Strengthen your security practices and create safer, more resilient environments for learners, staff, and the communities they support.
Education providers often manage large volumes of sensitive learner and operational data. This creates opportunity not only for learning and growth, but also responsibility. Cybercriminals often target people and processes through compromised passwords, inactive accounts, reused credentials, or excessive system access.
While technology continues to advance, many security incidents still begin with everyday actions: clicking a suspicious link, sharing login details, or granting access beyond what is required.
The good news is that proactive steps can make a meaningful difference.
Actions you can take today
Simple actions taken now can help strengthen your organisation’s security posture and reduce exposure to threats:
- Review active users and remove or archive accounts that are no longer required.
- Ensure staff are using strong, unique passwords across all systems.
- Limit administrative access to only those who need it.
- Reinforce security awareness across your organisation.
Applying the principle of least privilege helps ensure users only have access to what they need to perform their role. Removing inactive accounts also reduces potential entry points for attackers.
Building stronger security habits
Effective cybersecurity is not achieved through a single tool or policy. The strongest organisations combine secure technology with informed users, clear processes, and ongoing awareness.
Additional steps that can help strengthen security include:
- Rotate passwords regularly, particularly following reports of compromised credentials.
- Enable Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) wherever possible.
- Ensure every user has their own unique login.
- Use a password manager to support strong password practices.
- Avoid reusing passwords across systems or applications.
- Where possible, implement Single Sign-On (SSO) using for example Google or Microsoft authentication.
- Verify identities before responding to unusual requests via email or phone.
- Encourage staff to report suspicious emails, links, or attachments.
- Maintain a clear and tested incident response plan to support fast action if needed.
Supporting secure and successful outcomes
Cybersecurity is an ongoing responsibility, but it is also an opportunity to strengthen trust, resilience, and operational confidence.
At Wisenet, security is built into what we do, with our ISO 27001:2022 certification reflecting our commitment to protecting customer and learner data through internationally recognised security standards and continuous improvement.
COMMENTS