A security shift briefing is the most critical 10 minutes in a guard's day. It's where the outgoing team transfers situational awareness to the incoming team. Ongoing threats, access issues, incident follow-ups, and client-specific instructions. When briefings are rushed or skipped, the incoming team operates blind.
Why security briefings get skipped
Security shifts often transition at inconvenient times. 6 AM, 2 PM, 10 PM. The outgoing guard is tired after 8-12 hours. The incoming guard is still getting settled. The temptation is a quick "everything's fine" and a handshake. But "everything's fine" doesn't tell the incoming guard about the suspicious vehicle that's circled the building three times or the tenant who reported a broken access card reader.
What every shift briefing should cover
- Active incidents: Anything ongoing. Trespassers, alarm activations, police involvement.
- Access and entry issues: Broken card readers, propped doors, tailgating incidents, credential problems.
- Patrol observations: Lighting outages, camera blind spots, unlocked areas, environmental hazards.
- Tenant/client notes: Special requests, expected deliveries, after-hours access authorized, VIP visitors.
- Equipment status: Patrol vehicle fuel level, radio battery status, camera system health.
- Upcoming events: Scheduled deliveries, maintenance crews, events that will affect access or traffic.
Voice-first briefings
Security guards are on their feet and on patrol, not sitting at desks. ShiftVoice lets the outgoing guard record a shift briefing while doing a final walkthrough. The incoming guard listens on arrival and has a searchable transcript for reference throughout their shift. Learn more about ShiftVoice for security.