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Top Ways to Secure Your Building

Security is one of the most necessary things that your building needs, whether you are looking to secure your home or secure your business. A building should be a fortress against the outside, only allowing people in with your permission. It’s vital that you make your building somewhere people - including you - feel safe.


Whether you're looking to ensure that your home is secure for a period of absence, or you're looking to ensure that your business is secure for insurance purposes, safety is a must. No matter what the reason is behind you wanting to keep your business secure, there are steps that you can take to make it happen. It starts with the exterior of your building and then you can work your way inside. So let's take a look at how you can make sure that your building is safe and secure.



Image source: Pexels



    1. Consider your risks. Before you can start working on making your property more secure, you need to understand what the risks are in the first place. Knowing who the local entry door installers are can help you, here, as you can ask them to assess the exterior of your building and point out all of the ways it’s not yet secure. You need to have all of the risks documented so that you can have all of those risks in one place. This way you can periodically look at the documentation and determine whether or not you need to update it. Whether it's due to people, location, or weather, all of the risks should be written down so that you can refer to them when you need to, especially when you are making security upgrades. Local door installers will be able to tell you whether or not your doors are currently secure or whether you are at risk and putting your insurance at risk at the same time.

    2. Secure the perimeter. From the outside of the building to the outside of the car park, the entire perimeter of your building should be completely secured. The outside of the building protects the building itself, so if you have the right fencing, the right gate, and even the right doors, you can ensure that people cannot get in unless you want them to. Fence or wall toppers and even anti-climb paint can be used to prevent anybody trying to climb in and you can also make sure that there is no easy access to any flat roofs on your property if you have them. By installing external lighting, CCTV and leaving lighting on in the building, you can be sure that your building is more secure because nobody wants to walk in somewhere where they are going to be seen.

    3. Have the correct signage. If you want to deter unwanted visitors, you need to have signs up strategically located around the property to warn them of how effective the security in the area is. For example, having signs dictating that you have CCTV and people are being recorded can stop people coming in in the first place. You should also have signage up that details anti climb paint or security dogs on the premises. Sometimes it's simplicity of a sign can stop somebody from even attempting to break into a building.

    4. Start controlling your access. Checking out all the entry points to your building is important and that's part of your risk assessment. But you should also know about those entry points and whether or not there is any access control. Are there locks on the windows? Are there heavy duty doors on the exterior before you get to the internal doors? These are questions you should be asking and you should also be determining whether you need key cards or actual keys to get into those places. Access control isn't limited to smart technology either, because sometimes having effective and robust procedures is enough to highlight when someone is there when they really shouldn't be.



    Image source: Pexels



    1. Upgrade your key control. Do you have key control currently in your building or have you not invested in that yet? Whether you're looking at smart keys, swipe cards, or physical metal keys, you need to have a system for controlling who has them and when. Allowing a minimal volume of people to hold a key is absolutely necessary, and only those who are most trusted should be required to have access. Key audits should be completed regularly to ensure that all the keys are still held by the correct people, and if you do have swipe cards, they should be changed regularly.

    2. Hire an onsite guard. There is never a greater protection from crime than a physical person being present on the building premises. Not only does the security guard deter and prevent intrusion, but they offer a quicker response time to anybody trying to even get in. In the event that entry is gained, then they are able to give bigger volumes of evidence and call the police faster.

    3. Install a new alarm system. Motion detectors and alarm systems can be used to trigger when there has been motion or when access has been gained to the building without justified reason. Alarm should never go off when someone's just moving in and out of the building, but only when it's after hours and they shouldn't be there in the first place. Alarms can be triggered manually when someone enters a restricted area, or they can be triggered because a door or a window has been accessed when the alarm has been set. Cameras that are linked to an alarm system can be used to alert anybody on the patrol to call the police.

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