Episode 44 — A.6.3–6.4 — Awareness, education & training; Disciplinary process
A.6.3 establishes the obligation to provide awareness, education, and training so that all personnel understand security policies, their responsibilities, and how to act in common scenarios. For the exam, differentiate universal awareness (policy, phishing hygiene, reporting lines) from role-based training for engineers, administrators, legal, and customer support. Programs should be periodic, measured, and responsive to change—new threats, system launches, or incident lessons learned. A.6.4 complements this with a disciplinary process for breaches of security requirements that is fair, proportionate, and consistently applied, reinforcing that obligations are not optional. Together, these controls shape culture by pairing enablement with accountability.
In practice, strong programs use a curriculum plan, microlearning modules, simulated phishing, secure coding workshops, and tabletop exercises, all tracked in a learning management system with completion metrics and effectiveness indicators. Communications are planned, multi-channel, and tailored to risk cycles, with managers accountable for team completion and comprehension. The disciplinary process is codified with clear categories of violations, escalation paths, documentation requirements, and links to HR and legal review to ensure due process and non-retaliation. Pitfalls include one-time annual training without reinforcement, punitive-only regimes that suppress reporting, and discipline applied unevenly across groups. Effective organizations correlate training outcomes with incident trends, use just culture principles to encourage near-miss reporting, and ensure that corrective actions—access changes, retraining, written warnings—are documented and auditable. Candidates should explain how these controls connect to Clause 7.3 awareness, A.5.36 compliance, and incident metrics, demonstrating a feedback loop where behavior changes are measured and governance maintains trust and fairness. Produced by BareMetalCyber.com, where you’ll find more cyber audio courses, books, and information to strengthen your educational path. Also, if you want to stay up to date with the latest news, visit DailyCyber.News for a newsletter you can use, and a daily podcast you can commute with.