After the incident, Leo brought in SafeBreach. “No more annual snapshots,” he said. “I want continuous validation.”
Maya’s team was burned out. “We’re always cleaning up after the fact,” she told Leo. “We patch one hole, and something else leaks.”
“You can’t secure what you don’t continuously test. SafeBreach turns breach assumptions into breach evidence—before an attacker does it for real.” If you’d like, I can tailor this story to a specific industry (healthcare, retail, government) or to a technical vs. executive audience. Just let me know.
Maya pulled up SafeBreach’s timeline: “We validated that attack path last Tuesday. It failed then. It fails now.”
FinCorp now runs SafeBreach daily. They catch configuration drifts within hours—not months. The team sleeps better. Leo presents to the board not with “we hope we’re secure,” but with evidence: “Here are the 12,000 attacks we simulated this week. Here are the 3 that could have breached us. Here’s how we fixed them yesterday.”
Every quarter, Tom’s red team ran a pentest. It took three weeks. The report was 147 pages long. Maya’s team spent another month prioritizing the 200+ findings. By then, the threat landscape had shifted. New CVEs emerged. Attackers weren’t using the same techniques Tom tested three months ago.
One Friday, a real attack came—a ransomware gang using a known but unpatched Exchange Server exploit. FinCorp had tested for that exploit six months ago, but they never revalidated after applying a hotfix. The hotfix broke the test, and no one knew. The gang got in. IR cost $2M.
Here’s a useful story for , illustrating how the platform helps a security team move from reactive firefighting to proactive breach prevention. Title: The Wednesday Night That Changed Everything
After the incident, Leo brought in SafeBreach. “No more annual snapshots,” he said. “I want continuous validation.”
Maya’s team was burned out. “We’re always cleaning up after the fact,” she told Leo. “We patch one hole, and something else leaks.”
“You can’t secure what you don’t continuously test. SafeBreach turns breach assumptions into breach evidence—before an attacker does it for real.” If you’d like, I can tailor this story to a specific industry (healthcare, retail, government) or to a technical vs. executive audience. Just let me know. safebreach
Maya pulled up SafeBreach’s timeline: “We validated that attack path last Tuesday. It failed then. It fails now.”
FinCorp now runs SafeBreach daily. They catch configuration drifts within hours—not months. The team sleeps better. Leo presents to the board not with “we hope we’re secure,” but with evidence: “Here are the 12,000 attacks we simulated this week. Here are the 3 that could have breached us. Here’s how we fixed them yesterday.” After the incident, Leo brought in SafeBreach
Every quarter, Tom’s red team ran a pentest. It took three weeks. The report was 147 pages long. Maya’s team spent another month prioritizing the 200+ findings. By then, the threat landscape had shifted. New CVEs emerged. Attackers weren’t using the same techniques Tom tested three months ago.
One Friday, a real attack came—a ransomware gang using a known but unpatched Exchange Server exploit. FinCorp had tested for that exploit six months ago, but they never revalidated after applying a hotfix. The hotfix broke the test, and no one knew. The gang got in. IR cost $2M. “We’re always cleaning up after the fact,” she
Here’s a useful story for , illustrating how the platform helps a security team move from reactive firefighting to proactive breach prevention. Title: The Wednesday Night That Changed Everything