
Are your IT people taking the right steps to protect your business? Here’s a simple test. One question. No tech degree required:
When’s the last time you reviewed an Incident Response Plan they wrote for you?
If your answer is anything other than “in the last 12 months”—you’ve got a problem.
A big one. And it’s more important than whatever else is on your list today.
This Isn’t a Drill. It’s a Deficiency.
Most businesses assume their IT provider is handling this. They assume there’s a plan. They assume someone knows what to do when the breach hits. Assumptions are what lawsuits are built on.
Because when your systems go down, when your data is encrypted, when your clients start calling and your staff doesn’t know who’s in charge—you’ll find out real fast what was missing.
The worst part? That’s not even the hard part.
The Breach Is Just the Beginning
The real pain starts after the breach. That’s when your insurance provider starts digging through the details. That’s when your vendors want to know how their data was affected. That’s when your legal team starts asking, “Did we even have a plan?”
And if the answer is no? You’re not just unprepared. You’re negligent.
That’s the word lawyers love the most.
It means you didn’t do what a “reasonable business” should have done.
And without documentation to prove otherwise, you’ll have a hard time arguing back.
Get the Answer Before the Storm
If you want to know whether you’re really protected—whether your IT team has your back or just your passwords—get a Cyber Liability Assessment. This isn’t a vulnerability scan or a glorified sales pitch.
This is a real-world readiness check that tells you:
- Whether you have a usable, customized Incident Response Plan
- If your post-breach communication plan is written and ready
- Whether your team knows what to do—and who’s responsible—for what
- And if you have the documentation you’ll need to protect yourself legally
Because the breach is coming.
The only question is whether you’ll be ready, or just next.
Get your Cyber Liability Assessment now.
Before a lawyer finds the holes your IT team didn’t.