The UK private security market is worth over £6 billion annually and employs more than 350,000 people. Yet the technology most security companies use to manage their workforce has not kept pace. Many firms are still running on spreadsheets, WhatsApp groups, and off-the-shelf HR tools that were never designed for the specific demands of guard management.
This guide is for operations directors and managers at UK security companies who are evaluating guard management software — either for the first time or because their current system is no longer fit for purpose.
What Makes Guard Management Different
Generic workforce management software misses several things that are unique to the security sector:
- Regulatory compliance: Every operative must hold a valid SIA licence for every role they perform. Deploying someone without checking their licence is a criminal offence, not just an HR oversight.
- 24/7 shift patterns: Security operates around the clock, across multiple sites, often with dynamic changes at short notice. Standard rota tools were not built for this complexity.
- GPS verification: Clients increasingly demand proof that guards were physically present. Clock-in and clock-out must be tied to location.
- Incident documentation: Guards are often first responders to incidents. Capturing reports accurately, in real time, from a mobile device is a non-negotiable operational requirement.
- Lone worker safety: Check calls, welfare checks, and escalation procedures must be built into daily operations — and tracked.
The Spreadsheet Problem
Most security companies start with spreadsheets. They work well enough up to about 30 guards and one or two sites. Beyond that, the cracks appear quickly:
- Licence expiry dates get missed because no one owns the reminder process
- Rota conflicts multiply as guard availability, site requirements, and last-minute changes collide
- Payroll calculations require hours of manual cross-referencing
- Clients ask for shift reports that take an afternoon to compile
- When a guard calls in sick at 2 a.m., there is no fast way to find a qualified replacement
The operational cost is real: senior managers spend time on administration rather than business development, errors lead to compliance risk, and the company cannot scale efficiently.
What to Look For in Guard Management Software
1. SIA Licence Verification
This is the most important feature for any UK security company. The software should sync with the SIA Public Register automatically, not just store licence numbers you enter manually. Real-time verification means you catch expired or suspended licences before deployment, not after.
2. GPS Clock-In/Clock-Out
Guards should be able to clock in and out from a mobile app with their GPS coordinates recorded at the moment of action. This gives you verifiable proof of attendance for client billing and dispute resolution.
3. Shift Scheduling and Rota Management
A purpose-built rota tool should show guard availability, licence validity, and site requirements in one view. Drag-and-drop scheduling, conflict detection, and automated notifications to guards should be standard.
4. Mobile Reporting
Incident reports, patrol logs, check call records, and vehicle defect reports should all be completable on a smartphone. The best systems generate PDF reports automatically for client submission.
5. Management Dashboards
Operations managers need a real-time view of who is on site, who is late, whether any licences are flagged, and whether any incidents have been reported. A management dashboard that consolidates this information is essential at scale.
6. ACS Compliance Support
If you hold or are pursuing ACS approved contractor status, the software should make the audit trail easy to produce. Document storage, deployment logs, training records, and incident histories should all be exportable in a format auditors can work with.
The Pricing Problem with Legacy Platforms
The established guard management platforms were built in an era when enterprise software was sold in multi-year contracts with large per-user licence fees. The typical pricing model — £15 to £25 per user per month, with separate charges for modules, training, and support — means that a company with 200 guards can easily spend £40,000 to £60,000 per year on software alone.
This pricing structure makes no sense for an industry with tight margins. Most security companies do not need complex configurability or an account manager — they need reliable software that does the core job at a sensible price.
What Modern Pricing Looks Like
The newer generation of guard management platforms has moved to per-guard pricing — typically £1 to £2.50 per guard per month. For a company with 200 guards, that is £200 to £500 per month rather than £3,000+. The feature set is comparable or better, because these platforms have been built more recently and designed specifically for operational use.
Key questions to ask any vendor:
- Is pricing per user or per guard? (Per guard is almost always better value)
- Are there setup fees or onboarding charges?
- What happens to the price when you scale from 100 guards to 300?
- Is there a minimum contract length?
- Is the price locked, or does it increase annually?
Implementation: What to Expect
The biggest barrier to switching platforms is not cost — it is the perceived disruption of migration. In practice, most modern guard management platforms can be set up and operational within a few days for companies under 500 guards. The data migration is typically guard details, site information, and schedules — none of which requires complex technical work.
The more important factor is adoption. Guards need a mobile app that is straightforward enough to use without training. Supervisors need dashboards that are intuitive from day one. Management need reports that are ready when clients ask for them.
TacDesk: Built for UK Security
TacDesk is a guard management platform designed specifically for mid-market UK security companies — typically those managing between 100 and 500 guards across multiple sites.
Its core capabilities include SIA Public Register auto-sync, GPS clock-in/clock-out, incident and patrol reporting, check call management, and an compliance module. Pricing is £1 to £2.50 per guard per month with no setup fees, no contracts, and a lifetime price lock.
Find out more about TacDesk or speak to the team about whether it fits your operation.