The Protective Circle: A Comprehensive Framework for Executive Protection Excellence
By Christian West and Telia Garner
()
About this ebook
With insights only lived experience can provide, seasoned security pro Christian West shares lessons learned from years of protecting some of corporate America's most promi
Christian West
Christian West is an executive protection architect and entrepreneur with decades of international experience. He has successfully founded, led, and sold two leading executive protection companies, AS Solution and West Security. A sought-after speaker, EP trainer, and security advisor in Europe and the United States, Christian is an active blogger who has written dozens of blogs and two bestselling books on executive protection. Christian founded Asgaard Technologies to bring to market ProtectionManager, the world's first app suite designed exclusively for the executive protection industry. He is also an advisor in several security technology companies. Christian founded EP Access in 2021 to provide high-quality training for EP professionals.
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The Protective Circle - Christian West
Praise for The Protective Circle
"The Protective Circle is an important book for anyone involved in delivering, managing, or receiving executive protection. It’s a terrific optimization of Christian’s first two books with critical NEW updates and additional material. The content in this book plays an important, unique role in the industry — teaching people how to start, fix, and run professional executive protection programs. These important concepts are delivered in a streamlined format that helps readers actually use and implement them. Christian has always had uncanny passion and intuition about protecting people. The Protective Circle is a masterclass I consider to be required reading for anyone in, or thinking of joining, the executive protection industry."
— Brian Jantzen, Strategic Advisor, Builder, Coach, Co-author of Corporate Executive Protection and Public Figures, Private Lives
"From a new EP manager in a corporate setting to an experienced Security Professional, there’s a lot to learn here regardless of your background. Practicing the principles identified in The Protective Circle will give you a competitive advantage over others who think EP is nothing more than being a 'bodyguard.'
"The Protective Circle professionalizes the EP industry and gives you recognition as an expert. As expected from Christian, all the elements of professional EP are here for you to embrace and understand. Assess your EP knowledge before and after reading The Protective Circle to mark the growth it entails. You may wonder, How do I sell this to the principal or to company management? Don’t worry, it’s all here."
— Ray O’Hara, Protection Professional
"When we entered the US market in 2017, our primary concerns were understanding the industry landscape and identifying the influencers driving the success of the top EP teams. The Protective Circle is a comprehensive guide to everything we wish we had known at the outset. It demystifies the industry’s workings and illustrates how its various components interconnect. I highly recommend The Protective Circle to any agent aspiring to leadership and entrepreneurs aiming to enter the Executive Protection industry. It offers invaluable insights that will save readers time and effort by elucidating the framework behind the country’s most effective EP teams."
— Pablo Ortiz-Monasterio, Founder of AS3 Driver Training
The
Protective
Circle
A Comprehensive Framework for Executive Protection Excellence
by Christian West
How2Conquer logo. Created and published by How2Conquer.Published by How2Conquer
Atlanta, Georgia
www.how2conquer.com
How2Conquer is an imprint of White Deer Publishing, LLC
www.whitedeerpublishing.net
Protective Circle© 2024 by Christian West
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means — for example, electronic, photocopy, recording — without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
First edition, March 2024
Ebook edition created 2024
Illustrations and cover design by Telia Garner
Edited by Lauren Kelliher, Terry Dunne, Charlotte Bleau
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
Print ISBN 978-1-945783-26-5
Ebook ISBN 978-1-945783-35-7
For information about special discounts available for bulk purchases, contact How2Conquer special sales www.how2conquer.com/bulk-orders
Contents
Introduction: The Foundations of Quality in Executive Protection
Section 1: Necessity, Nature, and Scope of Executive Protection Programs
Chapter 1-1: Executive protection is risk management made personal
Chapter 1-2: The Protective Circle — a comprehensive approach to mitigating personal security risks
Chapter 1-3: Why every corporation and ultra-high-net-worth family should have an executive protection strategy
Chapter 1-4: The questions boards of directors must ask before mandating an executive protection program
Chapter 1-5: How to determine appropriate staffing levels
Chapter 1-6: What’s the best way for corporations and family offices to source executive protection services?
Section 2: Managing the Executive Protection Program
Chapter 2-1: The executive protection ecosystem in corporate settings
Chapter 2-2: The executive protection ecosystem in high-net-worth families
Chapter 2-3: Setting objectives for the executive protection program
Chapter 2-4: Organizing the executive protection program
Chapter 2-5: Motivating and communicating with the executive protection team
Chapter 2-6: Measuring the performance of the corporate executive protection team
Chapter 2-7: Connecting the dots between regulations, standards, policies, and procedures — and their operational applications in executive protection
Chapter 2-8: How to write an executive protection strategy
Section 3: The Importance of Training
Chapter 3-1: Why training matters
Chapter 3-2: Separating the hard and soft skills of executive protection — and introducing tradecraft
Chapter 3-3: Training and the 10 protective capabilities
Chapter 3-4: Soft skills are hard
Chapter 3-5: The importance and challenges of sustainment training
Section 4: Managing Changes in Executive Protection Programs
Chapter 4-1: Starting up an executive protection program
Chapter 4-2: Turning around a security program that’s in trouble
Chapter 4-3: Realigning a protective program that needs to change course
Chapter 4-4: Sustaining an effective executive protection program
Wrap Up & Resources
Glossary
About the Author
Introduction:
The Foundations of Quality in Executive Protection
The executive protection industry is rapidly expanding, driven by the growing demand for personal security in an increasingly complex and uncertain world. However, despite the industry’s growth in size, number of programs, and professionalization, there still exist many misconceptions about the contemporary practice of executive protection.
