Who this serves
CEOs traveling to high-risk regions. Lone employees on assignment abroad. Aging parents, college students, journalists in volatile environments, solo professionals in isolated work — anyone whose safety depends on someone trained being aware in real time, not a dispatcher in another time zone.
Duty-of-care obligations are expanding. Most organizations lack the infrastructure to meet them for individual travelers. Consumer safety apps connect users to 911 — but cannot coordinate across jurisdictions, talk to local law enforcement, or guide someone through a crisis in real time.
Before the trip
Pre-trip risk briefings shaped by the actual destination and the traveler's profile. Threat profiles for the cities and corridors involved. Local partner and vendor vetting where the trip touches third parties. Itinerary-based risk planning that adjusts as the trip evolves.
While they are out
The GIOC monitors in real time. SOS with direct analyst response — the person who picks up knows the traveler. Safety timers for solo legs. Cross-jurisdictional coordination when the situation crosses borders or agency lines.
A 93-year-old veteran with dementia begins driving from North Carolina toward the state line. A consumer app would have called 911. The GIOC operator, a former law enforcement officer, tracks him in real time, recognizes that state police cannot execute the stop, anticipates a shift change at the local department, and talks directly with the responding officer to coordinate a safe intercept at a gas station in South Carolina. No crash. No harm. That is the difference between an app and Hawkeye.
After
Incident documentation and reports. Third-party witness affidavits where the situation called for them. Post-trip debrief. Insurance-ready records.
Real protection requires real people. Hawkeye is the only platform where trained analysts are watching, ready, and able to act.


