04 / Unarmed FAQ
Questions we
hear every week.
The eight questions that come up on almost every unarmed RFP, site walk, and scope-of-work call — answered directly with the specifics a property manager actually needs.
Q · 01What's the difference between armed and unarmed officers?+
An unarmed officer carries no firearm and operates under TN Private Protective Services (PPS) registration for unarmed security, while an armed officer holds a separate armed endorsement that requires an additional 8 hours of firearms training and annual range qualification. Scope of authority is identical on paper: both are private citizens with the powers of observation, reporting, and citizen's arrest — but unarmed officers are staffed specifically for deterrence and documentation rather than kinetic response. Most white-collar sites — office towers, retail, hospitality, multifamily — are best served unarmed.
Q · 02Do you do front-desk concierge?+
Yes — our concierge variant is our most-requested unarmed configuration. Officers wear a blazer-and-slacks Class-A uniform instead of the tactical polo, greet guests by name where possible, handle package intake through our visitor-management portal, coordinate with building engineering on vendor access, and still write a full daily activity report. Concierge officers are screened specifically for hospitality temperament — we test for it in the second interview, and roughly half of our applicants for concierge posts never make it past that screen.
Q · 03What if a situation escalates beyond an unarmed officer?+
Every unarmed post has a written escalation matrix built into the post orders: observe, report to dispatch, call 911 if warranted, document. Our Memphis dispatch simultaneously rolls our nearest armed mobile-patrol unit on any Priority-2 or higher incident, and median armed backup on an active post runs 11 to 14 minutes statewide. Officers are explicitly trained not to pursue, not to intervene physically beyond reasonable self-defense, and not to detain — the job is to keep eyes on, keep dispatch informed, and hand off to TN or MS law enforcement cleanly.
Q · 04Do unarmed officers carry handcuffs or batons?+
By default, no. Our standard unarmed loadout is a radio, body-worn camera, flashlight, and OC pepper spray (where the client site-plan permits). Handcuffs and expandable batons are available as a site-specific uplift for posts with a documented need — typically transit hubs, large-format retail, or medical de-escalation environments — and only for officers who have completed the additional intermediate-weapons training. We quote that explicitly on the proposal; it is never a hidden line item, and we will not deploy intermediate weapons to a post that hasn't asked for them.
Q · 05How are incidents logged?+
Every officer ends shift by completing a Daily Activity Report (DAR) in
ByDuty — the guard-management platform Shield of Steel runs firm-wide. Incidents requiring immediate attention flow through Memphis dispatch and post automatically to the client portal with a time stamp, body-cam clip, and officer statement; routine DARs consolidate overnight and land in your inbox before 9:00 AM the next business day. Every report is supervisor-reviewed before it's released.
Q · 06What uniform do unarmed officers wear?+
Three standard options. The default is a navy tactical polo with embroidered Shield of Steel shield and dress slacks — appropriate for retail, multifamily, and back-of-house corporate posts. The Class-A uniform (button-down, tie, blazer, slacks) is used for Class-A office lobbies and hospitality concierge. The third is a high-visibility yellow polo with reflective striping for loading docks, construction sites, and exterior access-control posts. All uniforms are sourced through Flying Cross and inventoried at our Memphis facility on Lamar Avenue; the officer does not pay for the uniform and does not launder it at home.
Q · 07Can I request a specific officer?+
Yes, and we actively encourage it. Every account gets a named primary officer, a named secondary, and a regional float, and you are welcome to name a preferred candidate from day one or after a two-week trial. Our retention rate on unarmed standing posts runs at 91 percent at 12 months, well above the industry median of roughly 45 percent, so the same face is usually on the post for years — not weeks. If chemistry with an officer isn't working, the client liaison can swap them within 48 hours, no questions asked, no contract drama, no pro-rate-refund argument.
Q · 08What's your hourly rate range for unarmed officers?+
Unarmed post rates in TN and MS currently run from $28 per hour for a standard weekday daytime post up to roughly $42 per hour for overnight concierge in a Class-A building or a hospitality environment that requires hospitality-trained staff. The spread depends on shift length, day-of-week, training uplifts (AED/CPR, de-escalation-certified, intermediate weapons), uniform class, and whether the post includes reporting extras like visitor-management portal administration or package-intake logging. Every quote is line-itemed: you see the base rate, the training uplifts, the supervisor-visit cadence, and the portal fee separately — never bundled and never surprised.