Endpoint Monitoring
We Find What Others Miss


CTG understands that the most important data in the world is yours and helps you secure it via 24/7/365 Endpoint Monitoring.
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Rather than reacting to a cyberattack and conjuring a flimsy response, our professionals are constantly scouring the web for new threats so we can develop preventive defenses and well thought out playbooks in the event of a breach.
Endpoint Monitoring

Industry best practices are moving from assumptions of High Trust (what is “Inside” is trusted and what is “Outside” is not) to a Zero Trust Model, where all traffic is considered hostile and on-going monitoring is a fundamental requirement to maintaining security. US government agencies were mandated by a Presidential 2022 Executive Order to migrate to Zero Trust Architectures within two years,, using micro-perimeters based on continuous identity verification, least privilege access, transactions validation and continuous threat monitoring. CTG’s experts are ready to help you in this transition with 24/7/365 endpoint threat monitoring, so that only the right users get access to the right data you want them to have for the right reasons.


To misquote famed Chinese general and strategist Sun Tzu in The Art of War, “If you know the enemy and know yourself you need not fear the efforts of a hundred hackers.”
Many organizations don’t know what devices are accessing their networks or how many nodes they have. CTG first maps outs your architecture to provide that scope and then provides customized solutions based on the size and needs of your organization, that then monitor your data like a hawk. All day, all night, a never-blinking stare. That’s the only way to stop hackers and ransomware attacks in their tracks. We use the US military's framework of “Find, Fix, Destroy.” Our persistent stare monitoring finds them, which allows you to isolate their attack, close the attack vulnerability and destroy their ability to continue their attack. Disgruntled, the hackers move on to pick on easier targets, of which sadly there are many.