SIA Licensing Is the Starting Point, Not the Finish Line
Every security operative in the UK must hold a valid SIA licence before they can work. The licence training covers essential topics — conflict management, physical intervention, legal powers, and emergency procedures. But the SIA licence represents the minimum standard, not the benchmark for excellent service.
Security companies that invest in ongoing training beyond the SIA minimum consistently outperform competitors on client retention, guard satisfaction, and ACS accreditation scores. Training is also a powerful retention tool — guards who feel invested in are far less likely to leave.
Essential Training Areas Beyond SIA
Site-Specific Induction
Every site has unique requirements that generic SIA training doesn’t cover:
- Site layout, access points, and vulnerable areas
- Client-specific procedures and protocols
- Emergency evacuation routes and assembly points
- Key contacts and escalation procedures
- Technology systems on site (CCTV, access control, alarms)
A structured site induction, documented and signed off, protects both the guard and your company.
Report Writing
Poor report writing is one of the most common client complaints about security providers. Guards need training on:
- Factual, objective language (what happened, not what they think happened)
- Capturing essential details — who, what, where, when, how
- Using digital reporting tools effectively
- The legal significance of their reports (they may become evidence)
Customer Service
Security guards are often the first point of contact at a premises. Their attitude and professionalism directly reflect on your client’s business. Training should cover:
- Professional communication with visitors, staff, and the public
- De-escalation techniques beyond the SIA syllabus
- Cultural awareness and sensitivity
- Representing the client’s brand positively
Technology Proficiency
Modern security operations rely on technology that guards must be comfortable using:
- Guard management apps — clock-in, reporting, patrol scanning
- CCTV monitoring and basic operation
- Access control systems
- Radio communication protocols
- Body-worn camera operation and legal requirements
First Aid
While not an SIA requirement for all licence types, first aid training is invaluable. Guards may be the first responder to medical emergencies, particularly on night shifts when no other staff are present. A basic first aid qualification costs relatively little and adds genuine value.
Tracking Training Records
For ACS accreditation, you need to demonstrate that your guards receive appropriate training and that records are maintained. This means tracking:
- What training each guard has completed
- When training was delivered and by whom
- When refresher training is due
- Certifications and their expiry dates
- Site-specific induction completion
Spreadsheet-based training records become unmanageable as your team grows. A centralised system that alerts you to expiring certifications and incomplete inductions prevents compliance gaps.
The Return on Training Investment
Training costs money and takes guards off the rota. But the return is measurable:
- Reduced turnover — trained guards feel valued and stay longer
- Fewer client complaints — better-trained guards deliver better service
- Higher ACS scores — training records are a key assessment area
- Reduced liability — properly trained guards make fewer mistakes
- Premium positioning — trained teams command higher contract rates
TacDesk includes training record management alongside guard operations, keeping certifications, inductions, and SIA licence tracking in one place. Explore the demo to see how training records integrate with your operation.