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Employees should feel that they have a secure place to work. Employers
should feel that company property is secure in the care of their workers.
Taking simple precautions can help eliminate any invitation and opportunity
for criminal activity.
Visitors & General Security Measures
- Know staff in other nearby businesses and be aware of their schedules.
- Look at and greet all who enter your business.
- Ensure all doors other than the main entrance are secured.
- Make certain windows are not obscured so that passersby can see
in.
- Make sure there is a clear exit route from the service desk to the
door.
- Never assume that a stranger wandering in the building is a member
of the staff. Always offer assistance.
- Never leave anyone alone in the office. Check by telephone to see
if someone can see them.
- Never allow visitors to wander freely about the business. Have the
person whom they want to see come to the front office area and escort
the individual to the meeting area.
- Have a visitor log book and policy on issuing visitor tags that
limit access to certain areas and hours of the day.
- If you encounter an individual while working late or alone, indicate
to that person that you are not alone. Say something like, "My
supervisor will be right with you and should be able to assist you."
- Keep personal information private. Avoid discussing where you live,
after-work or vacation plans in front of customers, new coworkers
or anyone in general with whom you are not comfortable.
- Install a spare phone in the storage room.
- Install an alarm, (preferably both audible and monitored). Have
alarm buttons in strategic spots; i.e. panic buttons at the reception
area.
- Install surveillance cameras that will monitor the front entrance,
the reception area, and other areas that are accessible to the public.
Valuables and Personal Belongings
- Never leave valuables, purses or wallets tucked behind counters
or on desks. Take them with you.
- If you are supplied with a locker, use it. And lock it. Keep the
key or combination with you or in a secure place. If there are no
lockers, join with other workers to make sure that a safe place is
provided for your personal belongings.
- Lock away personal letterhead and business cards to avoid use by
unauthorized people.
Classified Information
- Clear all desks of classified information every night and place
everything in locked cabinets or desks. Ensure all classified information
is shredded after its use.
- Outgoing classified or restricted information should be enclosed
and sealed with the addition of "Personal" or "To be
opened by addressee only."
- Store classified information on separate diskettes and label them
"classified." These disks should be secured when not required.
- Terminals should be locked after hours. Passwords should not be
written on any user guide, manual, etc.
- Access to classified information on the computer should be restricted
and logged.
- Dont disclose confidential information to a stranger, no matter
how important the person appears. Report such requests to your supervisors.
Equipment and Supplies
- Mark equipment for easy identification in the event of theft or
damage. Maintain an inventory of all marked items.
- The Sonoma County Sheriffs Department can assist you by issuing
OANs (Owner Applied Numbers) to business equipment or property.
- Lock up audio/visual equipment when not in use.
- Select an individual whose responsibility is supplies.
- Secure spare and master keys in locked cabinets.
Access
- Restrict office keys to those who need them. Maintain a record of
keys including issue and return dates, name and signature of recipient
and an outline of the consequences should an important key be missing.
- Establish a rule that keys are not to be hidden or left unguarded
on desks or cabinets and enforce that rule.
- Have a procedure in place for collecting keys and identification
from terminating employees.
- Treat doors with coded locking systems as you would a key. Codes
are released to appropriate individuals only. Have a procedure in
place for the release of these codes.
Security Outside the Office and on Business Trips
- Let your workplace know your schedule and where you are at any given
time.
- If its necessary to meet new contacts out of the workplace,
choose a public place. Avoid having new contacts walk you to your
car, home or hotel room.
- When entering an elevator, stand next to the controls. If you feel
uncomfortable about a person in the elevator, exit on the next floor
or push all the buttons. Be careful not to push the stop or emergency
button.
- If it is necessary to take a business trip, make sure reservations
are guaranteed at your hotel.
- Purchase a portable alarm that you can place on the room door.
- When checking into a hotel, hand over a business card to the reservations
desk instead of speaking your name so a stranger will not be able
to use your name.
- Leave instructions not to give out your name or room number, and
never enter a hotel room if you suspect someone is inside. If you
are in a motel, try to obtain a room close to the front desk or managers
office, or on the second level or above.
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