Die Bedrohungslage hat sich dramatisch verändert und verschlechtert!
Travel, international staffing, executive visibility, and public disruption can shift a routine business trip into a layered security problem. This page is about recognizing that shift early.

Warning signs leaders often miss
Travel plans built without local risk review
Route assumptions, venue exposure, and low-visibility threats remain untested.
Staff sent into change without support
Country entry, site closure, labor tension, and local pressure are handled too late.
A private concern spills into operations
Family pressure or personal targeting begins affecting schedules and decisions.
Why the picture feels worse
Because exposure is now faster and more connected. A single trip can involve digital leakage, movement visibility, public friction, and duty-of-care questions at the same time. Clients need a response model that accepts that overlap.

Travel exposure is rarely limited to the flight itself
Threat changes become visible in terminals, meeting transfers, hotel arrival patterns, and the moments when a traveler still looks routine but is already easy to predict.
A good plan accounts for those transitions before the schedule becomes public or fixed.

What PRAI helps define
- Threat fit
What matters for this trip, site, person, or movement right now?
- Protective posture
Does the client need discrete planning, protective accompaniment, or escalation?
- Communication limits
Who needs to know the itinerary, the reason, and the fallback plan?
