Unilateral contract.
Contract security jobs usually involve working for a security agency that is contacted by individual companies. In florida there are armed and unarmed security positions.
An indentured servant
While it is true that some home security systems require a contract with a security company, not all systems do. Some systems work without monitoring, and some security companies offer monitoring on a month to month basis with no contract required.
Department of Defense Security Contract
A contract attachment is a part of the contract for a specific purpose. It may list locations for services, or provide the security policies that may be followed.
The CAPM is a model for pricing an individual security (asset) or a portfolio. For individual security perspective, we made use of the security market line (SML) and its relation to expected return and systematic risk (beta) to show how the market must price individual securities in relation to their security risk class. The SML enables us to calculate the reward-to-risk ratio for any security in relation to that of the overall market. Therefore, when the expected rate of return for any security is deflated by its beta coefficient, the reward-to-risk ratio for any individual security in the market is equal to the market reward-to-risk ratio
yes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! if a business name is incorrect on contract can it be terminated
DoD Contract Security Classification
One of the largest contract security employers is http://www.alliedbarton.com/. You can also search at http://www.civiliancontractorjobs.com/ or http://www.securityrecruiter.com/job_openings_details.php?id=PdY%3EDBWbY
$2,000 for a six year contract, No sign on bonus for a four year contract.
A contract in which only one party makes an express promise, or undertakes a performance without first securing a reciprocal agreement from the other party. In a unilateral, or one-sided, contract, one party, known as the offeror, makes a promise in exchange for an act (or abstention from acting) by another party, known as the offeree. If the offeree acts on the offeror's promise, the offeror is legally obligated to fulfill the contract, but an offeree cannot be forced to act (or not act), because no return promise has been made to the offeror. After an offeree has performed, only one enforceable promise exists, that of the offeror. A unilateral contract differs from a Bilateral Contract, in which the parties exchange mutual promises. Bilateral contracts are commonly used in business transactions; a sale of goods is a type of bilateral contract. Reward offers are usually unilateral contracts. The offeror (the party offering the reward) cannot impel anyone to fulfill the reward offer. An offeree can sue for breach of contract, however, if the offeror does not provide the reward after the offeree has fulfilled the contract's requirements