Network security is no longer assessed solely on technical robustness. In the 2024–2025 regulatory and audit landscape, organizations are expected to demonstrate that network architectures are deliberately designed, risk driven, documented, and continuously governed. Firewalls, VPNs, and wireless access controls are scrutinized not only for their configuration, but for the rationale behind their placement, their integration into risk management, and their operational oversight.
This training focuses on how ISO/IEC 27033 is used as a structural reference to design and manage secure network environments. Participants work through how network boundaries are defined, how trust zones are segmented, and how communications between networks are secured in a way that is auditable and aligned with business requirements. The emphasis is on decision making: why a specific architectural option is selected, what risks it addresses, and what evidence is required to demonstrate control effectiveness.
Abilene Academy’s approach deliberately avoids vendor specific or purely technical deep dives. Instead, the course mirrors how network security is evaluated by auditors, regulators, and senior management. Through a continuous case study, participants practice defining network security policies, aligning them with risk assessments, documenting architecture choices, and establishing monitoring and incident response mechanisms that operate over time.
Delivered by active consultants, the training reflects the realities of hybrid environments, remote access dependencies, and increasing scrutiny on network interconnections. Participants leave with a clear method to manage network security as a governed system, not a collection of technical controls, and with the practical capability to apply ISO/IEC 27033 within real organizational constraints.