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Cyber Crisis Management

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Kip Boyle

48:10

26 View
  • 01 - Understanding cyber crisis.mp4
    00:37
  • 01 - The foundation of cyber crisis management.mp4
    04:52
  • 02 - Team formation and roles.mp4
    03:38
  • 01 - Early warning signals.mp4
    04:04
  • 02 - Assessment and initial steps.mp4
    03:39
  • 01 - Immediate response strategies.mp4
    03:22
  • 02 - Ongoing management.mp4
    03:28
  • 01 - Internal communication.mp4
    04:13
  • 02 - External communication.mp4
    03:16
  • 01 - Escalation procedures.mp4
    02:37
  • 02 - Resolving the crisis.mp4
    03:57
  • 01 - Analyzing the crisis.mp4
    03:46
  • 02 - Testing and refining the plan.mp4
    02:58
  • 01 - Key takeaways.mp4
    02:24
  • 02 - Building a culture of cyber resilience.mp4
    01:19
  • Description


    Knowing how to manage a cyber crisis is a unique and highly sought-after skill in today’s global workplace. A cyber crisis can significantly impact your day-to-day business operations, so you need to prepare your organization to respond and succeed. Join instructor and cybersecurity expert Kip Boyle as he shows you what it takes to effectively manage a cyber crisis—from preparation and detection to escalation, resolution, evaluation, and improvement.

    Learn how to build a strong foundation for cyber crisis management, always staying a step ahead and taking action, wherever needed. Kip covers immediate response strategies as well as ongoing management techniques that can help you navigate the challenges of complex threats. Along the way, discover the importance of learning from experience, testing and refining a cyber crisis management plan, and becoming cyber resilient.

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    I’ve been working in cybersecurity since 1992. I started as an air force officer, leading information technology teams. My assignments had us handling very sensitive information related to air-to-air weapons testing, so we were expected to practice what I now call “good cyber hygiene”. My most challenging job during this time was director of wide area network security for the F-22 “Raptor”. At the time, we were getting ready for the first production jets to come down the assembly line. It was very exciting! After the USAF, as a project leader at Stanford Research (SRI), I helped many Fortune 100 firms grapple with cybersecurity on a large scale. The problems they were dealing with were often 5 years or more ahead of the mainstream. So, there were no “off-the-shelf” solutions and many of our customers didn’t even know where to start. With no one else to turn to, they would come to us. Fast forward a few years and I was selected to be Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) of an insurance company. They owned a few subsidiaries, so I was also providing cybersecurity leadership to senior decision-makers of a community bank, credit union, debit/credit card transaction processor, and an IT managed service provider. I learned a lot about the business value of cybersecurity during those years. Then, in June of 2015, I launched my own company, Cyber Risk Opportunities. These days, cyberattacks are hurting businesses, even bankrupting them. That's wrong! We help executives manage cyber as the business risk it has become. So they’ll be ready no matter what happens. Setting priorities is a big goal in our work. Today, we have a lot of customers. Right now, we’re helping both a professional basketball team and a biotech company optimize their cyber risk management programs. It’s great to be able to use the same approach to help organizations that are so different in just about every obvious way. But, just under the surface, they are both very similar in terms of the cyber risk practices they need to follow. My mission is to enable executives to become more proficient cyber risk managers. Our customers include the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank, Boeing, Visa, Intuit, Mitsubishi, DuPont, and many others. And, because so many organizations in the US need better cyber risk management at the executive level, we’ve launched a partnership program so other professionals in positions of trust, such as lawyers and technology service providers, can use our tools and methods to help their existing customers thrive as cyber risk managers. Ask me about it!
    LinkedIn Learning is an American online learning provider. It provides video courses taught by industry experts in software, creative, and business skills. It is a subsidiary of LinkedIn. All the courses on LinkedIn fall into four categories: Business, Creative, Technology and Certifications. It was founded in 1995 by Lynda Weinman as Lynda.com before being acquired by LinkedIn in 2015. Microsoft acquired LinkedIn in December 2016.
    • language english
    • Training sessions 15
    • duration 48:10
    • English subtitles has
    • Release Date 2024/08/12