadership #ThreatPrevention
#CrisisPreparedness #ProactiveSecurity #DefenseInDepth #SecurityTraining

APA Source
Cunningham, B. (2025). No more failures of imagination: Future proofing airport employee screening. Security Magazine. Retrieved from https://www.securitymagazine.com/articles/102053-no-more-failures-of-imagination-future-proofing-airport-employee-screening

Security

Reflections on the Brown University Shooting and the Importance of Prepared Security

Prepared Security 

On December 13, 2025, a tragic shooting at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, claimed the lives of two students and wounded nine others during a study session in the Barus & Holley Engineering Building. The violent incident unfolded during finals week and sent shockwaves through the campus community and beyond.

In the days that followed, law enforcement coordinated a substantial investigation involving local, state, and federal partners. Enhanced surveillance footage and community tips supported search efforts, and ultimately officials identified a suspect linked to both the Brown shooting and another fatal attack outside the campus. Authorities later confirmed the suspect was found deceased from a self-inflicted injury as the manhunt concluded. 

As we mourn the lives lost and support the healing of survivors and families, this tragedy reinforces critical lessons for security leaders in all sectors:

  • Preparedness matters. Robust emergency alert systems and response protocols can save lives.
  • Collaboration saves time. Coordination among security teams, law enforcement, and community members is essential in a crisis.
  • Training protects people. Regular drills and clear communication help organizations respond confidently under pressure.

Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services, we are committed to supporting safety through trained security professionals, proactive threat awareness, and strong partnerships with our clients. Incidents like this remind us why vigilant planning, preparation, and community cooperation are cornerstones of effective safety strategies.

Our thoughts remain with the Brown community as it continues its path toward healing.

 

#CampusSafety #SecurityLeadership #CrisisResponse #ActiveShooterPreparedness
#EmergencyManagement #CommunitySafety #SecurityTraining #Collaboration

 

APA Source
Wikipedia contributors. (2025, December 20). 2025 Brown University shooting. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved December 20, 2025, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Brown_University_shooting

 

Closing-the-Influence-Gap-Why-Security-Professionals-Must-Be-Heard.

Closing the Influence Gap: Why Security Professionals Must Be Heard

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

New research highlights a concerning trend: security professionals often lack the influence they need, and many organizations are struggling to perform even the most basic security risk management functions effectively. (ISACA, 2025)

For enterprises navigating increasingly complex threat landscapes, this is a critical wake-up call. Without strong influence and integration at the executive level, security teams risk being reactive rather than strategic, and organizations leave themselves exposed to avoidable risks.

The Influence Gap
Consultants found that security professionals frequently aren’t included in key business decisions, limiting their ability to align risk management with organizational objectives. This misalignment can lead to gaps in policies, insufficient resource allocation, and fragmented incident response strategies.

Challenges in Risk Management
The research also revealed weaknesses in core security functions:

  • Inconsistent risk assessments and prioritization

  • Limited integration with enterprise governance frameworks

  • Insufficient monitoring and reporting of key security metrics

Why This Matters
Security isn’t just an IT concern — it’s enterprise risk management. Organizations that fail to empower security professionals risk operational disruptions, regulatory noncompliance, reputational damage, and financial loss.

Steps Forward

  1. Elevate Security Leadership — Ensure CSOs or security leads have a seat at the executive table.

  2. Integrate Security into Strategy — Align risk management with business goals and decision-making processes.

  3. Invest in Training & Metrics — Equip teams with the skills, tools, and KPIs needed to measure and communicate risk effectively.

  4. Foster a Culture of Awareness — Make security a shared responsibility, not an isolated function.

In today’s environment, visibility, influence, and strategic alignment are just as important as technical capability. Organizations that empower their security teams gain a competitive advantage — protecting assets, maintaining trust, and mitigating risks before they escalate.

