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Duaine Labno, Director of Special Investigations and Threat Intelligence at TIG Risk Services, shares with Ben how his background in law enforcement shaped his leadership and approach to building elite security teams, including the application of hostage negotiation techniques often overlooked in the industry.
With 26 years of experience, Duaine shares how crisis psychology sharpens threat assessment, from recognizing psychological triggers to staying composed under pressure and separating facts from assumptions. His ethical decision-making framework and commitment to 260 hours of annual team training create what he calls "control during chaos" — a model where silence signals precision, not uncertainty. Listen now or read along!
Too busy; didn’t listen:
[8:10-9:22] And when we do scenario-based training, I'm all about control during the chaos, everyone has to stay calm. So it's great walking into the room when they are working as a team and you have silence, I mean, there's not a lot of talking. They are communicating with each other, they're using technology to communicate with each other, but they've really honed in on that skill set to be able to work under a chaotic situation. So that's one of the things that I try and push towards my people. And as probably you've seen throughout your career, many of these events sometimes can be reported as being more chaotic than they really are. So we have to take control of our own emotions, have a clear mindset, have a process in place, and everyone needs to know how to do their job and be very proficient at doing their job. And I think the more you practice that, the better you become during the stressful situations.
Listen to more episodes:
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By MaltegoDuaine Labno, Director of Special Investigations and Threat Intelligence at TIG Risk Services, shares with Ben how his background in law enforcement shaped his leadership and approach to building elite security teams, including the application of hostage negotiation techniques often overlooked in the industry.
With 26 years of experience, Duaine shares how crisis psychology sharpens threat assessment, from recognizing psychological triggers to staying composed under pressure and separating facts from assumptions. His ethical decision-making framework and commitment to 260 hours of annual team training create what he calls "control during chaos" — a model where silence signals precision, not uncertainty. Listen now or read along!
Too busy; didn’t listen:
[8:10-9:22] And when we do scenario-based training, I'm all about control during the chaos, everyone has to stay calm. So it's great walking into the room when they are working as a team and you have silence, I mean, there's not a lot of talking. They are communicating with each other, they're using technology to communicate with each other, but they've really honed in on that skill set to be able to work under a chaotic situation. So that's one of the things that I try and push towards my people. And as probably you've seen throughout your career, many of these events sometimes can be reported as being more chaotic than they really are. So we have to take control of our own emotions, have a clear mindset, have a process in place, and everyone needs to know how to do their job and be very proficient at doing their job. And I think the more you practice that, the better you become during the stressful situations.
Listen to more episodes:
Apple
Spotify
YouTube
Website