
Let’s talk about training.
Maybe you gather the troops once a year in a conference room. Fire up the PowerPoint. Tell a few phishing stories. Everyone nods along, someone makes a joke about Nigerian princes, and you check the box. Done.
Or maybe you’ve gone high-tech. Automated phishing simulations. Monthly emails. A platform that sends you a report about who clicked what and when.
Cute. But here’s the truth: none of that matters when the demand letter shows up. Because the attorney won’t ask how many phishing emails you sent. They’ll ask: "Can you prove your training aligns to the controls you claimed were in place?"
And if the answer is no?
They already have their proof: there was a breach.
You were managing the network.
The burden of proof just landed on your chest like a 500-pound gorilla.
Now you have to prove you weren’t negligent.
That’s why we created Cyber Liability Essentials.
Not just an incident response plan. Not just a set of policies.
We built a defense kit that aligns every piece of your security stack to the real-world legal and insurance requirements that will be used against you.
What do you actually need?
- A clean, current contact list of internal stakeholders
- A signed acceptable use policy (yes, every user)
- An incident response plan that includes playbooks for post-breach communication and demand letters
- Documented evidence that training occurred
- Training content linked directly to your controls and standards
If your current setup doesn’t check all those boxes? You’re not prepared. You’re practicing self-defense with foam nunchucks.
Training by itself doesn’t cut it.
It has to be aligned. It has to be documented. And it has to be part of a system that was built to protect you, the MSP, not just your clients.
This is about more than cyber awareness.
This is about cyber liability self-defense.
If you’re serious about protecting yourself, your business, and your team—you need Cyber Liability Essentials.
Let us show you how it works. You’ll walk away knowing exactly what evidence you need, and how to make sure your training isn’t just fluff.
It’s not enough to educate users. You have to defend the decisions you made.
This is how you do it. Get started with CLE.