⭐100K+ Monthly Downloads
⭐Top 20 Apple Management
⭐100K+ Monthly Downloads ⭐Top 20 Apple Management
The Small
Business
Cyber Security Guy
Welcome to the blog and podcast, where we share brutally honest views, sharp opinions, and lived experience from four decades in the technology trenches. Whether you're here to read or tune in, expect no corporate fluff and no pulled punches.
Everything here is personal. These are my and the team’s thoughts, opinions forged in the heat of battle! And not those of our employers, clients, or any other professional with whom we are associated.
If you’re offended, take it up with us, not them.
What you’ll get here (and on the podcast):
Straight-talking advice for small businesses that want to stay secure
Honest takes on cybersecurity trends, IT malpractice, and vendor nonsense
The occasional rant — and yes, the occasional expletive
War stories from the frontlines (names changed to protect the spectacularly guilty)
I've been doing this for over 40 years. I’ve seen genius, idiocy, and everything in between. Some of it makes headlines, and most of it should.
This blog and the podcast are where we break it all down.
Grab a coffee and pull up a chair, you need to see this!
SMB1001: What Each Tier Actually Demands of Your Business (And Where It Gets Complicated)
Bronze means firewalls and backups.
Silver means individual accounts and MFA on email.
Gold means EDR, DMARC, and a proper incident response plan.
Platinum means someone actually checks your work.
Diamond means you pay ethical hackers to break in and find the holes before real criminals do.
That's the SMB1001 ladder in five sentences.
The marketing version stops there. The version I'm giving you today includes the bit where the standard contradicts NCSC guidance on passwords, the director accountability trap most businesses walk straight into, and exactly how much this all costs.
Part 2 of Cyber Belts: The SMB1001 Deep Dive.
⚠️ Full Disclaimer
This is my personal blog. The views, opinions, and content shared here are mine and any contributors and ours alone. They do not reflect or represent the views, beliefs, or policies of:
Our Day Job employers
Any current or past clients, suppliers, or partners
Any other organisation We affiliated with in any capacity
Nothing here should be taken as formal advice — legal, technical, financial, or otherwise. If you’re making decisions for your business, always seek professional advice tailored to your situation.
Where we mention products, services, or companies, that’s based purely on our own experiences and opinions — We are not being paid to promote anything. If that ever changes, we’ll make it clear.
In short: This is my personal space to share my personal views. No one else is responsible for what’s written here — so if you have a problem with something, take it up with me, not my employer.