How Security Hub solutions are structured

Solution Strategies

A clear view of how advisory, operational architecture, crisis frameworks, capability development and multi-agency coordination connect into one deployable system.

Strategy anchored to field operations

Architectures that can actually be run

Crisis pathways rehearsed before they are needed

Capability uplift built into every engagement

5

Integrated strategy pillars

3

Core deployment lenses

24/7

Operational relevance

Global

Regulatory exposure profiles

How the solutions page flows

How the Solutions Page Should Now Flow

The Solutions page is anchored around five strategy pillars. Each one answers a different question for high-exposure environments — from what you should do, to how you structure, rehearse and coordinate it.

01
Entry strategy

Strategic Security Advisory

Board-level and executive decision support

02
Architecture

Operational Architecture & Risk Structuring

How environments are wired for control

03
Crisis & escalation

Crisis & Escalation Framework Design

When risk becomes an incident

04
New — capability

Capability Development for High-Exposure Environments

Structured, discipline-building training programs

05
Multi-agency layer

Multi-Agency Coordination Support

Interfaces between agencies, regulators and operators

01Strategic Security Advisory

Board-level clarity in complex exposure environments

Advisory structures that translate complex threat environments into clear, sequenced options for boards, regulators and senior leadership — without losing operational detail.

What this pillar answers

  • • How should leadership think about exposure, escalation and resilience over a 12–36 month horizon?
  • • Which scenarios actually matter for this environment and which are just noise?

Typical outputs

  • Board-ready threat and exposure maps.
  • Prioritized security roadmaps linked to budget cycles.
  • Decision notes for regulators and oversight bodies.
02

Operational Architecture & Risk Structuring

Architectures that people can actually run

Design and calibration of security architectures, risk registers and control frameworks that can be operated in real time by field teams — not just presented on consulting slides.

What it answers

  • • How should controls, sensors, people and processes be wired so they can actually be run?
  • • Where are the gaps between policy, technology and frontline behaviour?

Typical outputs

  • Target-state operational architecture diagrams.
  • Control inventories tied to risk registers.
  • Run books and interface definitions.

Layers

  • Control layer — sensors, thresholds.
  • People layer — roles, coverage.
  • Process layer — run books, escalation.
Pillar 03

Crisis & Escalation Framework Design

Escalation ladders, command pathways and decision matrices that hold under pressure — across time zones and multi-agency environments.

1

What this pillar answers

  • Who decides what, at which escalation level, and how is that decision documented under time pressure?
  • How do command centres, regulators, corporate leadership and field teams communicate under stress?
2

Typical outputs

  • Escalation ladders mapped against incident types.
  • Command-and-control playbooks.
  • Drill scripts and post-incident review frameworks.
New · 04

Capability Development for High-Exposure Environments

Security Hub advisory engagements frequently operate within environments characterized by elevated exposure, regulatory sensitivity and layered authority structures. Capability development is designed around that reality — not as generic classroom material.

Operational discipline within

  • Sensitive installations
  • Airline and aviation operational environments
  • Critical infrastructure facilities
  • Government-linked facilities
  • High-profile hospitality and public venues

Structured response capacity

  • Aviation-related threat models
  • Suspicious behavior recognition
  • Risk prevention methodologies
  • Escalation control frameworks
  • Crisis command coordination
  • Multi-agency interface discipline

Programs are grounded in practical operational experience and aligned with structured governance frameworks developed through advisory engagements.

Scenario-based simulations may be incorporated to reflect aviation-specific or infrastructure-specific operational realities.

Capability development remains engagement-specific and structurally aligned with advisory outcomes.

View Academy pathways
05

Multi-Agency Coordination Support

Design and rehearsal of coordination structures that allow multiple agencies to share situational pictures, decide and act without delay.

InterfacesJoint proceduresConsolidation

What this pillar answers · Typical outputs

  • • How do agencies share a single situational picture during an incident?
  • • How are responsibilities and hand-offs structured so no signal is lost?
  • Multi-agency coordination charters and interface maps.
  • Joint operating procedures and notification matrices.
  • Rehearsal programs and after-action consolidation.