What Is an Executive Protection Program?
Most companies do not build an executive protection program because they want one. They build one because something happened — a credible threat, a board question about duty of care, or a new executive who comes with risk. The trigger matters less than what you do next.
Beyond the Bodyguard
An executive protection program is a structured security capability. It combines threat assessment, protective intelligence, advance work, secure transportation, residential security, and travel security into a coordinated system. A single close protection agent is a person. A program is a machine.
The difference matters when something goes wrong. A person improvises. A program has contingencies documented, rehearsed, and funded before the crisis arrives.
Who Needs One
Companies in the $50M-$2B revenue range increasingly face this question. The CEO receives a credible threat. A board member asks about duty of care. A workplace violence incident raises questions about leadership security. The general counsel reads about negligent security liability and sends an email.
The answer is not always a full-time detail. Many mid-market companies need a program framework — threat assessment protocols, travel security procedures, event security standards — without a 24/7 protective team.
What a Program Includes
A mature EP program covers six operational areas:
- Threat assessment and protective intelligence — identifying and monitoring risks before they materialize
- Advance work — pre-event reconnaissance and planning for any location the principal visits
- Secure transportation — route planning, driver protocols, and vehicle standards
- Residential security — physical and electronic measures at the principal’s home
- Travel security — domestic and international travel planning, hotel assessments, ground transportation
- Event security — conferences, board meetings, public appearances
The scope scales with the threat level. Not every executive needs all six areas at full capacity all the time.
The First Step
Start with a threat assessment. Understand what risks exist before designing the program around them. A program built on assumptions wastes money. A program built on assessed risk protects people.