Cybersecurity Bootcamp for Enterprise IT Teams

We simulate real network vulnerability scenarios and harden servers against attacks. We prepare IT departments to prevent data leaks and ensure the integrity of commercial infrastructure.

12
simulated attack scenarios in the standard bootcamp

Trusted by enterprise teams

Measurable results and feedback from IT specialists after cybersecurity bootcamps.

Retention score 94%

Participants apply security measures within the first 30 days.

Dr. Miruna Oltean

„We reduced incident response time by 60% after the ransomware simulation.”
Active clients 47

IT departments that completed the server hardening program.

Eng. Crin Farcas

„Default configurations were the main vulnerability – now we have an internal standard.”
Recommendation rate 4.8 / 5

Based on anonymous questionnaires completed by technical teams.

Consolidated feedback

„The material is concrete, with real network scenarios. No generic theory.”
Certified partners 12

Audit firms and security solution providers that collaborate regularly.

Technical collaborations

„The bootcamp uncovered gaps that automated scanners couldn't see.”
Completed projects 83

Data infrastructure security interventions in the last year.

Eng. Crin Farcas

„We hardened 40 Linux servers after the audit – the attack surface decreased by 80%.”
Certifications obtained 6

Specialists who passed the CISSP and CEH exams after the program.

Dr. Miruna Oltean

„The practical exercises were more useful than any online course.”

Frequently Asked Questions About Security Bootcamps

Clear answers to the most common questions about attack simulations and IT infrastructure hardening.

How is a technical bootcamp conducted?

Each bootcamp begins with a briefing session where we set the objectives and rules of the simulation. Then, the IT team works directly in an isolated environment, replicating the company's real infrastructure. Scenarios include ransomware attacks, data exfiltration via APIs, and exploitation of default configurations. At the end, we analyze the results together and prioritize remediation measures.

What preparation should participants have?

Participants must have solid knowledge of Linux/Windows server administration and familiarity with network concepts (firewall, VPN, routing). No prior security certification is required, but practical experience in operating enterprise infrastructure is essential to follow the simulated scenarios.

Does the bootcamp affect production systems?

No. All simulations run in a sandboxed environment, completely separate from the production network. We use containers and virtual machines that replicate the client's architecture, without interfering with live data or services. After the exercise, the environment is reset to its initial state.

How long does a typical program last?

The standard duration is 3 consecutive days, 6–8 hours per day, including breaks and debriefing sessions. For teams wanting a more in-depth approach, we also offer an extended 5-day version, with additional modules on hardening and API security.

What happens after the bootcamp?

We provide a detailed report with discovered vulnerabilities, prioritized recommendations, and a short-term action plan. We also offer a 30-day follow-up session to check the progress of implementing the measures and to answer any additional questions.

Can the bootcamp be customized for our infrastructure?

Yes. Before the program, we conduct an assessment of your existing network configuration and servers, so the simulated scenarios are as relevant as possible. We customize attack vectors, targeted data types, and even firewall rules to reflect the team's real environment.

Why SelfDefenseCamp

Technical bootcamps that simulate real attacks on enterprise data infrastructure

Real vulnerability scenarios

We don't teach abstract theory. Each bootcamp starts from a documented attack vector – ransomware, API exfiltration, unsecured default configurations. IT teams work on their own servers, with simulated data, and apply hardening, isolation, and restoration measures.

Internal audit before training

Before the first module, we analyze network configuration, access policies, and traffic logs. The result is a vulnerability report that we use as a basis for exercises. We don't work on generic setups, but on the department's real infrastructure.

Continuous progress measurement

At the end of each bootcamp, we run a controlled penetration test and compare reaction times, the number of remediated configurations, and backup coverage. Results are delivered to the management team as clear metrics, not diplomas.

Monthly scenario updates

As new attack techniques emerge (recent CVEs, ransomware variants, living-off-the-land methods), we update the exercise library. Teams don't repeat the same simulations; they face threats relevant to their operational context.

Cookie settings We use cookies for the stable functioning of the site, preserving basic choices, and understanding which pages are useful. You can accept, reject, or check the settings before continuing.