Remedial training campaigns added to user training reports

January 22
Enhancement
BullPhish ID, Kaseya 365 User

BullPhish ID now gives you better visibility into remedial training tied to phishing simulation failures. When Auto-Enrollment for High-Risk Targets is enabled, users who fail phishing simulations are automatically enrolled in follow-up training, and that activity now surfaces directly in user training reports.

Within the selected reporting period, when at least one remedial training campaign occurs, user training reports now include remedial training campaign data and status for each applicable user. A new tooltip next to the Report Contents Training option explains that remedial training campaign details are automatically included alongside standard training campaign data whenever they are present.

These improvements make it easier to confirm which users have been assigned remedial training, track their compliance and demonstrate that failed phishing simulations are driving concrete follow-up actions. This helps you close the loop between simulations and training and maintain a stronger, more accountable security awareness program.

Learn more about remedial training campaigns in user training reports for BullPhish ID here.

One complete platform for IT & security management

Kaseya 365 is the all-in-one solution for managing, securing, and automating IT. With seamless integrations across critical IT functions, it simplifies operations, strengthens security, and boosts efficiency.

SIEM Integration: Types, Benefits and Best Practices

SIEM integration connects your security tools to a central system for unified threat detection. Learn how it works and best practices for getting it right.

Read blog post

Cloud SIEM: A guide to features, advantages and deployment models

The way organizations manage security has changed permanently. Infrastructure that used to sit behind a firewall now spans cloud platforms,

Read blog post

AI SIEM: How AI is transforming threat detection and security operations

Security teams have always faced an information problem. The data needed to catch threats exists somewhere within the environment, but

Read blog post