The application asks for controls you cannot prove
MFA, backup recovery, endpoint protection, patching, and incident response answers need current evidence, not best guesses.
Cyber Insurance Readiness
AgileCT helps Canadian SMBs answer insurer questions, organize broker-ready evidence, and prioritize the fixes most likely to affect renewal, underwriting follow-up, or premium conversations.
Why Clients Act
MFA, backup recovery, endpoint protection, patching, and incident response answers need current evidence, not best guesses.
Organize plain-language explanations, dated fix owners, and realistic exception notes so follow-up does not stall.
Use the review to launch fix coordination and quarterly evidence refresh instead of rebuilding the package from scratch.
Business Risk Lens
AgileCT frames cyber insurance readiness around the decisions leaders actually have to make: what reduces business disruption, what evidence can be trusted, and which gaps need ownership before renewal pressure arrives.
Security work has to connect to downtime, trust, renewal risk, customer commitments, and resilience.
Weak ownership, unclear policy expectations, and poor accountability make controls hard to prove.
Insurers and customers care whether MFA, backups, patching, and response steps are adopted in real workflows.
Checklists help organize proof, but they do not stop incidents unless the underlying safeguards are operating.
Technology is useful only when roles, review cadence, training, and escalation paths are clear.
The practical goal is to reduce impact, prepare recovery, document exceptions, and review residual risk.
Priorities should be tied to value, loss exposure, renewal deadlines, and customer confidence instead of tool lists.
You need to know systems, users, vendors, backups, logs, and open issues before advanced controls can work.
Detection time affects containment, recovery cost, customer communication, and the quality of incident records.
Processes should still work when staff, vendors, systems, and business priorities shift.
Free Snapshot
This directional scorecard helps identify whether the next step is a free triage call, readiness review, fix sprint, or ongoing evidence refresh.
Organized Proof
The same proof insurers ask for often supports customer security questionnaires and vendor due diligence reviews: extra login verification, company computer protection, backups, security updates, email protection, incident response, training, and vendor oversight.
Map each insurer or customer question to the proof source, owner, and review date.
Summarize current protections, gaps, fix dates, and any exceptions without overstating readiness.
Separate must-fix, renewal-supporting, and next-quarter actions with owners, proof that fixes worked, and review dates.
Refresh evidence quarterly so it does not drift out of date.
After The Review
Fix coordination: translate insurer gaps into IT-ready requests for MFA, endpoint protection, backup recovery, email security, patching, and incident response.
Implementation support: coordinate with your internal IT team, MSP, or selected vendors and collect proof after changes are complete.
Quarterly retainer: keep evidence fresh, review exceptions, prepare renewal timelines, and reuse the package for customer security questionnaires.
Packages
Free
A quick scorecard across common security areas insurers ask about.
Starts at $2,500
Security baseline review, proof checklist, gap rating, and broker-friendly summary.
Scoped add-on
Insurance-question proof map, incident exercise notes, and security fix plan.
What Changes The Price
The starting review covers a focused renewal path. Add-ons depend on renewal timing, employee count, systems in scope, outside IT provider involvement, proof maturity, incident exercise needs, and how many fix owners need follow-up.
Share your deadline, current evidence, and broker or carrier context so we can scope the right level of help.
Next Step