SoS Solutions
Explore our solutions designed to exceed your cybersecurity education & awareness requirements.
Stickley on Security was founded in 2007 with a plan to provide organizations with meaningful education and awareness solutions that employees and customers would actually embrace. As our founder Jim Stickley points out, it is simple to offer a training course but far more difficult to actually educate the participants. Our goal is to ensure that your customers and employees not only learn about cybersecurity risks, but that they can apply what they learn into their everyday lives and jobs.
Explore our solutions designed to exceed your cybersecurity education & awareness requirements.
Powered Cybersecurity Training. (PCT) is designed to help solve the challenges small and medium-sized businesses face in attempting to deploy and manage cybersecurity education and phishing simulation.
SoS Advisor was designed to address the customer security education and awareness needs of your organization. We understand that the security threats your customers face change daily. That's why SoS provides new content everyday specifically written for your customers.
Spoofed domains lead to employee and customer compromise. Domain Assure Detect and Domain Assure Prevent are two solutions designed to maintain your organizations online integrity and reduce spear-phishing, typosquatting and other online attacks.
Some of the biggest cyber security breaches in US history have started with a malicious email received by an unsuspecting employee. Using his past 25 years of experience breaking into organizations, Stickley has created BadPhish, the definitive next generation phishing simulator and education solution.
Potential new threats against your organization emerge daily. Employee EDU is designed to ensure your staff is prepared. Through our security education and awareness solutions your staff will not only be trained about important security topics but also be made aware and tested on the latest security threats.
Stickley on Security WorkRemote combines practical education and technology to provide a next-generation remote employee cybersecurity solution. Stickley on Security WorkRemote ensures no corporate data resides at the remote location, no corporate data transported, no individual VPN required, and only encrypted pixels are transmitted.
Jim Stickley speaks at hundreds of board meetings nationwide on cybersecurity related topics and can now speak to your board as well. When Stickley speaks to your board, his goal is to keep them aware of the many cybersecurity threats that your organization faces as well as keep them up to date on the latest cybersecurity regulations. Ultimately Stickley gives your board members the critical information they need to make cybersecurity related decisions.
Business executives and their board members face a never-ending challenge of keeping up with the latest cybersecurity security threats. With all of the audits and reports, security budget requests and regulatory requirements, our cyber security experts can help you make sense of it all.
The spirit of giving doesn’t depend on the season. However, when Giving Tuesday comes around every year, scammers are quick to jump on that bandwagon. They exploit generosity, posing as legitimate charities or creating entirely fake ones to steal money and personal information. Their tactics change, but the goal never does: To take advantage of your kindness. Before you donate, take a moment, a little caution goes a long way toward protecting both your wallet and your identity.
TransUnion has confirmed a serious data breach affecting about 4.4 million people, stemming from a cyberattack on July 28, 2025, which was discovered two days later. The breach did not compromise TransUnion’s main credit reporting systems, but attackers gained access to a third-party application tied to U.S. consumer support operations. A lot of useful information was gained in this attack, including Social Security Numbers--which are very difficult to change--and birthdates--which cannot be changed.
It’s the second Tuesday of the month. That means that Microsoft released its November Patch Tuesday security update addressing a whopping 63 vulnerabilities across its product ecosystem. While it may seem like a lot, it actually marks a significantly lighter load than previous months. Four vulnerabilities are rated Critical while 59 are rated. The lot affects Windows (including Windows 11), Office, Azure, SQL Server, Hyper-V, and other core components.