
Teesside Mystery Shopping
Having been funded by Cleveland’s Unit for the Reduction of Violence (CURV), voluntary ‘mystery shoppers’ entered various premises across the Teesside region and tested the implementation of the scheme.
The Student Safety App (SSA) is the world’s first crowdsourced safety platform, built by students, for students, designed to enhance safety and well-being both on and off campus, with no in-app purchases, hidden fees, or partnership costs for universities. Spearheaded by former Leicester City, Aston Villa, Birmingham City, and England striker Emile Heskey, the app helps students feel safer by combining anonymous, real-time incident reporting with practical personal safety tools and clearer access to support.
Key features include:
Emile Heskey said, “This app is not just a piece of tech – it’s a tribute to lives lost, and a promise to the students of today that their safety matters. The Student Safety App is a social app that allows students to work and navigate through inner cities and around crime. Students should never have to walk home along feeling afraid. This all is what they’ve been waiting for – practical, fast, and student-focused.”
As a recent Nottingham Trent University graduate, Monica Ghuman said, “There’s not one platform that unites a student with all the key stakeholders in the university experience. You’ve got WhatsApp channels, emails, countless different apps, but nothing that puts a student in contact with all those providers.”
This realisation is what sparked the idea for the Student Safety App. They are also currently developing a college version, specifically for college students, with features for safeguarding minors.
Ask for Angela is proud to support the Student Safety App, helping to make sure clear, consistent support is available to anyone who may be feeling vulnerable and/or unsafe.
For more information on the Student Safety App, please see: About Student Safety App – Student Safety
In an emergency, always call 999.

Having been funded by Cleveland’s Unit for the Reduction of Violence (CURV), voluntary ‘mystery shoppers’ entered various premises across the Teesside region and tested the implementation of the scheme.

Foyleside Shopping Centre in Derry, Northern Ireland recently rolled out our online Ask for Angela Vulnerability Training to staff members to support implementing the scheme.

We’re really pleased to share that the National Ask for Angela Vulnerability Training is now officially accredited by the BIIAB (British Institute of Innkeeping Awarding Body).

Here at Ask for Angela we are proud to be supporting the NABCP’s National Awareness Week for Business Crime Reduction Partnerships.
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