#CyberSecurity #EnterpriseRiskManagement #CSO #SecurityLeadership #RiskMitigation #CorporateSecurity #Governance #InformationSecurity #StrategicSecurity

Reference
ISACA. (2025). State of security leadership and risk management research report. ISACA. (https://www.isaca.org/resources/news-and-trends/newsroom)

Securing-the-Supply-Chain-Strengthen-Your-Enterprise-from-Every-Angle

Securing the Supply Chain: Strengthen Your Enterprise from Every Angle

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

Is your enterprise a fortress with the back door left wide open?

With supply chain attacks rising 68% last year, your trusted vendors — the very partners you rely on — may be your biggest vulnerability. (Verizon, 2024)

Enter Cyber Supply Chain Risk Management (C-SCRM): a proactive approach to protecting your enterprise by managing risk across your entire ecosystem — not just within your walls.

Why Supply Chain Security Matters
Modern enterprises rely on interconnected vendors, contractors, and service providers. Each relationship is a potential entry point for attackers. A breach at a single supplier can cascade across your organization, disrupting operations, compromising data, and harming your reputation.

Key Components of C-SCRM

  • Vendor Risk Assessment: Evaluate third-party security practices before onboarding.

  • Continuous Monitoring: Track vulnerabilities, compliance, and emerging threats in real time.

  • Incident Response Coordination: Align your enterprise and vendor response plans to reduce impact.

  • Policy & Governance: Establish clear standards and enforce them across your ecosystem.

Benefits of a Proactive Approach
By implementing C-SCRM, organizations reduce exposure to third-party attacks, improve regulatory compliance, and gain actionable insights into potential weaknesses before they become crises.

The Bottom Line
A fortress is only as strong as its weakest gate. Protecting your enterprise today requires extending your risk management mindset to include every partner, supplier, and contractor in your supply chain.

The question isn’t if your enterprise will be targeted — it’s when. The difference is whether you’re ready.

#CyberSecurity #SupplyChainSecurity #EnterpriseRiskManagement #CSCRM #ThirdPartyRisk #RiskMitigation #BusinessContinuity #VendorManagement #CyberResilience

Reference
Verizon. (2024). 2024 Data Breach Investigations Report: Supply chain attacks increase 68%. Verizon Enterprise. (https://enterprise.verizon.com/resources/reports/dbir/)

 

In today’s complex business environment, Chief Security Officers (CSOs) face a growing array of challenges.

Turning Intelligence Into Action — How CSOs Can Drive Smarter Risk Management

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

In today’s complex business environment, Chief Security Officers (CSOs) face a growing array of challenges: emerging threats, competing priorities, and rapidly evolving operational landscapes. Research abounds on these risks, but how can CSOs transform information into actionable strategies that drive both security and business outcomes?

Leverage Threat Intelligence
CSOs can turn raw data into foresight by integrating threat intelligence from industry reports, government advisories, and internal incident trends. This enables proactive risk mitigation rather than reactive responses.

Prioritize Risks Strategically
Not all threats carry the same weight. By combining intelligence with business impact analysis, CSOs can focus resources on the vulnerabilities that matter most — protecting critical assets, employees, and operations without overextending budgets.

Align Security With Business Objectives
Security decisions shouldn’t exist in isolation. CSOs who communicate risk in business terms — linking security investments to operational continuity, regulatory compliance, or reputational protection — ensure that leadership understands and supports their initiatives.

Drive Data-Driven Decision Making
Digital tools and analytics platforms allow CSOs to quantify risk, measure mitigation effectiveness, and continuously refine strategies. Evidence-based decisions foster confidence from executives, investors, and stakeholders alike.

Foster a Culture of Awareness
Security is not just a function; it’s a mindset. CSOs can leverage intelligence to inform training, shape policies, and build organizational resilience from the ground up.

In an era of uncertainty, the CSO’s role is evolving from protector to strategic advisor. By leveraging emerging research and actionable intelligence, CSOs can reduce risk, optimize resources, and make decisions that support both security and business growth.

