Empower your team. We deploy realistic, positive-reinforcement email simulations that train employees to recognize and report suspicious activity safely.
No trick questions, no public shame. We teach your staff how to protect your data.
Traditional cybersecurity companies try to trick employees, and when someone clicks a simulated link, they receive harsh warnings or are forced to take hours of compliance tests. This culture of fear causes employees to hide mistakes—the worst possible outcome for an incident response pipeline.
PelTech champions constructive, supportive cybersecurity education. We treat employees as teammates in defense. If someone makes a mistake and clicks, we show them exactly what indicators they missed, in a 60-second micro-learning card.
We deploy standard phishing patterns (fake invoices, generic account resets, urgent HR alerts) that match current cyberthreat indicators.
Track your team's "reporting rate" (the speed at which users actively flag simulations to the SOC) rather than just click rates.
Provide immediate, non-judgmental guidance right at the moment of error, when retention and learning are highest.
A controlled, realistic test email lands in the employee's inbox quietly.
User notices anomalies: mismatched domain extensions or generic signatures.
Using our email sidebar plugin, the user flags the email to our analysts.
The organization's risk profile drops, and compliance readiness rises.
Nothing punitive happens. They are redirected to a secure, constructive micro-learning window that highlights the specific indicators they missed (such as an incorrect sender domain or an urgent language structure). The goal is education, not embarrassment.
We typically recommend bi-weekly or monthly simulations. Frequent, short simulations ensure that security remains top-of-mind without distracting employees from their primary business responsibilities.
Yes. We provide executive dashboards showing click rates and report rates over time. Over 6 months, businesses typically see their report rates double and click rates decline to under 4%.