Every September, Suicide Prevention Month offers a vital reminder: protecting student mental health is the most urgent and important thing we do. At Gaggle, our mission of protecting students is carried out daily by the dedicated professionals who monitor and respond to potential cries for help from students across the country.
The leader of our Safety Team is Alex Beck. He has been working at Gaggle for over 12 years. His career story reflects both the personal meaning of this work and the powerful difference even one alert can make.
A Career With a Purpose
When Alex first joined Gaggle, he didn’t expect to land in student safety. “I studied marketing in college, and I originally came here to put those skills to use,” he explained. “What drew me to Gaggle was the chance to do work that mattered. We were not just selling products, but contributing to something with a real purpose.”
That path eventually led him to the Safety Team. Alex now describes this move as life-changing. “It wasn’t something I envisioned at the start, but it turned out to be the best decision I could have made for my career. It gave me the chance to grow in ways I hadn’t expected and to make a real impact.”
When trained safety professionals escalate these issues to school staff as alerts, the school staff can act fast and potentially save a life.
Growing up, Alex had friends who struggled with mental health, but it wasn’t until working at Gaggle that he realized how widespread those challenges are. “Even when I saw it firsthand in school, I don’t think I fully understood the seriousness. Working at Gaggle opened my eyes to the scale of the need and the real impact of helping students get the support they deserve.”
For Alex and his team, the work is built on noticing signs that students may be struggling. They are well-versed in recognizing when student content moves into a territory that hints at pain. “It’s not always a loud or obvious cry for help,” he said. “Sometimes it’s in the smallest changes, and those are the moments where the real need becomes clear.”
Behind Every Alert
When a critical alert comes in, time is everything. Alex described the process: Safety Analysts immediately review the content, assess severity, and relay it to district contacts who can step in. “We move quickly because every minute matters. Our role is to identify the crisis, provide a clear summary, and make sure the right people are notified. Once we’ve confirmed it’s in their hands, we turn immediately to the next student who may need help.”
Protocols are designed to balance speed with empathy. Supervisors review decisions and provide real-time feedback to help analysts sharpen their judgment. “Our entire culture is built on accuracy, urgency, and compassion,” Alex said. “That focus comes from every level of leadership at Gaggle.”
Supporting the Protectors
This work can be emotionally heavy. To support his team, Alex emphasizes wellness from day one. “We make it clear that caring for your own mental health is not just encouraged, it’s essential,” he shared. “We build trust, normalize conversations around resilience, and create a community where no one faces hard situations alone.”
That sense of connection, he believes, is just as important as the technical processes. “Relationships come first, always. That’s what helps sustain our people in this work.”
Stories That Stay With You
Some stories inevitably linger. One, in particular, wasn’t just about the incident itself, but the gratitude expressed afterward. “A school district leader once stood on stage in front of our entire company and shared how our work had directly saved a student’s life. The room was completely silent as he said ‘thank you.’ I’ll never forget that moment.”
It’s those reminders, the saved lives, the changed trajectories, that fuel Alex and his team when the work feels tough. “We keep a visual reminder of the lives we’ve helped save,” he said. “It grounds us and gives us hope.”
What Educators Need to Know
For school leaders, Alex’s message is simple: never underestimate the power of one alert. “Sometimes a single comment or action is all we have to intervene,” he stressed. “Educators can’t be everywhere at once. That’s where we step in to make sure nothing is missed.”
He also wishes more people understood that suicide prevention often starts with picking up on subtleties. “Kids don’t always express what they’re going through in obvious ways. Building strong relationships with students creates a baseline, so when something shifts, you notice it.”