Director/VP (16-20 years)

Director, Corporate Security

This role is all about setting the security vision and strategy for our entire property portfolio. You'll be the one making sure our buildings, people, and assets are safe, not just today, but for years to come. It’s a big job, shaping how we approach physical and converged security across the business, dealing with everything from new building designs to managing major incidents.

Job ID
JD-REFM-DIRSEC-006
Department
Realestate Facilities Management
NOS Level
Strategic
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
Director/VP (16-20 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Director, Corporate Security is responsible for defining, building, and running the overarching security programme for our entire real estate portfolio. This means you'll be shaping the strategy that keeps our properties, tenants, and staff safe across multiple locations, which directly impacts our operational resilience and brand reputation. You'll sit right at the top, working closely with the executive team to make sure security is baked into everything we do, from new developments to daily operations. When this role is done well, we see a significant reduction in security incidents, our properties are recognised as secure environments, and our tenants feel genuinely safe. Get it wrong, and we're looking at major financial losses, reputational damage, and, frankly, risks to people's safety. The challenge here is balancing cutting-edge security with practical, cost-effective solutions across a diverse portfolio, often dealing with legacy systems and competing priorities. The reward? You'll be building a truly secure environment, knowing your work directly protects thousands of people and millions of pounds in assets.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role drives the transformation of our security posture across the entire business unit. You'll be making decisions that directly influence our P&L, risk profile, and market standing. Your strategic choices impact how we design, build, and operate our properties, ensuring they're secure, compliant, and resilient against evolving threats. Essentially, you're safeguarding the company's future.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Overall Security Incident Reduction
  2. Desc: The year-over-year decrease in significant security incidents across the entire property portfolio.
  3. Target: 15% year-over-year reduction in reportable security incidents (e.g., major theft, unauthorised access, physical assaults).
  4. Freq: Quarterly and Annually
  5. Example: If we had 100 significant incidents last year, you'd aim for no more than 85 this year. This isn't just about counting; it's about seeing if our proactive measures are actually working.
  6. Metric: Portfolio Physical Security Risk Score Improvement
  7. Desc: The improvement in our internal risk assessment scores for physical security controls across all properties.
  8. Target: Improve portfolio physical security risk score from 75 to 85 (on a 100-point scale) within 18 months.
  9. Freq: Bi-Annually
  10. Example: After implementing new access control policies and upgrading VMS at three high-risk sites, the average risk score for those properties improved from 68 to 82. This shows strategic investment paying off.
  11. Metric: Tenant Safety & Security Satisfaction
  12. Desc: Feedback from tenants on their perception of safety and security within our properties, typically gathered through surveys.
  13. Target: Increase tenant satisfaction survey scores related to 'Safety & Security' by 10% year-over-year.
  14. Freq: Annually
  15. Example: Last year, our tenant survey showed 70% felt 'very safe'. Your goal would be to push that to 77% or more. It's about perception, yes, but that's built on real security improvements.
  16. Metric: Security Programme Budget Adherence
  17. Desc: How closely the actual security expenditure aligns with the approved annual budget for the entire corporate security programme.
  18. Target: Maintain actual spend within ±5% of the approved annual budget (£2M-£10M+).
  19. Freq: Quarterly
  20. Example: If the annual budget is £5M, you're expected to spend between £4.75M and £5.25M. No massive overruns, but also not underspending where critical needs exist.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Strategic Influence & Board Engagement
  2. Desc: Your ability to effectively communicate security risks and strategies to the executive team and the Board, influencing key business decisions.
  3. Evidence: You're regularly invited to Board Audit Committee meetings to present on security posture. Your recommendations on major security investments are consistently adopted. Executive leadership proactively seeks your input on new property acquisitions or major operational changes. They trust your judgment, basically.
  4. Metric: Team Leadership & Development
  5. Desc: The effectiveness of your leadership in building, mentoring, and retaining a high-performing security team across multiple locations.
  6. Evidence: High retention rates within your direct and indirect teams. Positive feedback in 360-degree reviews from your managers and peers. A clear succession plan for key roles. Your team members are visibly growing and taking on more responsibility.
  7. Metric: Proactive Risk Identification & Mitigation
  8. Desc: Your foresight in identifying emerging security threats (physical, cyber-physical, geopolitical) and implementing preventative measures before they become incidents.
  9. Evidence: Regularly presenting intelligence on new threat vectors to leadership. Successfully implementing controls that prevent incidents seen in competitor organisations. Your team isn't just reacting; they're anticipating and preparing.
  10. Metric: Cross-Functional Collaboration & Integration
  11. Desc: How well you work with other departments (IT, Facilities, Property Development, Legal) to embed security into their processes and achieve converged security goals.
  12. Evidence: Security requirements are included early in new construction projects. IT and physical security incident response plans are fully integrated. There are no 'silos' when it comes to security issues; everyone's on the same page.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Protecting People & Assets at Scale
  2. Daily: You get a real buzz from knowing your strategic decisions directly contribute to the safety of thousands of people across our portfolio. Seeing a new security system go live, or a successful incident drill, gives you a sense of purpose. You're driven by the tangible impact of your work on real-world safety.
  3. Motivator: Building & Mentoring High-Performing Teams
  4. Daily: You genuinely enjoy developing your managers and specialists, helping them grow their careers and tackle bigger challenges. You're motivated by seeing your team excel, knowing you've empowered them to deliver top-tier security operations. Their success is your success.
  5. Motivator: Solving Complex, Multi-faceted Challenges
  6. Daily: You thrive on untangling complicated problems that involve physical security, IT, legal, and operational aspects. The idea of designing a converged security strategy that addresses both physical and cyber-physical risks across a diverse property portfolio excites you. You don't shy away from ambiguity.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll often find yourself in the middle of a tug-of-war between security needs and business convenience or cost-cutting. You'll present a compelling case for a multi-million-pound security upgrade, only to have it deprioritised for a new marketing campaign. You'll have to deal with legacy systems that are a nightmare to secure and even harder to replace, often because 'it's always been done this way'. You might also face resistance from other departments who see security as a roadblock rather than an enabler.

