Glitch effect

Incident Response Tabletop-in-a-Box

Your security stack is solid. Your defenses are strong. 

But nothing is bulletproof. Shady hackers find gaps, slipping through the smallest cracks.

You can’t stop every threat, but you can control how you respond to minimize damage to your business. Time is never on your side with breaches, so your best defense is readiness to respond.

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The worst time to figure out your incident response plan is in the middle of an incident. Most teams have a plan on paper and have never run it. When the real thing hits, the gaps show up fast.

This incident response table in a box gives you everything you need to run a realistic tabletop exercise.No outside consultant required.

What's in the box

  • A ready-to-run attack scenario you can walk through as a team

  • Facilitator notes and discussion prompts to keep things moving

  • Roles and decision points so everyone knows their part

  • A simple way to capture gaps and turn them into fixes

Who it's for

IT leaders, security teams, and partners who want to pressure-test their response before an attacker does it for them.

How to run an exercise

  • Gather the people who'd actually be in the room during an incident

  • Walk the scenario step by step, making decisions in real time

  • Note where you hesitate, disagree, or hit a wall

  • Turn those moments into concrete improvements to your plan

After the exercise

A tabletop shows you the gaps; continuous detection and response close them. See how the Huntress agentic security platform backs your plan with a 24/7 SOC when a real incident hits.

Download the kit and run your first exercise this month.


[PH] Learn More About Phishing

[PH] Huntress delivers everything you want from a security tool, all designed with the unique needs of outsourced IT and security teams in mind.
[PH] Phishing attempts can show up as messages from your bank, your boss, your utility providers, or even the government. One click from one user can compromise an entire network and inadvertently let hackers deploy ransomware, steal information, or worse.
[PH] The median time it takes for a user to click a link and enter information is less than 60 seconds. With a turnaround time that quick, it's no wonder phishing is one of the preferred methods used by hackers. (2024 Verizon Data Breach Report)