Global Career Guide (EN)From Security & Emergency Services β†’

CCTV Operator

A CCTV operator watches camera feeds to keep places like town centres, shops, car parks and venues safe and secure. It suits observant, patient people who can stay alert for long stretches and want a security role that is more about watching and reporting than physical work.

The Role & Expectations

The work is monitoring multiple screens, spotting suspicious or dangerous behaviour, operating cameras to follow incidents and radioing or calling the right people - security, staff or the police. Concentration, good judgement and clear, calm communication matter, as does careful record-keeping, since footage and your notes can end up as evidence.

Shifts often cover nights, weekends and bank holidays, the work is mostly seated in a control room, and staying focused through quiet hours is the real challenge. Pay is usually an hourly wage, often a little above minimum for the unsociable hours.

In the UK you generally need an SIA (Security Industry Authority) public space surveillance licence, which means approved training and a background check. Many operators start with a security firm or local authority once licensed.

Daily Responsibilities

  • Monitor multiple CCTV screens for incidents
  • Operate and zoom cameras to track activity
  • Spot suspicious or dangerous behaviour
  • Alert security, staff or police as needed
  • Keep clear logs of events and footage
  • Follow data protection and privacy rules
  • Hand over information to the next shift