Common Frustrations

  1. Constantly fighting for budget and resources, especially for proactive security measures that don't have an immediate, obvious ROI.
  2. Dealing with the political aspects of security, where executive priorities shift, or key stakeholders don't fully grasp the risk.
  3. The slow pace of change in a large organisation, especially when trying to implement new technologies or processes across many sites.
  4. Managing the fallout and reputational damage from incidents that could have been prevented with better investment or compliance.
  5. The sheer volume of regulatory and compliance requirements that constantly evolve, demanding significant oversight and adaptation.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A quiet, predictable 9-to-5 job with no urgent calls. Major incidents don't stick to business hours.
  2. A role where you're solely focused on deep technical work. You'll be more about strategy and people than configuring systems yourself.
  3. The luxury of always having full autonomy without needing to justify decisions or gain executive buy-in. You're a leader, but you still report to the C-suite.
  4. A role where you can avoid difficult conversations or challenging entrenched ways of working. You'll be a change agent, and that's rarely easy.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, high-stakes nature of incident response and crisis management can be highly engaging and stimulating, playing to strengths in hyperfocus during critical moments.
  2. The need to quickly pivot between strategic planning, operational oversight, and executive communication can suit those who thrive on variety and dynamic problem-solving.
  3. A natural inclination for innovative thinking can be a huge asset in developing novel security strategies and anticipating future threats.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Sustained focus on detailed policy documentation or lengthy compliance reports might be challenging; breaking these down into smaller, manageable chunks or using dictation tools could help.
  2. Managing a large team and numerous concurrent strategic initiatives requires strong organisational systems; support with executive assistants or project management tools could be beneficial.
  3. We can offer flexible working arrangements where possible to help manage energy levels and focus, and provide quiet spaces for deep work when needed.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Often brings strong spatial reasoning, which is fantastic for understanding physical layouts, camera placements, and designing optimal security architectures.
  2. Excellent problem-solving skills, especially in complex, non-linear situations, which is crucial for incident analysis and strategic risk assessment.
  3. Strong verbal communication and storytelling abilities, which are invaluable for presenting complex security concepts to executive and board-level audiences.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Reading and writing extensive policy documents, detailed reports, or legal compliance texts might be more time-consuming; we can provide access to proofreading software, dictation tools, and offer support from administrative staff for document preparation.
  2. We encourage the use of visual aids, diagrams, and verbal presentations over purely text-based formats for communicating key information, especially during strategic reviews.
  3. Flexible deadlines for written deliverables can be discussed, focusing on the quality and content of the strategy rather than the speed of its written production.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep, analytical approach to security systems and protocols, often spotting patterns or inconsistencies others miss, which is critical for robust risk assessment and system design.
  2. Strong adherence to logic and process, ensuring that security policies are consistently applied and that incident response plans are followed meticulously.
  3. Exceptional ability to focus on specific, complex technical details or data sets, which is invaluable for deep-dive investigations or architectural reviews.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex social dynamics and unspoken corporate politics, especially in executive-level negotiations, might be challenging; we can provide clear expectations for communication and offer coaching on stakeholder engagement strategies.
  2. Unexpected changes in strategic direction or urgent, unplanned meetings could be disruptive; we aim for clear agendas, advance notice for changes, and provide opportunities for pre-briefings.
  3. We can offer a structured onboarding plan, clear communication channels, and a quiet office environment or option for remote work to minimise sensory overload, especially during intense periods.

