559.825.3200

Top Mistakes to Avoid When Training Staff on Cybersecurity

Training Cybersecurity
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

As technology continues to advance, so do the techniques used by hackers. We must keep up with their evolving strategies to keep our systems protected. To do this, regular cybersecurity training of employees is a must. Studies show that an effective training method can reduce vulnerability to phishing and similar attacks from 60% to 10% within a year.

7 Common Mistakes in Cybersecurity Training

You can do many things to get the most out of each training session. But today, we will focus on what you should NOT do because they are counterproductive to the training. Here are the top mistakes you should avoid.

Boring Training Sessions

If the training comprises text-heavy slide shows with someone just reading out loud, then you can’t blame your employees for nodding off in the first few minutes. Not only will they lose interest, but they will also gain absolutely nothing from the training. Instead, use a more engaging approach. Replace text with visuals. Encourage interactive discussions. Have some group work.

Same Program for Everyone

In any organization, members have varying skill levels. With cybersecurity, some employees might be more aware of the latest trends. Others might not even know what phishing is. So a one-size-fits-all cybersecurity training program is bound to fail. You need to address everyone’s level and train them accordingly.

One-Time Workshop

Many still believe that compressing all the key learning areas into one big training session will work, but it will not. You can squeeze as much value as possible into a single session, but there should be a follow-up. Better yet, there should be a series of follow-ups. Ongoing reinforcement is one of the best methods for making any lesson stick.

Focusing on In-Office Cybersecurity Training

Yes, it is important to practice online safety while in the office. But most companies today have employees in a hybrid work setup or working full-time from home. With this being the new norm, the training program must also address mobile security.

Insufficient Leadership Support in Cybersecurity Training

We always say that children emulate the behavior of their parents. The same goes for employees and their superiors. Whatever the staff is learning, the top executives must be as well.

Leaving out Incident Response Training

Prevention is indeed better than cure. However, this doesn’t mean we shouldn’t talk about handling cyberattacks when they happen. Employees need to know what actions to take in the event of a data breach to prevent the damage from escalating further.

Lack of Proper Assessment

Cybersecurity training does not end when the facilitator gives their last remarks. You must test the participants on what they have learned with these efficient assessment methods. It could be standard question-and-answer tests or random phishing simulations to check if and how the employees will apply what they have learned.

Final Thoughts on Cybersecurity Training

Before you take your staff on their next cybersecurity training, keep these mistakes in mind and avoid them at all costs. Plan the training program so it can deliver maximum impact. Better yet, you can use a tried-and-tested program created by established and trusted cybersecurity experts to train your staff. That is something that we can help you with.

It pleases us to present the latest tool in employee cybersecurity training—our very own microtraining platform. This method tackles all the important aspects of online security, from threat identification to incident response and everything in between. If you are interested in learning more, we have a demo of the platform that you can download by clicking right here. 

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

A Trespasser Got Hurt on Your Fresno Jobsite at 2 AM. You’re About to Find Out That’s Your Problem.

Construction site liability in California extends to trespasser injuries — even unauthorized visitors who enter after hours. Fresno and Visalia contractors without camera evidence face costly premises liability claims. PC Solutions deploys Verkada systems that document site conditions and trespasser activity for legal defense.

May 5, 2026

Your Central Valley Solar Farm Has 2,000 Acres of Panels Under Construction. Who’s Watching Them at Night?

Solar farm construction in Fresno, Kings, and Kern counties creates massive theft targets — copper wire, panels, and inverters worth millions spread across thousands of acres with no perimeter control. PC Solutions deploys Verkada camera systems designed for large-scale linear construction projects.

April 28, 2026

Your Bakersfield Laydown Yard Has $500K in Pipe and Steel Behind Temporary Fencing. What Could Go Wrong?

Material laydown yards at Central Valley construction projects hold hundreds of thousands in steel, pipe, copper, and equipment behind temporary fencing with no cameras. PC Solutions deploys Verkada security systems that protect staging areas from theft and document deliveries for dispute resolution.

April 21, 2026

A Worker Fell on Your Clovis Jobsite. Cal/OSHA Asked for Video. You Had a Toolbox Talk Sign-In Sheet.

Cal/OSHA investigations at Central Valley construction sites increasingly request video documentation of safety practices. Fresno and Visalia contractors without timestamped footage face higher fines, longer investigations, and rising insurance costs. Here’s how to close the documentation gap.

April 14, 2026

That $300K Excavator Sitting on Your Visalia Jobsite Uses a Universal Key. So Does Every Thief’s.

Here is a fact about construction equipment that should keep every general contractor up at night: the majority of heavy equipment in the field can be started with a universal

April 7, 2026
Verkada by PC Solutions

Try Verkada by PC Solutions

Start your 30-day free trial