Events
,
Governance & Risk Management
,
Infosecurity Europe Conference
Frost & Sullivan’s Stahnke on How Human Risk Insights Drive Better Threat Response
Legacy cybersecurity training often fails because users skip the content or treat it as a compliance task. Forward-looking organizations now recognize that human behavior is a critical piece of their security posture, said Claudio Stahnke, industry analyst at Frost & Sullivan.
See Also: Cyber Workforce Demands Specialized Skills Amid AI Growth
Instead of static annual videos, companies are adopting interactive, real-time approaches that educate employees about what actions to avoid – like clicking on suspicious links.
Nudges – brief, context-sensitive alerts triggered by risky behavior – serve as just-in-time training, Stahnke said. “There will be like an endpoint agent on the machine of an employee or computer. When they hover a link, there will be a small pop up saying, ‘Hey, are you sure that you want to click on this?'”
These interventions are tailored to individual risk profiles, boosting awareness without disrupting workflows. But overuse can cause “nudge blindness.” Privacy also remains a concern, he said. Agents installed on employee devices can feel invasive if not managed transparently.
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group at Infosecurity Europe 2025, Stahnke also discussed:
- Why human behavior is integral to threat detection and response workflows;
- How metrics like reduced phishing click rates help justify investment;
- Why transparency and employee support are key to preserving privacy.
Stahnke is a cybersecurity analyst focused on MSS and human risk management. His expertise centers on how firms adapt to threats, AI-driven defenses and outsourced security, offering insights on market trends, vendor strategy, and the future of threat detection and response.