Produktbild: Preparing for and Dealing with Cyber Threats
Vorbesteller Neu

Preparing for and Dealing with Cyber Threats A non-technical guide to navigating a cyber attack

25,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

18.02.2027

Verlag

Bloomsbury Academic

Seitenzahl

192

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,6/1 cm

Gewicht

279 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-350-62341-5

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

18.02.2027

Verlag

Bloomsbury Academic

Seitenzahl

192

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,6/1 cm

Gewicht

279 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-350-62341-5

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

0 Bewertungen

Informationen zu Bewertungen

Zur Abgabe einer Bewertung ist eine Anmeldung im Konto notwendig. Die Authentizität der Bewertungen wird von uns nicht überprüft. Wir behalten uns vor, Bewertungstexte, die unseren Richtlinien widersprechen, entsprechend zu kürzen oder zu löschen.

Die Bewertungen sind nach Format, Anzahl Sterne und Datum sortiert.

Verfassen Sie die erste Bewertung zu diesem Artikel

Helfen Sie anderen Kund*innen durch Ihre Meinung

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

0 Bewertungen filtern

  • Produktbild: Preparing for and Dealing with Cyber Threats
  • Chapter 1: Understanding the cyber threat landscape
    This is a general introduction to the book, giving some general background and explain what the book hopes to achieve.

    Chapter 2: What cyber incidents actually are
    This chapter talks about the most common types of cyber incidents in a non-technical manner to provide a foundation for the rest of the book. It also introduces some of the more common concepts such as the "cascade effect" where attacks can flow from each other.

    Chapter 3: Recognising incidents when they happen
    This chapter teaches the reader some practical identification skills to help differentiate actual attacks from normal IT issues and staff behaviour. It introduces some quick decision-making frameworks to help the reader practically.

    Chapter 4: Preparing your business before an incident occurs
    This chapter shifts from prevention and detection to preparation, with more practical advice to be prepared for an attack. A 90-day implementation plan and testing approaches ensure sustainable readiness.

    Chapter 5: What to do in the first hour
    This is the practical section designed to be referred to during a crisis. It contains practical guidance and will be supported by checklists, showing leaders how to avoid impulsive mistakes such as restoring systems prematurely, staying silent or rushing communications. Leaders learn to prioritise facts over assumptions, focus on limiting damage, and communicate clearly.

    Chapter 6: Coordinating a full incident response
    As incidents extend beyond the first hour, leadership becomes about coordination rather than personal heroics. Clear frameworks ensure that external specialists serve the business rather than inadvertently taking control.

    Chapter 7: Communicating under pressure
    Communication failures can sink incident response faster than technical issues. This chapter equips leaders with strategies for internal updates, regulatory notifications, and customer messaging. Leaders learn to acknowledge uncertainty without damaging trust, balance compliance with business messaging, and maintain stakeholder confidence.

    Chapter 8: Recovery and return to normal
    Recovery is often misjudged as simple system restoration, but this chapter reframes it as an opportunity for transformation. Businesses are urged to treat recovery as strategic investment, not cost.

    Chapter 9: Learning and strengthening defences
    Once systems are restored, the real value lies in learning. This chapter emphasises that incidents provide unique, high-stakes insights into business operations, team performance and stakeholder relationships.

    Chapter 10: The transferable framework
    This chapter shows how incident-tested skills, structured decision making, communication under pressure and coordinated leadership are transferable to every aspect of business. By leveraging lessons learned, businesses can convert cyber incidents into permanent competitive advantages.

    Chapter 11: Building long-term resilience
    This final chapter reveals how all of the previous learnings can build long-term resilience in a firm, and how to leverage that for future incidents.

    Appendices
    Including a digital emergency kit and communication templates.