Phone a friend.

Ring Ring! Your colleague needs your expertise.

As you start up your computer on Wednesday morning, you get a Teams message from your colleague, Claire. Answer the video call, examine the email she received, and give her advice. Are you up for the challenge?

Claire Wilson

Is calling you...

Claire received an email that she’s not sure about. What do you think?

Hmmm, looks suspicious to me!

Hmmm, looks legitimate to me!

I don't know.

Claire thinks it's suspicious too. What do you call these types of emails?

Claire thinks it might be malicious. What do you call these types of emails?

Phishing!

Spam!

I don't know.

Phishing emails, of course! What should I do now?

No not Spam, I think it's Phishing! What should I do now?

I think it's Phishing! What should I do now?

Report!

Ignore!

I don't know.

Claire Wilson

Call ended...

Let's see how you did.

You scored:
3/3
Pass Fail

Excellent job! You passed this training. Please continue to be resilient to protect our organization from cyberattacks.

Unfortunately, you did not pass this training. Remember to look for indicators of a phish, and always report suspicious emails.

If you ever receive an unusual email from a colleague with strange tone or spelling/grammatical mistakes, give them a quick call to confirm it’s legitimate before engaging with the email.

You are the last line of defense against phishing. If you receive a suspicious email, report it immediately.

Flounder Report Phishing