Company Profiles
An Urgent Need To Take Protection Vs Physical, Cyber Threats Up A Level

We talk to experts in physical and cyber security catering to the needs of wealthy individuals. In these unsettled times, these often difficult subjects are increasingly front of mind.
The urgency of helping family offices, businesses and executives
with security and knowable risks has arguably never
been more prominent. Geopolitics are, to put it mildly,
tense.
There are other threats – a few months ago, the CEO of
UnitedHealth in the US, Brian Thompson, was shot dead in a
Manhattan street. Just last week, the CEO of Crestwood Trucking
was brutally murdered in the Chicago area, allegedly by one of
his employees.
Physical as well as cyber threats against wealthy and
high-profile individuals are multiplying. For today’s wealth
management industry, security is a top-line concern.
Edward Marshall (pictured below), who has spent nearly 15
years at different firms looking at the needs of high net worth
and ultra-HNW individuals, is on a mission to raise the level of
advice and service in security and risk management. In
direct response to market gaps, he founded Presage Global more
than two years ago. The firm works with C-suites and boards,
family offices, and investors.
Edward Marshall
A member of this news service’s editorial
board, Marshall is a family office insider and a family
office researcher, advisor, and author. He is also a risk and
threat management specialist, working with HNW families,
investors, and companies to reduce their cyber, physical,
financial, operational, and reputational risk profiles.
To use the phrase of Marshall’s business partner, Tristan
Flannery, Presage Global is the equivalent of an “RIA” for the
security world.
In December 2024, Presage conducted a study, and shared its
findings in a report for the executive protection (EP) industry,
entitled, The New Guard: The Evolution of Technology,
Training, and Tradecraft in Executive Protection. The study
reveals the EP field's shift from traditional "bodyguards" to
strategic, tech-enabled risk advisors skilled in cross-domain
risk management. Last autumn, Presage also published a white
paper, Combating Insider Threats in Family
Offices.
Marshall has already provided actionable thought leadership to
the family office community (see an example here),
but these studies merely scratch the surface, Marshall argues, as
to Presage Global’s real-world focus. Recently he spoke to this
news service, alongside Flannery.
We have a problem
As is often the case, people approach a firm such as Presage
Global because they’ve had a problem, such as a security breach.
“Around 70 per cent of people come to us after a security
incident has occurred or arrive at our door when there is a tough
decision to make,” Marshall said.
Presage Global is, as its website describes it, “An
intelligence-powered risk management and business advisory firm.”
It works with family offices, businesses and investors. Areas
covered include due diligence; risk audit and resilience;
cybersecurity; strategic intelligence; geopolitical risk; market
entry and international business development; disputes and
investigations; security and protective operations; and
privacy.
Flannery says there has been an endemic problem in the protective
services industry.
“In Silicon Valley [for example], for a long time, the role of
providing security was seen as akin to that of almost a part-time
executive assistant, but that showed a lack of understanding from
both parties. Security professionals can certainly facilitate
other business needs but need to be cognizant of not allocating
their time on tasks that distract them from their primary purpose
of protection,” Flannery said. “While maintaining, facilitating,
and protecting the client’s schedule is paramount to an
experienced protection professional, they are neither events
managers, nor a concierge service for last-minute
needs.”
“Good executive protection people cannot be ‘yes-men or women’
who constantly deferentially agree with their client’s every whim
related to security matters,” Flannery continued. “This approach
can inadvertently create a plethora of unnecessary threats,
vulnerabilities and unplanned contingencies, all of which can
increase the risks to safety and security (e.g., like a
last-minute schedule change or a desire foregoing certain
security protocols). They need to be able to clearly articulate
what they are doing in support of the business objective and be
comfortable pushing back when a demand is made of them that
creates a vulnerability. The business leader ultimately makes
tough business decisions, but they need to be informed of
potential risk consequences.”
Flannery said the EP industry is a “crowded space and largely
unregulated market in the US, and many other
countries.”
“While different states and cities have some registration and
licensing regimes, virtually anyone can offer EP or bodyguarding
services in the market, and therefore results can be
unpredictable,” he said.
Flannery said one concern is that clients are “often unaware that
agents new to the industry are placed on their accounts – which
can lead to poorly trained individuals making up elements of an
EP team.”
“A client could end up with a security firm that fills protection
teams with junior, inexperienced agents without their knowledge,”
he said.
