The question of how much technical testing is actually needed to pass an ISO 27001 audit is relevant for security leaders from different industries. The standard requires organizations to prove that their security controls work in practice, so ISO 27001 penetration testing is frequently discussed during implementation and audit preparation.

Many teams invest in compliance monitoring tools expecting clarity and control. They map frameworks, collect evidence, and track tasks. On paper, everything looks structured. Yet audits don’t evaluate how well your dashboard is configured. They assess whether controls actually work: consistently, over time, with clear ownership and traceable proof.

It's easy to think that only careless employees fall for phishing attacks. But what if that’s not the case? New phishing statistics reveal that senior executives are 23% more likely to fall victim to AI-driven, personalized attacks. Why?

AI tools can now generate working software in minutes. A founder can describe an idea, press enter, and get a prototype the same day. The speed feels revolutionary, but many teams hit the same wall a few weeks later: the code works in a demo but breaks under real-world circumstances.

Healthcare mobile app development may seem complex, but it is inevitable. Regardless of the industry, users increasingly prefer mobile products, so the demand for scalable, convenient, and secure applications is growing rapidly.

Seventy percent of companies are testing AI, yet fewer than one in three see real financial returns. Many teams start with excitement and end with a stalled pilot, unclear ROI, or a system that works in a demo but fails in production.
