The Gap Between CCTV and Security Guards
Most commercial premises in the UK have CCTV systems. Most also employ security guards, either directly or through a contractor. Yet in many cases, these two security layers operate independently — cameras record footage that nobody watches in real time, and guards patrol without reference to what the cameras are showing.
Bridging this gap creates a significantly more effective security operation. When CCTV monitoring and guard management work together, incidents are detected earlier, responses are faster, and evidence collection is more comprehensive.
Types of CCTV Monitoring
Passive Recording
The most basic approach — cameras record continuously, and footage is only reviewed after an incident. This provides evidence but no prevention. It’s the equivalent of closing the stable door after the horse has bolted.
Active Monitoring
A dedicated operator watches camera feeds in real time, identifying suspicious activity and alerting guards or emergency services. This is expensive but effective, particularly for high-value sites.
AI-Assisted Monitoring
Modern CCTV systems use AI analytics to detect anomalies — unusual movement patterns, loitering, perimeter breaches, or objects left unattended. These systems alert human operators only when something requires attention, dramatically reducing the cost of active monitoring.
Remote Video Response
A hybrid model where a remote monitoring centre watches cameras and can issue audio warnings through on-site speakers, contact guards, or alert police. This provides many benefits of active monitoring without the cost of an on-site control room.
Integrating CCTV with Guard Operations
The real value comes from connecting your CCTV monitoring to your guard management workflow:
Incident Correlation
When a guard files an incident report, the associated CCTV footage should be easily identifiable and retrievable. If a guard reports a trespass attempt at 02:30 on Camera 7’s coverage area, the relevant footage should be linked to that report automatically or with minimal effort.
Directed Response
When CCTV operators spot suspicious activity, they can direct the nearest guard to investigate — using GPS tracking to identify who’s closest and radio or push notification to dispatch them. This is faster and more effective than guards stumbling upon incidents during routine patrols.
Evidence Packages
For incidents that lead to police involvement or insurance claims, having a complete evidence package — incident report, guard statement, CCTV footage, GPS data showing guard response — is far more powerful than any single element alone.
Patrol Optimisation
CCTV coverage can inform patrol routes. Guards focus their physical presence on areas with limited camera coverage, while well-covered areas receive less frequent physical patrols. This optimises the use of both technology and personnel.
Footage Management Challenges
Managing CCTV footage alongside guard operations creates data management challenges:
- Storage — video files are large, and retention periods may be 30+ days
- Access control — footage containing personal data must be restricted under GDPR
- Retrieval — finding specific footage quickly when needed for evidence
- Sharing — securely providing footage to police, clients, or insurers
- Retention — automatically deleting footage after the retention period while preserving evidential clips
Practical First Steps
Full CCTV integration is a significant investment, but you can start with practical steps:
- Link footage to reports — ensure guards note camera references in incident reports
- Upload key clips — attach relevant footage to digital incident reports
- Standardise retention — define and enforce consistent retention periods
- Control access — use role-based permissions for footage viewing
TacDesk includes a video footage system that lets guards upload and link body-cam and security camera footage directly to incident reports, with controlled sharing for third-party access. See the demo to explore footage management.