Sensory Considerations

Our corporate offices are generally modern and well-lit, but a Director's role involves frequent travel to various property sites, which can range from quiet office buildings to busy retail centres or industrial facilities. Expect varying noise levels, foot traffic, and social interactions. There will be periods of intense focus in meetings, balanced with site visits and independent strategic work.

Flexibility Notes

We believe in supporting our leaders to do their best work. While this role requires significant presence and collaboration, we're open to discussing flexible working patterns, including hybrid models, to accommodate individual needs. The focus is on delivering strategic outcomes, not just clocking hours.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Director, Corporate Security (OFQUAL Level 8)
  2. Responsibilities: Define the multi-year corporate security strategy and roadmap for our entire real estate portfolio, getting buy-in from the C-suite and Board. This means looking at where we are, where we need to be, and how we'll get there, typically over a 3-5 year horizon.
  3. Own the overall security risk posture for the business unit, which includes identifying, assessing, and mitigating physical, converged, and operational technology (OT) security risks across all properties. If something goes wrong, it's ultimately on you.
  4. Drive the transformation of our security capabilities, leading major programmes like the integration of physical and logical access systems or the deployment of advanced video analytics across dozens of sites. This often involves significant capital investment.
  5. Build, lead, and mentor a high-performing team of security managers and specialists, fostering a culture of continuous improvement, accountability, and professional development. You'll be responsible for their growth and making sure we have the right talent in place.
  6. Present regular security briefings and updates to the Board and executive leadership, clearly articulating our security posture, emerging threats, and the effectiveness of our programmes. They'll ask tough questions, so you need to be on top of your game.
  7. Accountable for managing the corporate security programme's P&L, typically ranging from £2M to £10M+, ensuring efficient allocation of resources and demonstrating clear ROI for security investments. Every penny counts, and you'll need to justify it.
  8. Represent the organisation externally with law enforcement, regulatory bodies, industry associations, and major security vendors, building strong relationships and staying ahead of industry trends and best practices. You're our public face for security.
  9. Supervision: You'll operate with full strategic autonomy within the business unit, reporting to the COO with monthly strategic alignment meetings. Most operational decisions are delegated to your managers, but you're ultimately accountable for their outcomes.
  10. Decision: Full strategic authority within the corporate security domain. This includes P&L responsibility for £2M-£10M+, making final decisions on major security system procurements, organisational design within your function, and hiring/firing for your direct reports. M&A involvement is common, with security integration decisions falling under your remit. Board-level decisions require COO and Board alignment, but your recommendations carry significant weight.
  11. Success: Success at this level means a demonstrable reduction in enterprise-wide security risks, a highly effective and motivated security team, and the successful execution of multi-year security transformation programmes. You'll be seen as a trusted advisor to the Board and a leader who consistently delivers on strategic objectives, protecting the company's reputation and bottom line.

