The European Cybersecurity Skills Framework (ECSF) is a practical tool to support the identification and articulation of tasks, competences, skills and knowledge associated with the roles of European cybersecurity professionals. The ECSF provides profiles of 12 typical cybersecurity professional roles. The main purpose of the ECSF is to create a common understanding between individuals, employers and providers of learning programmes across the EU.
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Security leaders need both technical knowledge and leadership skills to gain the respect of technical team members, understand what technical staff are actually doing, and appropriately plan and manage security projects and initiatives. This security managers training course will teach leaders about the key elements of any modern security program. Learn to quickly grasp critical cybersecurity issues and terminology, with a focus on security frameworks, security architecture, security engineering, computer/network security, vulnerability management, cryptography, data protection, security awareness, cloud security, application security, DevSecOps, generative AI (GenAI) security, and security operations. This is more than security training. You will learn how to lead security teams and manage programs by playing through twenty-three Cyber42 activities throughout the class, approximately 60-80 minutes daily.
Certification: GIAC Security Leadership (GSLC)
The next generation of security leadership must bridge the gap between security staff and senior leadership by strategically planning how to build and run effective security programs. Yet, creating a security strategy, executing a plan that includes sound policy coupled with top-notch leadership is hard for IT and security professionals because we spend so much time responding and reacting. We almost never do strategic planning until we get promoted to a senior position, and then we are not equipped with the skills we need to run with the pack. This information security course will provide you with the tools to build a cybersecurity strategic plan, an entire IT security policy, and lead your teams in the execution of your plan and policy. By the end of class you will have prepared an executive presentation, read 3 business case studies, responded to issues faced by 4 fictional companies, analyzed 15 case scenarios, and responded to 15 Cyber42 events.
This cloud security strategy for leaders training course focuses on what managers, directors, and security leaders need to know about developing their plan/roadmap while managing cloud security implementation capabilities. To safeguard the organization's cloud environment and investments, a knowledgeable management team must engage in thorough planning and governance. We emphasize the essential knowledge needed to develop a cloud security roadmap and effectively implement cloud security capabilities. Making informed security decisions when adopting the cloud necessitates understanding the technology, processes, and people associated with the cloud environment. 12 Hands-on Cyber42 Exercises + Capstone.
This Security Culture for Leaders course will teach and enable today's cybersecurity leaders to build, manage, and measure a strong security culture. Cybersecurity leadership is no longer just about technology. It is ultimately about culture - not only what people think and feel about security but how they act, from the Board of Directors to every corner of the organization. As a result of this cyber security culture course, students will not only create an engaged and far more secure workforce, but also lead more effective and successful security initiatives. In addition, students will apply everything they learn through a series of 12 interactive team labs, numerous case studies and the Cyber42 leadership simulation capstone.
If you are a SOC manager or leader looking to unlock the power of proactive, intelligence-informed cyber defense, then LDR551 is the perfect course for you! In a world where IT environments and threat actors evolve faster than many teams can track, position your SOC to defend against highly motivated threat actors. Highly dynamic modern environments require a cyber defense capability that is forward-looking, fast-paced, and intelligence-driven. This SOC manager training course will guide you through these critical activities from start to finish and teach you how to design defenses with your organization's unique risk profile in mind. Walk away with the ability to align your SOC activities with organizational goals. 17 hands-on exercises + Cyber42 interactive leadership simulations.
SEC504 helps you develop the skills to conduct incident response investigations. You will learn how to apply a dynamic incident response process to evolving cyber threats, and how to develop threat intelligence to mount effective defense strategies for cloud and on-premises platforms. We'll examine the latest threats to organizations, from watering hole attacks to cloud application service MFA bypass, enabling you to get into the mindset of attackers and anticipate their moves. SEC504 gives you the information you need to understand how attackers scan, exploit, pivot, and establish persistence in cloud and conventional systems. To help you develop retention and long-term recall of the course material, 50 percent of class time is spent on hands-on exercises, using visual association tools to break down complex topics. This course prepares you to conduct cyber investigations and will boost your career by helping you develop these in-demand skills.
Threat hunting and Incident response tactics and procedures have evolved rapidly over the past several years. Your team can no longer afford to use antiquated incident response and threat hunting techniques that fail to properly identify compromised systems. The key is to constantly look for attacks that get past security systems, and to catch intrusions in progress, rather than after attackers have completed their objectives and done worse damage to the organization. For the incident responder, this process is known as "threat hunting".FOR508 teaches advanced skills to hunt, identify, counter, and recover from a wide range of threats within enterprise networks, including APT nation-state adversaries, organized crime syndicates, and hactivists.
The world is changing and so is the data we need to conduct our investigations. Cloud platforms change how data is stored and accessed. They remove the examiner's ability to directly access systems and use classical data extraction methods. Unfortunately, many examiners are still trying to force old methods for on-premise examination onto cloud-hosted platforms. Rather than resisting change, examiners must learn to embrace the new opportunities presented to them in the form of new evidence sources. FOR509: Enterprise Cloud Forensics and Incident Response addresses today's need to bring examiners up to speed with the rapidly changing world of enterprise cloud environments by uncovering the new evidence sources that only exist in the Cloud.
FOR528: Ransomware for Incident Responders provides the hands-on training required for those who may need to respond to ransomware incidents. The term "Ransomware" no longer refers to a simple encryptor that locks down resources. The advent of Human-Operated Ransomware (HumOR) along with the evolution of Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) have created an entire ecosystem that thrives on hands-on the keyboard, well-planned attack campaigns. Our course uses deftly devised, real-world attacks and their subsequent forensic artifacts to provide you, the analyst, with all that you need to respond when the threat become a reality.
Whether you handle an intrusion incident, data theft case, employee misuse scenario, or are engaged in proactive adversary discovery, the network often provides an unparalleled view of the incident. SANS FOR572 covers the tools, technology, and processes required to integrate network evidence sources into your investigations to provide better findings, and to get the job done faster.
FOR608: Enterprise-Class Incident Response & Threat Hunting focuses on identifying and responding to incidents too large to focus on individual machines. By using example tools built to operate at enterprise-class scale, students learn the techniques to collect focused data for incident response and threat hunting, and dig into analysis methodologies to learn multiple approaches to understand attacker movement and activity across hosts of varying functions and operating systems by using an array of analysis techniques.
If you are worried about leading or supporting a major cyber incident, then this is the course for you. You cannot predict or pick when your organization will face a major cyber incident, but you can choose how prepared you are when it happens. While there are broad technical aspects to cyber incidents there is also a myriad of other activities that generally fall to executives, managers, legal, press, and human relations staff. These include communicating both internally and externally, considering the battle rhythm, and a look at methodologies for tracking information gathered and released to the public. This cyber incident management training course focuses on the challenges facing leaders and incident commanders as they work to bring enterprise networks back online and get business moving again.
The next generation of security leadership must bridge the gap between security staff and senior leadership by strategically planning how to build and run effective security programs. Yet, creating a security strategy, executing a plan that includes sound policy coupled with top-notch leadership is hard for IT and security professionals because we spend so much time responding and reacting. We almost never do strategic planning until we get promoted to a senior position, and then we are not equipped with the skills we need to run with the pack. This information security course will provide you with the tools to build a cybersecurity strategic plan, an entire IT security policy, and lead your teams in the execution of your plan and policy. By the end of class you will have prepared an executive presentation, read 3 business case studies, responded to issues faced by 4 fictional companies, analyzed 15 case scenarios, and responded to 15 Cyber42 events.
Certification: GIAC Strategic Planning, Policy, and Leadership (GSTRT)