A week later, the report arrived. But it didn’t look like the dense, hundred-page walls of text Sarah was used to seeing.
It was clean. It was categorized by risk level (Critical, High, Medium, Low). But the true magic was in the Remediation Section.
For every vulnerability found—and there was one critical one involving how session tokens were handled—Hackwize didn't just say, "You are vulnerable."
They provided:
Sarah handed the report to her lead developer, Mark. Mark, who usually hated security reports, called Sarah an hour later.
"Who wrote this?" he asked. "They actually understand our tech stack. I’ve already pushed the fix to staging."
klist
Web applications are a common target for hackers:
A year later, MoveFast Inc. hadn't suffered a single major security incident.
Sarah had rolled out Hackwize’s services across their entire ecosystem—testing their mobile app, running social engineering phishing simulations for their staff, and conducting quarterly cloud configuration reviews. hackwize
During a board meeting, the CEO pointed to Sarah. "Our cyber insurance premiums dropped by 20% this year, and we just won a massive contract with a Fortune 500 retailer. They said our security posture was the deciding factor."
Sarah smiled. She knew the secret. She hadn't magically found a million-dollar budget. She had simply found a partner who turned the daunting, scary world of cybersecurity into something actionable, understandable, and—dare she say it—helpful.
Consider the hypothetical (but realistic) case of NexPay, a growing fintech startup. NexPay had passed three compliance audits (SOC2, PCI-DSS) but was still uneasy. Hackwize was brought in for a three-week engagement. A week later, the report arrived
The ROI? A $50,000 engagement prevented an estimated $2 million in breach costs, regulatory fines, and reputational damage.