Friday, September 7, 2007

Strike Corps intends to demonstrate the value of our anti-terror training solutions (e.g. DVD, books and training classes) through web supported TV infomercials. We will follow with telephone and database marketing to improve our lifetime value.

The founders of Strike Corps have decades of effective, real anti-terror experience and expertise learned and applied at the highest levels of government and corporate organizations that can be taught to communities and individuals.

Other types of training videos, books and schools offer self defense, martial arts and first aid for the public, but do not directly address anti-terror events. More technical training is offered to first responders and law enforcement at a much higher price, but not geared to every day scenarios. Of course the government offers helpful videos and publications for disaster preparation. If terror strikes, the public has no role, except to be the victims. The public is expected to call the authorities and wait. Think Katrina.

The TV is full of terror experts touting their latest book on politics, cultures and intelligence. These academic views of the Global War on Terror offers little useful information to defend individuals and their communities. In fact they just perpetuate the fear of terror to the public. Fear sells books.

Strike Corps offers decades of real wartime experiences to reduce the fear factor by the public. Hands-on, real advice, demonstrating how to implement various techniques to improve safety and survival can be communicated through case studies and scenarios through videos, books and reality training. Learning and practicing practical solutions reduces the fear factor and the accompanying stress levels.

The best part is when everyone can take responsibility for their own security, everyone is more secure. Lives and property can be saved, living a much more fulfilling, less stressful life in the process.

If terrorism strikes near you, would you want to know what to do? Does your family? Community? Work?