The business of protecting people from physical and cybersecurity
threats is large and growing. According to Allied Market
Research, the global physical security market size
was $104.6 billion in 2020 and is projected to rise to
$192.9 billion by 2030. As for “cyber,” the global market is
about twice the monetary value of the “physical” one – around
$202 billion in 2022 and estimated to rise at a compound annual
growth rate of 12.3 per cent from 2023 to 2030 (source: Grand
View Research). The physical side can cover areas such as
CCTV cameras, bodyguards, security patrols, investigators,
protection devices (including those licensed in certain places to
carry firearms), locks and monitoring tools. Another metric is
cyber-insurance that covers breaches, ransoms and loss of
business because of an attack. The market is expected to rise
from $10.3 billion this year to $17.6 billion by 2028 (source:
Markets And Markets). A parallel topic is that of the
role of private investigators in the work of making background
checks on various people and entities. See this interview
in 2023 of Conflict International, a UK-based
organisation. Another
firm operating in the physical security area that has
spoken to this news service is Global Guardian, a
US-based group.
What starts the conversation
An example of a problem that prompt calls to Presage Global
is cybersecurity breaches – and AI is part of it, said
Marshall.
“We think that in the next five years, AI-driven cyber threats
will be the biggest risk to family offices. Deepfakes, AI fraud,
and data breaches will escalate, outpacing security measures.
Internal failures – poor succession planning, insider
threats, and weak due diligence – will amplify those novel
vulnerabilities,” Marshall said. “A failure to understand how
risks connect across domains – physical, legal,
reputational, privacy – will worsen exposure. But the
greatest threats that stand the test of time? Complacency,
prioritising convenience over security, and neglecting basic risk
hygiene.”
“Family offices that fail to adapt, diagnose their own unique
threats holistically and regularly, and implement proactive
safeguards will face consequences. Risk isn’t static: staying
ahead is the only safeguard when you are a risk magnet,” he
said.
A valuable service
While not a comfortable subject, security is part of the wealth
management advisory “value proposition.”
A starting point is gathering information.
“There is not a lot of good data for executive protection
professionals working at the highest tier,” Marshall
said.
There is a lot of demand for more professionalism and training.
New technologies – such as drones – create the need for new
skills and resources, he continued. In a new threat
landscape, for example, learning from the use of drones
on the battlefield in Ukraine and their use by Mexican drug
cartels will help people do their job better.
One challenge is that people seeking help don’t necessarily know
what key questions to ask of firms/advisors putting themselves
forward. They also often lack awareness of all the relevant,
accessible risk management tools for solving problems and
predicting threats, he said. “Wealth management firms have wealth
planners examining budgets, investment goals, and trusts, but how
often do they work with ‘Risk and Security Planners’, which is
what Presage Global is for our clients.” In that spirit, Presage
Global recently released a Family Office Risk Readiness
Evaluation, which includes checklists covering a wide range of
risk and security concerns.
Like an RIA
Flannery said the fiduciary model of a registered investment
advisor, not motivated by trail commissions, is one that Presage
Global likes.
“We like to think of ourselves as the RIA of security bringing
the best-of-breed solutions to client risk needs,” Flannery said.
“Our approach is to curate the best security solutions according
to risk exposures rather than push a single product or
agenda.”
“CEOs and executives in sectors that operate globally or with
high profiles (e.g. big tech, oil and gas, finance, and
healthcare) have long faced threats. Many of these threats can be
chalked up to noise in the form of nuisance online posts on
social media and in forums, lacking specificity, and in-person
demonstration designed to cause disruptions to workflows,” he
said.
Other threats, however, are specific, he said, such as those who
say, “I know you live at X location and will act at this
time.” That suggests what assets face the most risk, whether
it be human, property, or reputation.
Fractional
Marshall told FWR about the concept of the “Fractional
Chief Security Officer” as a service that the firm
provides.
A fractional or managed chief security services (CSO) models
provide expert security leadership to organisations without the
cost of a full-time executive, he said.
“It’s ideal for organisations that need strategic security
guidance, risk management, and compliance support but don’t have
the budget or need for a permanent chief security officer,”
Marshall continued. “Security is more than a necessity
– it’s your competitive edge. Whether you are a fast-growing
business, a family office, or a multinational enterprise, managed
CSO services give your organisation the resilience, leadership,
and strategy it needs to navigate today’s threat landscape and to
safeguard your people, assets, and reputation.”
Flannery said those looking to hire security services must avoid
making assumptions.
Unlike business leaders setting exacting standards in certain
fields, “in security, they will think ‘It’s just security’ and
say 'she or he was a former law enforcement officer, intelligence
officer, or military veteran, and must therefore be good at what
they’re doing’. That’s simply not true,” Flannery said. “EP is a
specialised skillset and requires significant training to be
proficient. The EP individual’s experience needs to align with
the clientele they serve to provide the high level of quality and
delivery. This is especially pertinent to senior roles in which
the delta between government and private sector experience widens
over time, and is a particular focus of our attention within
Presage Global.”