Cyber security clicks into place when small habits become automatic.
Most cyber incidents don't start with a hacker. They start with a sentence like "it's probably fine." We call the habits that prevent that moment Digital Seatbelts — small, everyday actions that quietly protect your business.
It's almost never a knowledge gap. It's a moment of assumption.
Most modern cyber attacks don't break through systems. They rely on people responding quickly, without pausing, in a busy and familiar environment.
Those thoughts are completely human — especially when you're busy and the work feels familiar. But that's exactly the gap attackers are looking for. Like not buckling up on a short journey, nothing feels wrong until something goes very wrong.
Four small habits that quietly do the heavy lifting.
None of these are dramatic. All of them add up. Click any seatbelt to explore it in detail — including what to look for, what to do, and the kind of attacks each one stops.
Pause before clicking
The single most powerful habit in cyber. A two-second pause stops most phishing attacks dead in their tracks.
Explore →Spot the urgency
Real requests don't usually require panic. Urgency is a manipulation tool. Treat it as a yellow flag, not a green light.
Explore →Check before acting
If the request is genuine, a 30-second check costs nothing. If it isn't, that check is the only thing that saves the day.
Explore →Lock your device
"I'll only be a minute" is the longest minute in cyber. Locking your screen is two seconds of effort and a whole layer of defence.
Explore →Take the Digital Test Drive.
Five real-world scenarios, one honest score, and a personalised view of where your habits sit on the cyber speedometer. No catch — just a useful gut-check for you and your team.
Book a free 15-minute cyber chat.
No sales pitch, no jargon. We'll talk through your current setup, where the easy wins are, and whether your team's everyday habits are protecting you the way they should be.