Nothing could be truer than the quote above, often attributed to an anonymous Navy SEAL. When things get real, your training kicks in. Training is not just filling your head with stuff, but actually performing it. Try. Fail. Learn. Get it right. Perfect it. And doing it again and again. The better the training, the better the students learn. This truism is the bedrock of high-performing, effective teams everywhere.
“Under pressure, you don’t rise to the occasion, you sink to the level of your training" - Anonymous Navy SEAL
Somehow the business world hasn’t taken this to heart yet. As cybersecurity threats have escalated, the business world’s search for an effective solution has evolved. After a period of denial, the great hope was that some AI-powered “black box” would solve all cybersecurity concerns without having to do anything. That didn’t work. Next, let’s outsource to a cyber insurance firm. The only problem is that it’s pricey, and you don’t control the process. The insurance company does, and they aren’t always on the same team as you. So, we’re left with one solution—an in-house or hybrid human-based solution, probably a small group of folks charged with the impossible. Stop any and every attack, 24x7x365 from any source—script kiddie or advanced persistent threat (APT). It’s got to be 100%, every time. There might be some pressure building there.
Here’s where the challenge comes in. You see, the people on your incident response team, as defined in your IR policy and procedures (if you have one), most likely have never been hands-on with a complex incident (If they had, you probably couldn’t afford to keep them). They may have studied cases, taken classes, read tons of materials, and have an alphabet soup of certifications. But they probably have never executed your Incident Response Plan. They’ve never seen what the adversary’s tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) look like in your technology stack. Do you have sufficient visibility? Is your logging up to snuff? So, how will your team perform in a high-pressure situation? How about with no sleep for 48 hours? Where are the gaps? You need to know. Your company is on the line.
How do you overcome this? You train. And then train some more. This type of training is called Adversary Emulation or Purple Teaming. Regardless, the concept is to step through a targeted attack using real TTPs but without all the dangers of a real attack. Team members are divided into two groups, a Red (Offensive) Team, and a Blue (Defender) Team. PacketWatch team members are on both teams and provide the technical resources to emulate the attack. At each step, Red Team and Blue Team members get together to:
The PacketWatch team can fashion engagements tailored to your firm’s specific needs. Whether you need to test tools and visibility, your incident response capabilities, the effectiveness of specific controls around groups of assets, your defenses against a particular targeted threat, or a combination thereof, PacketWatch’s Active Security Team will build an effective engagement for you.
With an Active Security Engagement, you can:
The better the instructor, the better the team learns. PacketWatch is a team of elite experts from a wide range of backgrounds, including the military, government, law enforcement, commercial enterprise, and the intelligence community. We respond to hundreds of complex breaches each year. Knowing and countering adversary tradecraft bolsters our effectiveness in quickly identifying and eliminating threats. We bring that real-world experience to bear for you and your team. That makes us the best for delivering this type of engagement for you. Planning, rehearsing, and testing with a high-performing team is key to ensuring your team’s success.
Ultimately, it’s all about the quality of your team’s training. That determines the outcome. Enable their success with a PacketWatch Active Security engagement.