Securing Email & Messaging to Protect Users and Preserve Brand Trust

Email and messaging platforms remain the most targeted vectors for cyberattacks. From Business Email Compromise (BEC) scams to phishing, ransomware, and impersonation campaigns, adversaries continue to exploit these channels because they are widely trusted and heavily used. Enterprises and government organisations must implement layered defences to secure email and messaging systems, protect users, and preserve brand trust.

Phishing Email Detection

Phishing emails account for the majority of compromises in cyber incidents. Deploying advanced detection tools—including AI-driven anomaly detection and sandboxing—stops phishing attempts before they reach the inbox. Managed DMARC services add another layer of defence by authenticating inbound messages and preventing attackers from spoofing legitimate domains.

Email Deliverability

A well-configured DMARC policy not only improves security but also boosts the deliverability of legitimate email. Employees, customers, and stakeholders gain confidence knowing that corporate email domains are validated, reducing the likelihood of messages being blocked or sent to spam.

Detect Rogue Mail Servers

Attackers frequently set up rogue mail servers or spoofed domains to distribute phishing emails. Continuous monitoring for suspicious domains, newly registered look-alike domains, and activated MX records helps security teams identify and neutralise these threats before they are weaponised.

Unauthorised Messaging Apps

The widespread use of messaging apps such as Telegram, Discord, and WhatsApp has created new attack vectors. Threat actors often use unauthorised messaging channels to distribute malware or impersonate customer support teams. Detecting and removing these channels reduces exposure and ensures communications remain secure.

Brand Protection Across Messaging

Extending brand protection controls to messaging platforms is critical. Proactively monitoring for impersonation and fraudulent accounts allows organisations to quickly shut down fake profiles that mislead customers and harm brand reputation.

Prevent BEC Attacks

Business Email Compromise (BEC) attacks target executives, finance teams, and other high-value roles. By correlating intelligence from domains, MX records, and social engineering patterns, organisations can detect and block these sophisticated attacks before fraudulent payments or data losses occur.

Outcome:

Securing email and messaging channels requires a multi-layered strategy that combines authentication, advanced detection, continuous monitoring, and brand protection. Organisations that harden these channels significantly reduce the risk of phishing, impersonation, and data breaches while maintaining the integrity of their digital communications.