Sia Door Supervisor training all over London

Course review:
The SIA Door Supervisor licence offers an opportunity to a rewarding career in the security industry. A Door Supervisor qualification also enables you to work as a Security Guard. A door supervisor has the luxury of working in entertainment venues where alcohol is being served, such as hotels, casinos, nightclubs and other venues. In the UK, all security industry qualifications are specified by the SIA and offered by us through Edexcel & Highfields. Our highly experienced SIA trainers will deliver only the best when it gets to security training.
The role of a Door Supervisor is, put simply, to provide a comfortable, pleasant and safe atmosphere for anyone using the premises on which he or she works. The Door Supervisor is the first, and in many cases the only, member of a security team that a customer will encounter and, as such, their job is to deter people who may pose a problem once on the premises from entering in the first place – but to do so in such a way as to not put off genuine customers who are just looking to enjoy their evening. This role is important in terms of protecting customer relations.
Much of a Door Supervisor’s role is quite straightforward – in the first instance it is about ensuring that venue policy and the law on admissions are upheld. This entails turning away people who fail to meet dress requirements or the venue’s minimum age. For those customers who meet requirements for entry, the door supervisor should greet them politely on their arrival and wish them a good evening on their departure. They also need to see that fire safety requirements, such as maximum occupancy and emergency exits, are stuck to.
As not all troublemakers are immediately apparent prior to entry, a door supervisor must also see to it that should trouble flare up inside the venue, the person or persons responsible are identified and dealt with in the correct manner using only reasonable force, and that any incidents that take place are documented as soon as they are satisfactorily dealt with. Company drugs policy and the standard drinking up period are also within the Door Supervisor’s remit, and they must ensure that at the end of the evening all customers leave the premises in an orderly fashion, checking the toilets afterwards to ensure that no-one has been left behind.
The Door Supervisor’s role, in short, is to see that order is maintained on the premises on which they work, and the relevant SIA qualifications are designed to see to it that any candidate for the role of Door Supervisor is fully conversant with the way in which this role is upheld. To this end, the course for an SIA-accredited Door Supervisor deals with a range of subjects that enable the individual seeking accreditation to perform the role to its optimum level. This range of subjects is more extensive than one may assume when they first think about the job of Door Supervision.
The course extends to thirty classroom hours and two hours of exams. The 30 hours of classroom work are split into two halves of fourteen hours, the first half being entitled “Role and Responsibilities of Door Supervisors in the Security Industry Environment”. This half covers all the hypothetical considerations of someone wishing to work as a Door Supervisor. Beginning with an introduction to their chosen role, and to the leisure and security industries in which they will make their living, this section of the course also entails ten further modules, all of which combine to give a full understanding of the legal requirements, responsibilities and entitlements of a Door Supervisor.
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Unit 1 - Working for the private security industry
Assessment Method: Multiple Choice Questions
This unit covers the following topics:
Module 1: Private Security Industry and awareness of the law.
Module 2: Health and Safety for the Private Security Operative
Module 3: Fire Safety Awareness
Module 4: Emergency Procedures
Module 5: The Private Security Industry
Module 6: Communication Skills and Customer Care
Unit 2 - Working as a SIA Licence door supervisor
Assessment Method: Multiple Choice Questions
This unit covers the following topics
Module 1: Behavioural Standards
Module 2: Civil and Criminal Law
Module 3: Searching
Module 4: Arrest
Module 5: Drugs Awareness
Module 6: Recording Incidents and Crime Preservation
Module 7: Licensing Law
Module 8: Emergency Procedures
Unit 3 - SIA Licence Conflict management
Assessment Method: Multiple Choice Questions
This unit covers the following topics
Module 1: Avoiding Conflict and Reducing Personal Risk
Module 2: Defusing Conflict
Module 3: Resolving and Learning from Conflict
Module 4: Emergency Procedures
Module 4b: Application of Communication Skills and Conflict Management for Door Supervisors
Unit 4 - Physical intervention skills for the private security industry
Assessment Method: Multiple Choice Questions / Practical Observation
This SIA unit covers the following topics
Module 1: Introduction to Physical Skills
Module 2: Disengagement Techniques
Module 3: Escorting Techniques
