Campus360
The First True Campus Safety Ecosystem for K–12 Schools
Recent school tragedies have exposed critical gaps in campus safety—from delayed alerts to communication breakdowns when seconds matter most. Too often, those failures stem from fragmented safety tools that don’t work together.
Many districts still manage separate systems for visitor management, emergency alerts, panic buttons, safety planning, and reunification. When those systems operate independently, information gets lost and response slows.
This guide exposes how fragmented tools create risk—and how Campus360 replaces them with one connected campus safety ecosystem, bringing together planning, alerts, visitor awareness, accountability, and reunification so schools can prepare, respond, and recover from emergencies and every day incidents.

Disconnected Tools Are a Hidden Safety Threat
Today's school leaders face mounting challenges:
- Nearly 2 in 3 school staff say they feel more concerned about their physical safety than just six months ago.
- 1 in 4 educators report their school isn’t doing enough to protect them from violence.
- Most districts juggle multiple standalone safety tools—with little to no integration.
Fragmentation doesn’t just slow response. It creates blind spots when clarity matters most. As Douglas Unified School District explained:
"We lacked a centralized system to coordinate our emergency response across all our schools... it took forever to get a comprehensive picture of a situation."
Inside the Campus360 Guide
Key Takeaways
- Why traditional, siloed tools fail schools during emergencies
- How unified systems improve compliance, reduce delays, and strengthen coordination
- How wearable panic buttons and panic alert technology deliver instant, multi-channel alerts—including Alyssa’s Law compliance
- How integrated visitor and volunteer management improves both prevention and response
- Real-world lessons from Douglas Unified School District and other districts moving to unified safety

"Regardless of the emergency, the appropriate tools are right in the palm of your hand."