Advertisements

Social Engineering for Cyber Security || Updated Course ||

Advertisements
Attack Techniques and Defense Strategies, Phishing, OSINT, Influence and Risk Mitigation, Social Engineering from A to Z
1
1/5
(70) Ratings
0 students
Created by Hamza Majeed
Advertisements

What you'll learn

  • Understand the core principles, terminology, and lifecycle of social engineering attacks.
  • Explain the psychology behind deception, manipulation, and human decision-making.
  • Identify the cognitive biases and emotional triggers commonly exploited by attackers.
  • Apply Cialdini’s principles of influence to understand real-world social engineering tactics.
  • Recognize authority, urgency, scarcity, reciprocity, commitment, social proof, and liking as manipulation techniques.
  • Understand the structure and methodology of phishing, spear phishing, whaling, vishing, and smishing attacks.
  • Analyze common social engineering techniques such as baiting, quid pro quo, and physical infiltration concepts.
  • Learn how attackers use Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) to gather information and build convincing pretexts.
  • Understand the role of Social Media Intelligence (SOCMINT) in reconnaissance and target profiling.
  • Identify indicators of phishing emails, fraudulent communications, and impersonation attempts.
  • Understand human-centric security principles and defense-in-depth strategies against social engineering.
  • Understand identity verification procedures, access control policies, and incident response best practices for social engineering threats.
  • Develop the ability to recognize, assess, and respond to human-focused cyber security risks in both personal and professional environments.
  • Build a strong foundation in social engineering concepts for careers in cyber security, information security, IT, governance, risk, and compliance (GRC).
This course includes:
1.5 total hours on-demand video
0 articles
0 downloadable resources
24 lessons
Full lifetime access
Access on mobile and TV
Certificate of completion
Advertisements

Course content

Requirements

  • No prior knowledge of social engineering or cyber security is required.
  • A willingness to learn about human psychology, influence, and cyber security concepts.
  • An interest in understanding how social engineering attacks occur and how to defend against them.

Description

This course contains the use of artificial intelligence

This an Unofficial Course.

Social engineering remains one of the most effective methods used by cybercriminals because it targets the human element rather than technology alone. Firewalls, encryption, and advanced security solutions can protect systems, but a single moment of trust, curiosity, or urgency can still lead to a successful attack. This comprehensive course provides a deep understanding of the psychological principles, influence techniques, and attack methodologies that make social engineering one of the greatest threats in modern cyber security.

Throughout this course, you will explore the foundations of social engineering and discover why human behavior is often the weakest link in organizational security. You will learn how attackers manipulate emotions, exploit cognitive biases, build trust, and influence decision-making to obtain sensitive information or unauthorized access. Rather than focusing on technical exploitation, this course emphasizes the human psychology behind cyber attacks and explains how deception is strategically applied in real-world scenarios.

You will gain a thorough understanding of the complete social engineering attack lifecycle, from reconnaissance and target profiling to pretext creation, information gathering, exploitation, and post-attack activities. The course explains the structured frameworks used by attackers to identify vulnerabilities, collect intelligence, establish credibility, and persuade individuals to disclose confidential information or perform risky actions.

A significant portion of the course examines the psychology of influence and persuasion. You will study widely recognized influence principles—including authority, reciprocity, commitment, consistency, liking, social proof, and scarcity—and understand how these psychological concepts can be exploited during social engineering attacks. You will also learn about elicitation techniques, conversational manipulation, authority-based deception, urgency creation, and trust-building methods commonly observed in cyber threats.

The course provides an in-depth examination of modern attack vectors used in both personal and enterprise environments. You will analyze phishing campaigns, spear phishing, whaling attacks, voice phishing (vishing), SMS phishing (smishing), baiting, quid pro quo, and physical social engineering concepts. You will understand how attackers craft convincing messages, impersonate trusted individuals, exploit communication channels, and leverage human emotions to achieve their objectives. The focus remains on understanding these techniques for defensive awareness, risk identification, and prevention.

You will also explore the critical role of Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) in social engineering. The course demonstrates how publicly available information can be collected, analyzed, and used to build highly convincing attack scenarios. You will learn about target profiling, digital footprint analysis, social media intelligence (SOCMINT), data aggregation, and information correlation, while also discovering practical strategies for reducing your own digital exposure and protecting organizational information.

Beyond understanding attacker methodologies, this course emphasizes practical defense strategies that strengthen organizational resilience against human-focused cyber threats. You will learn how to build a security-aware culture, design effective security awareness programs, implement identity verification procedures, establish human-centric security controls, and apply defense-in-depth principles that reduce the likelihood of successful social engineering attacks. The course also covers incident response considerations, reporting procedures, and organizational policies that help minimize the impact of social engineering breaches.

Designed with a strong balance of theory and practical application, this course explains complex concepts using clear language, structured frameworks, and real-world examples. Whether you are a cyber security professional, IT administrator, security analyst, manager, student, or simply someone interested in understanding how attackers manipulate human behavior, you will develop the knowledge required to recognize social engineering attempts, evaluate risk, and contribute to a stronger security posture.

By the end of this course, you will possess a comprehensive understanding of social engineering psychology, influence mechanisms, reconnaissance methodologies, OSINT fundamentals, common attack techniques, defensive strategies, and organizational best practices.

More importantly, you will be equipped to recognize manipulation attempts, make informed security decisions, and help create a resilient human firewall capable of defending against one of the most persistent threats in cyber security.

Disclaimer: This course is intended solely for educational, awareness, and defensive cyber security purposes. The concepts discussed are presented to help learners recognize, prevent, and respond to social engineering threats responsibly and ethically. No instruction is provided for conducting unauthorized or malicious activities.

Thank you

Who this course is for:

  • Cyber security professionals looking to strengthen their knowledge of human-focused attack techniques and defensive strategies.
  • IT administrators, system administrators, and network professionals responsible for securing organizational environments.
  • Security analysts, SOC analysts, incident responders, and risk management professionals.
  • Security awareness trainers and organizational leaders responsible for building a security-conscious culture.
  • Information Security (InfoSec), Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) professionals.
  • Security awareness trainers and organizational leaders responsible for building a security-conscious culture.
  • Students pursuing careers in cyber security, information technology, or digital forensics.
  • Managers, executives, and business professionals who want to reduce the risk of social engineering attacks within their organizations.
  • Employees who handle sensitive information and want to recognize and prevent phishing and other manipulation attempts.
  • Anyone interested in learning the psychology behind social engineering and how to defend against modern human-based cyber threats.
Advertisements
FREESECS10
Advertisements
Advertisements
Free Online Courses with Certificates
Logo
Register New Account