#CyberSecurity #RiskManagement #BusinessContinuity #CSOLeadership #ThreatIntelligence #DataDrivenDecisions #CorporateSecurity #EnterpriseRisk #SecurityStrategy

Reference
Gartner, Inc. (2024). Emerging risks and strategic security priorities for chief security officers. Gartner Research. (gartner.com)

 

Mobile-Patrols-Are-Leading-the-Way-—-Why-Today-We-Need-More-Flexible-Security.

Mobile Patrols Are Leading the Way — Why Today We Need More Flexible Security

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

 

As organizations look for cost-effective, high-impact protection, mobile patrol security has emerged as a top choice. It delivers a strong, visible presence across wide areas — without the expense of a full-time, on-site guard.

In a landscape where threats shift quickly and budgets remain tight, mobile patrols offer the agility and deterrence businesses need to stay ahead.

High-Visibility Deterrence
Marked patrol vehicles and rotating patrol times make it harder for bad actors to predict security patterns — significantly increasing deterrence.

Coverage That Static Posts Can’t Match
Mobile units can monitor multiple buildings, parking lots, perimeters, and high-risk zones in a single shift, providing broader coverage at a fraction of the cost.

Flexible, Adaptive Protection
Whether it’s overnight property checks, construction-site monitoring, event support, or after-hours business patrols, mobile units adapt to changing needs in real time.

Instant Reporting & Verification
Modern patrols use GPS check-ins, time-stamped photos, and digital incident reports, giving clients real-time visibility and documented proof of rounds.

Budget-Friendly Security
Instead of staffing multiple fixed posts, organizations can deploy mobile patrols to maximize coverage, reduce blind spots, and keep costs manageable.

Why This Trend Matters

Proactive security is always more cost-effective than reactive response. As businesses face workforce shortages, rising trespassing incidents, and expanding facility footprints, mobile patrols provide the balance of strength, coverage, and affordability.

A flexible security model isn’t just smart — it’s necessary. And mobile patrols are leading that evolution.

#SecurityServices #MobilePatrol #PhysicalSecurity #RiskManagement #LossPrevention #CorporateSecurity #FacilitiesManagement #BusinessContinuity #SecurityTrends2025

Reference
Security Industry Association. (2023). Guidelines for effective mobile patrol deployment in physical security programs. SIA Publications.

Smarter-Coverage-Stronger-Deterrence-—-Why-Mobile-Security-Patrols-Matter-More-Than-Ever.

Smarter Coverage, Stronger Deterrence — Why Mobile Security Patrols Matter More Than Ever

By Frank Costa, President, Nexgen Protection Services

In today’s fast-moving threat environment, security can’t afford to sit still. That’s why mobile security patrols have become a critical layer in modern protective strategies — delivering flexibility, visibility, and rapid response far beyond what static posts can provide.

Mobile security service strengthens your perimeter and protects your people:

 Round-the-Clock Patrols
Mobile security teams don’t just drive by. Teams conduct floor-by-floor, exterior, and interior checks to ensure full coverage across your site — day and night.

Verified Accountability
Patrols are backed by photo verification, electronic check-ins, or seamless integration with your existing static-guard technology stack.

24/7 Dedicated Dispatch
Marked, well-maintained vehicles and a 24-hour dispatch line mean teams are ready to respond immediately — whether it’s a disturbance, trespass, alarm call, or unusual activity.

Why It Matters

Security becomes expensive when it’s reactive. Static guards are essential, but they can’t be everywhere at once. Mobile units expand coverage, adapt to changing conditions, and provide a visible, consistent deterrent across wider areas — all while keeping overhead lower than additional fixed posts.

For events, large facilities, after-hours operations, construction sites, or multi-building campuses, mobile patrols deliver the agility and presence needed to stay ahead of risk.

When visibility increases, incidents decrease — and proactive protection always costs less than reactive response.

#SecurityServices #MobilePatrol #RiskManagement #PhysicalSecurity #LossPrevention #FacilitiesManagement #BusinessContinuity #ProtectAndPrevent

Reference
Security Industry Association. (2023). Guidelines for effective mobile patrol deployment in physical security programs. SIA Publications.