In today’s unpredictable world, the risk of encountering an armed offender in the workplace,
while rare, is a reality that businesses must take seriously. From retail and hospitality to
healthcare and education, no sector is immune to the threat of sudden violence. As incidents
involving weapons have increased in recent years, the need for comprehensive, evidence-based training has never been more critical.
The Dangers of Going It Alone: The Vigilante Factor
When faced with a life-threatening situation, the instinct to protect one’s staff, customers, or property can be overwhelming. However, business owners and employees attempting to take down an armed offender without proper training can put themselves and others at even greater risk.
The “vigilante factor”—the urge to intervene directly—may seem heroic, but data and law enforcement experience show it is often deadly and counterproductive.
Specialist police and tactical response teams train for years to manage the chaos and split- second decisions required in active armed offender scenarios.
Even for professionals, solo intervention is extremely dangerous, with a high likelihood of serious injury or death. For untrained civilians, the risks multiply: confusion, panic, and lack of situational awareness can escalate the threat, endanger bystanders, and hinder police response.
In some cases, well-intentioned intervention has led to tragic outcomes, including mistaken identity or accidental harm.
What Proper Training Delivers
Active armed offender training, like that offered by Resolution Education, empowers employees and business owners to respond calmly, make informed decisions, and prioritise survival. Our program teaches participants to:
- Recognise the early warning signs of potential violence and suspicious behaviour,
enabling early intervention or avoidance - Follow established protocols, such as “Escape, Hide, Tell,” rather than confronting the
offender - Use scenario-based drills to build muscle memory, reduce panic, and improve decision-making under extreme stress
- Communicate effectively with police and emergency services, ensuring a coordinated
and a safe response - Apply post-incident recovery strategies, including first aid and emotional support for staff
and customers
These skills are not about turning civilians into heroes but about maximising the chances of survival for everyone present. Training also helps businesses develop tailored emergency action plans and conduct regular safety audits, further reducing risk.
The urge to act in a crisis is natural, but untrained intervention can have devastating consequences. The most effective way to protect your people and your business is not through bravado, but through preparation.
Invest in proper, scenario-based active armed offender training for your team.
Encourage a culture of safety, vigilance, and clear-headed response—not
vigilantism.
Remember: your role is to safeguard lives, not to confront danger head-on. Let the professionals handle the threat, and ensure your staff are equipped to survive and support each other until help arrives.
Contact us by phone or through the form below to talk about customised active armed offender training for your workplace.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does scenario-based training help staff avoid the impulse to confront an armed offender?
Scenario-based training builds muscle memory for prioritising safe escape routes, barricading techniques, and silent communication, reducing panic-driven decisions to engage the threat. Repeated drills make survival instincts automatic, overriding the natural urge to “do something heroic” in high-stress moments.
What early warning signs does active armed offender training teach staff to recognise?
Training covers recognising suspicious behaviour such as testing security measures, unusual aggression patterns, or probing questions about layouts and exits. Early awareness allows staff to alert authorities or implement protocols before an incident fully develops, potentially preventing escalation.
How should staff communicate with police during an active armed offender response?
Staff should provide precise details on the offender’s description, location, direction of movement, weapons observed, and number of affected people while remaining silent and hidden until police confirm their arrival. Effective, calm reporting coordinates the professional response without compromising personal safety.
Which workplaces are most at risk for active armed offender incidents according to the training?
High-risk workplaces include financial institutions, retail spaces, healthcare facilities, educational settings, government buildings, and transportation hubs due to crowds, valuables, or contentious interactions that attract potential threats. Tailored training addresses each environment’s unique vulnerabilities.
What is the “Escape, Hide, Tell” protocol in active armed offender training?
“Escape” prioritises immediate evacuation if a safe path exists, “Hide” involves barricading in a defensible position with silenced devices if escape isn’t viable, and “Tell” means relaying critical information to authorities. This sequence maximises survival without encouraging confrontation.
How long does active armed offender training typically take and what formats are available?
Sessions run from 1-3 hours in face-to-face, virtual, or blended formats, using discussions, videos, and light drills suitable for all fitness levels. Customisation ensures content fits organisational schedules without requiring physical exertion beyond basic movement.
What post-incident procedures are covered in active armed offender training?
Post-incident focus includes safe assembly points, injury triage, media handling, and psychological debriefs to support recovery. Training prepares staff to assist investigations while prioritising wellbeing, turning preparedness into long-term resilience.