Oculus » Security Services » Office Security
We assess your building’s access points, floor plan, occupancy patterns, restricted areas and the specific vulnerabilities before recommending a security provision.
Officers are briefed on your building’s access hierarchy, restricted zone protocols, your visitor management procedures and the professional conduct standard expected in your specific workplace before the first shift begins.
Your account manager reviews incident logs, monitors security performance and adjusts the provision as your occupancy patterns, hybrid working model, building configuration or security requirements change.
All officers hold a current SIA Door Supervisor or Security Guard licence.
SIA Approved Contractor Scheme status for Security Guarding and Key Holding.
Access management, floor patrols, restricted area oversight, visitor control, CCTV monitoring, after-hours contractor escort.
Business hours, evenings, nights and 24/7. Patrol discipline adjusted to hybrid occupancy patterns.
Written incident logs, access records and security reports for facilities management and compliance teams.
Wirral, Liverpool, Chester, Deeside, Knowsley, Warrington and the wider North West.
GDPR-aware physical security and confidential area management: Data protection obligations under UK GDPR extend explicitly to physical access controls. Server rooms, finance departments, HR record stores and legal file archives all require physical security oversight as part of an organisation’s information governance framework.
Hybrid working adaptation: Office occupancy in the current working environment is variable in ways that pre-2020 fixed-schedule security planning does not address. A building operating at 35% occupancy on a Thursday presents a different security risk profile from the same building at full attendance on a Monday: different floor areas are active, different access points are in use, and the extended-occupancy periods created by early starters and late leavers vary by day.
Professional conduct in a corporate environment: The conduct standard required of a security officer in a corporate or professional workplace is different from that in a retail or industrial setting. Officers interact daily with senior management, external clients, professional staff and board-level visitors who form assessments of the organisation partly based on the conduct of the people they encounter in the building.
Office security has changed materially in the past five years. Hybrid working has created a more variable occupancy profile that requires security planning calibrated to actual presence rather than assumed attendance. After-hours vulnerability has increased as the range of building service providers accessing commercial buildings outside working hours has grown – cleaning contractors, maintenance engineers, IT teams, fire safety testers and energy management contractors all require access during periods when the management oversight present during normal operations is absent. Effective office security accounts for both dimensions: the variability of daytime occupancy and the specific risks of after-hours access.
An officer briefed to escort after-hours contractors, monitor access during low-occupancy periods and maintain floor patrols calibrated to where people actually are in the building is providing a security service matched to how offices actually work today.
The North West’s commercial office estate spans several distinct building types, each with a specific security profile. Grade A managed office buildings in Liverpool city centre and Birkenhead waterfront create multi-tenancy environments where the access arrangements of one occupier affect every other organisation in the building and where a shared entry concierge must balance the security requirements of multiple tenants simultaneously.
Business park office buildings across Wirral and Cheshire are typically lower-rise, more independently accessed and often have on-site car parking that introduces a perimeter and vehicle access dimension alongside the building access control requirement.
Corporate headquarters and large single-occupier commercial buildings create a third profile: multiple floors, dedicated restricted areas for finance, HR and IT infrastructure, potentially 24/7 occupancy in server rooms and operations centres, and a security requirement that covers the full building perimeter as well as the internal access control hierarchy.
Independently verified SIA Approved Contractor Scheme status. The professional standard for security operating in corporate and commercial workplace environments.
Every officer in your building is directly employed by Oculus – vetted, briefed and managed by the company you contracted.
Officers briefed on restricted zone management and the data protection rationale behind physical access controls.
Security provision and patrol patterns adjusted to actual building occupancy rather than a fixed schedule. Coverage reflects the office as people use it, not as it was configured pre-2020.
Wirral, Liverpool, Chester, Deeside, Knowsley, Warrington and the wider North West from our Bromborough headquarters.
The North West’s commercial offices range from Grade A managed buildings in Liverpool city centre, business park campuses across Wirral and Cheshire, and professional services offices in historic building stock across Chester. This creates a diverse range of building environments with different access dynamics, different occupancy patterns and different physical security challenges. A provider who works across this geography daily brings building-type familiarity to a contract that a national operator with occasional North West deployments cannot accumulate.
The practical account management advantage of local proximity is most visible when the working environment changes and security needs to change with it. When a North West organisation shifts its working model, expands into additional floors, changes its cleaning contractor arrangement or introduces new after-hours access requirements, the account manager responsible for the security contract needs to assess the implications and update the provision quickly. A locally based account manager who can visit the building, walk the affected areas and brief officers on the updated requirements within the same week is a different operational proposition from one who manages the update remotely and dispatches updated briefing documents by email.
For organisations operating across multiple North West office locations, the consistency of a single security provider covering all sites from one management structure has real operational value. Incident reporting across the estate follows a single format. Officer briefing standards are consistent regardless of which site the officer is working. GDPR-related restricted area protocols are applied uniformly across every building in the estate. Oculus manages multi-site office security across the North West as a core capability, with the same account management standards, officer briefing processes and incident documentation applied across every client building regardless of size or location.