Prioritizing Digital Executive Protection to Manage Corporate Risk
Executives are often the weakest link in an organization’s security chain. They often handle the most sensitive data—often on the fly—and have access to a company’s most valuable assets. They are increasingly targeted by threat actors seeking to leverage their credentials, access, and status to execute destructive and costly attacks. Personal digital privacy is not enough for these high-value targets and their families, as 70 percent of executives have fallen victim to at least one cyberattack against their personal assets. As AI-driven social engineering attacks rise, protecting executives’ personal information and privacy should be a critical corporate risk management priority. But typically, it is not prioritized, nor is it widely integrated into enterprise cybersecurity strategies.
This webinar explores the security challenges organizations face in protecting the personal digital lives of executives and their families—including a lack of visibility into their devices and online behaviors—and the extent to which they are taking steps to do so.
Join our roundtable panel of experts, including Mitch Ashley, analyst at The Futurum Group, Ingrid Gliottone, Chief Experience Officer for BlackCloak, Malcolm Harkins, Chief Security and Trust Officer for HiddenLayer, and Chris Roberts, Technical Solutions Architect /Regional Field CTO for WWT, who will share their extensive knowledge and experiences on AI-driven social engineering, personal data protection, and risk management.
They will discuss a variety of topics, including:
The evolving AI social engineering threat landscape
The risks AI social engineering attacks pose to executives and their families
Executive behavior that makes them more vulnerable to attack
The challenge of securing executives’ PII
Best practices and real-world examples
Key Takeaways
1. The security challenges posed by AI social engineering attacks and how they differ from traditional security concerns.
2. The importance of prioritizing the protection of executives’ personal digital lives to offset corporate risk — and why it’s critical to act now.
3. Important steps to gain visibility into and protect executives’ personal digital footprints, harden their personal devices and accounts, and protect their homes (scanning home networks, smart home access points, etc.).
4. Real-world insights and best practices for securing executives and their families against AI social engineering attacks, enabling organizations to adopt AI technologies securely and confidently.