For one thing, we still run into many people who associate high-end personal protection with stereotypical perceptions of either the US Secret Service or more-brawn-than-brain bodyguards with a penchant for punching paparazzi. For another, even industry insiders don’t always agree on what constitutes good personal protection, which qualifications and certifications should be mandatory for agents and managers, or what distinguishes the best programs from the second best. This lack of standardization and consensus on evidence-based best practices hinders the industry's ability to establish clear benchmarks for excellence. It also perpetuates many misunderstandings between clients and providers, within the corporations and family offices that are the biggest users of our services, and even among the people who are the backbone of the industry.
In The Protective Circle, I aim to address these miscomprehensions by digging into what I perceive to be the fundamentals of quality in executive protection and presenting these as straightforwardly as possible. Drawing on more than 30 years of experience working with some of the largest and most complex executive protection programs in the world, The Protective Circle aims to establish a common frame of reference for protective excellence for a wide range of executive protection stakeholders on both sides of the customer/provider divide.
Among customers, two main target groups emerge: family offices and corporations. Different as they are, within both these types of organizations a range of stakeholders play similar and crucial roles in enabling good protection. These always include the principal who requires protection, of course, as well as executive assistants responsible for planning and scheduling the principal’s time. They might also include Chief Security Officers (CSOs) or other C-suite players that influence the frames that define the protective program, as well as many other individuals working in security and risk management roles. Procurement personnel responsible for vendor selection should also find The Protective Circle helpful.
On the provider side, the book is aimed at anyone seeking to deliver quality executive protection services. Whether they’re owners, directors, managers, team leads, or the agents providing the day-to-day protection, The Protective Circle is intended to offer insights and guidance for all levels of involvement in the hope that they’ll be able to use some of its ideas to up their own game.
I’m here to share what I’ve learned so far. Some of this experience comes from running very large programs; some derives from working with much smaller clients. I gained much of this experience by founding and operating two successful executive protection companies including AS Solution, which was one of the largest private executive protection companies globally at the time of its sale in 2017. I’ve worked with exceptional companies, vendors, and individuals. I’ve also encountered less impressive counterparts. All of this experience has formed my understanding of what distinguishes good executive protection from mediocre practices.
In The Protective Circle, I aim to introduce new concepts and perspectives that build upon the foundations laid in my two previous books. In that connection, I wish to acknowledge the invaluable contributions of a few people. First, thanks to Brian Jantzen, a long-time collaborator who has provided unique insights into executing and managing good executive protection programs. Brian co-authored my first book, Corporate Executive Protection: An Introduction for Corporations and Security Professionals, and my second book, Public Figures, Private Lives: An Introduction to Protective Security for High Net Worth Individuals and Family Offices. I would also like to extend my gratitude to Ivor Terret and Jared Van Driessche, two professionals with whom I’ve also worked for years, who helped write my second book.
Why write this third book now? After selling AS Solution and undergoing a few subsequent mergers, I decided it was time to take a break from more than 300 travel days per year. During this hiatus, I pursued my passion for developing talent and established a company providing online training solutions — a learning alternative I believe the industry lacked. As I reflected on my future endeavors, I recognized the need for a renewed focus on enhancing the quality of executive protection services. With this in mind, I began digging into the core drivers of protective excellence and the contours of The Protective Circle began to take shape.
The Protective Circle represents my current thinking on what constitutes quality executive protection. Keeping what still works from my first two books and endeavoring to further distill the essence of good protection, I’ve integrated a few basic but powerful ideas that I hope will help dispel persistent misconceptions of executive protection for corporations and family offices and contribute to moving the industry forward.
These three core drivers of protective excellence will be familiar to many. Some will consider them obvious or even banal. That’s fine with me — as long as these quality drivers continue to inform protective programs regardless of their size and budget, and as long as they work together in an integrated way. Here they are:
1.Quality executive protection is risk-based: At its core, executive protection is a personalized form of risk management. Understanding how to assess and mitigate the specific personal security risks our principals face is crucial to designing and implementing quality programs. The first chapter invites readers to understand executive protection within the broader context of risk management, and why ongoing and proactive updates of the threats and vulnerabilities that constitute personal risk should always dynamically inform executive protection programs.
