IFPO-CPO Training Experience

Originally published on LinkedIn · August 2020.

As part of my Resume Bucket List Challenge, I have recognized how unstructured and excuse-filled my career growth has been due to my lack of planning and strategic focus. One of countless examples: a few years ago, I got to meet Sandi Davies at the ASIS International GSX conference and was intrigued by IFPO — the International Foundation for Protection Officers — and their training and certification program. Well, since April I worked through 90+ hours of their training, and a couple of weeks ago I passed their Certified Protection Officer (CPO) certification.

For someone who has been blessed in the security industry for over 26 years, I wish I had taken this course early on — even if I did not need to certify. But Jim, you are not a “mall cop,” right? Right. I have never been in those professional shoes. But I am a passionate converged security, all-hazards security professional who has had many occasions where my mission was a guard / protection officer / personal protection professional role. After this training, I realize the scope of this part of the security profession can be more comprehensive than TV leads you to believe.

I realized that if I am in the security industry — in a generic sense — I am a “protection officer,” regardless of whether I am protecting information, personnel, or facilities. This training is well-focused on the more classic boots-on-the-ground officer, but it does well in covering a wide variety of security basics — the same basics I cover when mentoring up-and-coming security professionals.

This past week I helped two young men through my “I want to get into Security” class. I will now be updating that class to include IFPO’s training in my recommendations.

It is far from the be-all-end-all of training — but it is a great foundation class. I also realized that when I influence, hire, or evaluate “guard” services, this training and certification will be a differentiator that I encourage my Level 2, 3, and 4 (Texas, USA nomenclature) service providers and officers to include in their standard onboarding.

For amazing military and law enforcement heroes looking to move into private sector security: evaluate this training early on as part of your Resume Bucket List.

Thank you Sandi and the IFPO team for your patience and continued support of the security industry.


View the original article on LinkedIn →

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