Site security is different from escort work in one important way: you are not following something, you are holding something. That shift in posture changes almost everything about how you operate.
In escort, your movements are dictated by your principal. In site security, you define the perimeter, the patrol pattern, and the response protocols. You are the one setting the terms of the space.
That sounds like more control. In some ways it is. In other ways, it exposes you to a different set of problems. A site is a fixed point. Anyone watching you knows where you are and can plan accordingly. You cannot easily disengage and re-position the way a mobile escort can. You have to be prepared to absorb contact rather than avoid it.
VYPR site security operations are built around a few principles. First, establish visibility before you establish position — know what is in your area before you commit to a deployment footprint. Second, layer your coverage. No single defender should be the only thing standing between an attacker and the objective. Third, maintain comms with the rest of the op so that any breach is immediately known.
The instinct when a site comes under fire is to rush toward the contact. Resist it. Your job is the site, not the attacker. Someone else engages; you hold. That role discipline is harder than it sounds, but it is what makes site security work as a function.
Site security slots come up regularly. Check Discord for upcoming ops.