2.Quality executive protection is comprehensive: Excellence in executive protection requires a holistic, 360-degree approach that covers all aspects of personal security, not just the most obvious ones or the ones we know from popular media. To clarify the importance of this comprehensiveness, I introduce a new framework, the Protective Circle, a model that explains the importance of holistic thinking regarding not only our principals’ varied (and often misunderstood) security needs, but also the multiple categories of threats and vulnerabilities they typically face — and the protective capabilities required to mitigate the resulting risks. I’ve found that the Protective Circle is a simple way to make clear to all kinds of stakeholders what executive protection is, how it works, and why it works best when approached comprehensively. It’s also a helpful tool for planning new protective programs and evaluating or improving existing ones.
3.Good executive protection relies on well-trained personnel: As I’ve said many times before, executive protection is a people business. Excellence in executive protection is always a synergy between highly trained professionals, efficient processes, and cutting-edge technology. But it all starts with good people who have good training. That’s why I include chapters that dig into both the hard and soft skills that executive protection professionals must master, how these capabilities play a role in the Protective Circle, and why training must always be a priority for successful programs.
These core quality drivers are interdependent. You can’t provide quality protection by choosing just one or two of them — you need all three. Good programs are good because providers continue to appreciate these quality drivers as they build and maintain protective programs across changing locations and times, and even when no one’s looking.
I’ll delve into these drivers and examine their inter-relatedness in various ways in the coming chapters, but I also explore numerous other facets of good executive protection. I invite you to embark on this journey with me as I try to make clear what constitutes quality executive protection and seek to further professionalize the industry. Your feedback, comments, questions, and suggestions are highly valued as we work together to enable more excellence in executive protection.
Enjoy the book!
— Christian West
Section 1:
Necessity, Nature, and Scope of Executive Protection Programs
The last thing Bob wanted was executive protection.
Bob never really wanted to be extremely wealthy. Things just worked out that way, as they sometimes do with talented entrepreneurs. He was highly intelligent, creative, and crazy about coding. He had a good idea, and the timing was right. If you asked Bob, he’d say he got lucky. The real geniuses aren’t usually the ones who claim to be smart.
As the founder of what would become a highly successful startup and then a major corporation, Bob worked hard and often. Still, he found time to pursue other interests like riding his mountain bike, cooking, and hanging out with friends. Despite the ever-growing valuations of his company, he considered himself to be a regular Joe
and disdained what he considered to be the affectations of the super-rich: drivers, personal chefs, security, and all the rest.
The money piled in, and Bob felt good sharing it. He donated to charities and would walk down the street handing out $100 bills to unhoused people. There were thousands of unhoused people in his city, and while he knew he couldn’t help all of them, passing out some C-notes every once in a while seemed the least he could do.
Soon enough, word of the guy with lots of money spread on the street. Crowds of people would gather when Bob was around. He began to be recognized almost everywhere he went, and people seemed to like to interact with him — for their own reasons, of course. After someone got ahold of his cell phone number, Bob started to get calls from strangers. At first only a few, then many. Most of the calls had to do with requests for money and favors; others offered unwanted business advice; some were antagonistic; none made him feel any better.
Bob didn’t enjoy the incessant attention. In fact, it made him uneasy and eventually anxious. He changed his phone number and stopped handing out cash on the street. But the level of public scrutiny only grew as his company went from success to success, his personal wealth skyrocketed, and the media shined an ever-larger spotlight on him.
Calls came in from obscure friends
and acquaintances. His company’s HR department began to require background checks and screenings for new employees. Unsolicited investment opportunities poured in. Lawyers started talking about liabilities that Bob had never imagined; now he had to protect himself from them. How was he suddenly responsible for so many potential mishaps?
Bob had been exposed to security at corporate events but wanted nothing to do with it in his private life. For one thing, he didn’t think he was special enough for any bad actors to be particularly interested in him. For another, who wanted all those goonish-looking bodyguards around? He’d seen his share of news reports about celebrity bodyguards punching photographers and thought both sides of the fight were idiots. Maybe the whole scene with burly guys in black suits, dark sunglasses, and squiggly earpieces worked for the president, but Bob didn’t even own a suit and wouldn’t be caught dead in a blacked-out Suburban. He enjoyed his lifestyle and didn’t want to be encumbered by worries about his safety or any extra security measures.
Still, when he built a new home, he agreed to his company’s and contractor’s advice that the building site get some guards. Leaving the building site and increasingly valuable fixtures unwatched at night was a risk the contractor didn’t want to take, and he couldn’t have his own tradespeople stay there 24/7. What began as a guy guarding the construction site eventually became full-time residential security. Bob’s wife didn’t want to deal with all the strangers knocking on the door of their new home; she sometimes felt unsafe when he was away and didn’t want the kids to notice anything.
Business was good, valuations were even better. After a while, Bob wasn’t just rich but super rich and very well known. His company was often in the press, and although he didn’t look for controversy, his views became news. He couldn’t go anywhere without being recognized. Even when he was riding a bike, people had no hesitation in chatting him up and slowing him down. He could be accosted on