Decision-Making Authority

Supercharge Your Strategic Impact: Save 10-15 Hours Weekly with AI

As a Director, your time is precious. You're not just managing; you're strategising, influencing, and leading. Imagine if you could offload some of the heavy lifting, the deep dives into data, or the initial drafts of complex reports. That's exactly where AI comes in. It's not about replacing your judgment, but augmenting it, giving you more time to focus on what truly matters: protecting our business.

ID:

Tool: Strategic Risk & Threat Intelligence Analysis

Benefit: Use AI to quickly digest vast amounts of global threat intelligence, regulatory updates, and industry reports. It can identify emerging physical and converged security risks relevant to our property portfolio, summarise key findings, and even suggest potential mitigation strategies, saving you days of research.

ID:

Tool: Security Programme Performance Optimisation

Benefit: Feed AI your security incident data, audit results, and operational metrics. It can identify hidden patterns, root causes of recurring issues, and areas where our security investments aren't delivering. This helps you optimise resource allocation and refine your strategy for maximum impact.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Executive Briefing & Board Report Drafting

Benefit: Instead of staring at a blank page, use AI to draft initial versions of your quarterly Board security reports, executive summaries, or strategic proposals. Provide key data points and talking points, and AI can structure a compelling narrative, allowing you to focus on refining the message and adding your strategic insights.

ID:

Tool: Policy & Compliance Interpretation

Benefit: Navigate the complex web of local and international security regulations with AI. Ask it to summarise the implications of a new data privacy law for our VMS retention policies or to compare our physical security standards against ISO 27001 requirements. Get actionable insights in minutes, not hours.

10-15 hours weekly Weekly time savings potential
You'll typically use 2-3 core AI tools, often integrated into existing platforms like SIEMs or productivity suites. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Director, Corporate Security →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

At this level, foundation skills aren't just about doing; they're about leading, influencing, and shaping the entire security culture. You're looking at the bigger picture, ensuring your team has the tools and guidance to excel, and that security is woven into the fabric of the business.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

You won't be hands-on with every system, but you'll need a deep, strategic understanding of how they work, how they integrate, and what their capabilities and limitations are. Your functional skills are about guiding the overall architecture and ensuring our technical solutions meet our strategic goals.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

To step into this Director role, you'll have already proven your mettle as a senior leader, likely having managed a significant security function or a large regional security programme. You're not just technically proficient; you're a seasoned leader who can think strategically, manage complex programmes, and build high-performing teams. This isn't a role for someone still learning the ropes of management; it's for someone ready to shape an entire organisation's security future.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The role of a Corporate Security Director is constantly evolving. It's not just about knowing the tech; it's about understanding its strategic implications, leading your team through change, and ensuring our organisation remains resilient in the face of new challenges. Your ability to adapt and guide will be your most valuable asset.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 16-20 years of progressive experience in corporate security, physical security, or a closely related field, with a minimum of 8-10 years in a senior leadership or management capacity, ideally overseeing a multi-site or large-scale property portfolio. We're looking for someone who has genuinely led significant security programmes, managed large teams, and dealt with high-stakes incidents at an enterprise level.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

Your experience as a Director of Corporate Security in Realestate Facilities Management is highly transferable. You could move into similar leadership roles in other large, asset-heavy industries like logistics, manufacturing, critical infrastructure, or even large public sector organisations. The core principles of protecting people, property, and information remain consistent, even if the specifics change.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

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