For a lot of mass gathering major events, incident escalation varies from a traditional emergency process. These issues often start with cleaners, with catering teams — people who are spread across sites and are often the first to come across them. That’s the reality of a large event. The first reporter isn’t a trained incident commander. It’s whoever happens to be there.
Capturing Information From All Corners of the Site
So it’s about understanding what the existing model of emergency response is and adapting it to ensure you can capture information from all aspects of a mass gathering event.
Take the example of a cleaner who comes across someone unwell in a bathroom. How does that cleaner radio through to the control room to create an incident? Whether that’s through a representative of their own team in the control room, or directly — that job gets created, and it gets shared to the wider network. Event staff who need to isolate the area. Security for crowd management. The medical team responding to the patient. Each of those groups getting the information that’s relevant to them, at the moment they need it.
It’s about coordinating that entire response — providing a continued patron experience for the person in need, but also minimising the impact on those around them so the event keeps running as it should.
When Incidents Escalate
When you widen this out to significant or major incidents, the principle doesn’t change. It’s just the foot to the floor goes down a little further. You’re responding to wider incidents, major incidents, where multiple external stakeholders are coming in to support. The incident might be 30 or 40 minutes. It might be two, three, four hours.
And recognising that from a single incident, associated elements come from it — a cleaning incident, an area that needs to be isolated, roads that need to close, patron movements that need to adjust. The response tree expands, but the model stays the same.
The Response Model Doesn’t Change — Only the Scale
How you respond to incidents, whether it’s a very small one or a quite large one, doesn’t fundamentally change. It’s about the tools and processes available to you in the software that help you grow and adjust to those circumstances.
That’s the value of a system built for this environment. Not one that handles the average case and struggles when something bigger develops — one that scales with the response without requiring you to shift to a different process mid-incident.
If your current setup handles small incidents but struggles when things escalate, book a demo with the Chronosoft team to see how a unified platform scales with the response — from the first radio call to a full major incident activation.