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The Payment Processor Security Advisor Control Map

$199.00
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A focused course, tailored for you

The Payment Processor Security Advisor Control Map

One control map a Security Advisor at a card acquirer can defend to PCI QSAs, BIN sponsors, merchant risk, and the CISO.

Four audiences ask the same question four different ways. The QSA wants evidence. The BIN sponsor wants a questionnaire response. Merchant risk wants a scope summary. The CISO wants a board slide. The controls underneath are the same. The artefacts are not.

$199 one-time
Tailored to your situation. Access within 24 hours. 30-day money-back.

Includes a hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access, generated for your specific situation.

Why this course

A Security Advisor inside a card acquirer or payment processor sits at the intersection of PCI DSS v4.0.1, the CDE boundary debate, the tokenisation-versus-encryption argument, the P2PE attestation chase, merchant-onboarding security reviews, and the cloud-controls mapping that AWS and Azure footprints demand. The work is repetitive in shape and exhausting in volume. Each audience asks for the same control evidence in a slightly different form, and the security advisory function rebuilds the same artefact three or four times a quarter. The advisor who can keep one defensible control map current, and feed every audience from it, is the advisor whose findings close fastest and whose merchants escalate least. The one who cannot collapse the four-audience problem ends up doing forty hours of remediation evidence per QSA cycle and another twenty hours per BIN sponsor refresh.

What you walk away with

  • Hold one control map that answers QSA, BIN sponsor, merchant risk, and CISO without rebuilding the evidence.
  • Defend the CDE boundary in writing when an engineering team proposes a scope-expanding change.
  • Run merchant-onboarding security reviews against a checklist that survives a future QSA pull.
  • Map the acquiring stack's AWS and Azure footprints to CSA cloud controls without a parallel project.
  • Train a peer advisor or holiday cover on the control map in under a working week.

The 12 modules

Module 1. The four-audience control map
Build the single page that feeds the QSA evidence reply, the BIN sponsor questionnaire, the merchant-risk scope summary, and the CISO board slide. Each control row has four columns, one per audience, with the artefact each audience expects and the location of the underlying evidence. Worked example covers a tokenisation control across all four audiences so the advisor sees the same control resolve four different requests.
Module 2. PCI DSS v4.0.1 CDE boundary defence
Document the cardholder data environment boundary as a defensible artefact, not a Visio diagram. Includes the data-flow narrative the QSA accepts, the engineering change request template that triggers a scope review, and the rebuttal pattern when a product manager proposes a feature that would pull a system into scope. Worked example walks a merchant-portal feature request from intake to a no-impact-on-scope sign-off.
Module 3. Tokenisation scope and the encryption alternative
When tokenisation reduces scope, when encryption alone does not, and how to write the scope-reduction memo the QSA will accept on first read. Covers the difference between vault tokenisation, format-preserving tokenisation, and merchant-side tokens, plus the residual-risk language the BIN sponsor expects to see. Worked example covers a merchant migrating from PAN-storing to token-storing and the eight-line scope-reduction memo that closes the QSA finding.
Module 4. P2PE attestation chase and the SAQ-D-merchant overlap
How to read a P2PE attestation, what to ask the device vendor when the attestation does not cover the integration model, and how to handle merchants who think they are P2PE-eligible but are running outside the listed solution. Includes the merchant-facing letter template for clarifying their SAQ obligation when the attestation does not apply, and the device-vendor follow-up checklist.
Module 5. Vendor security assessments for acquiring-stack suppliers
The supplier security assessment for a card-acquiring shop is different from the SaaS vendor review. This module covers the question set for HSM vendors, key-management-as-a-service providers, fraud-screening vendors, and merchant-onboarding KYC providers. Includes the residual-risk register format that survives a QSA review and a follow-up cadence that does not lapse between annual refreshes.
Module 6. Merchant-onboarding security review
The security advisor inputs to merchant agreements. Covers the merchant security questionnaire that the BIN sponsor expects to see retained, the cardholder data flow review that distinguishes a low-risk e-commerce merchant from a high-risk MOTO operation, and the escalation path when a prospective merchant fails the security review but commercial wants to onboard. Worked example walks a high-risk merchant through to a conditional onboarding with documented controls.
Module 7. AWS and Azure footprint to CSA cloud-controls mapping
The acquiring stack runs on at least one hyperscaler. This module maps the AWS and Azure footprint to the CSA Cloud Controls Matrix and to PCI DSS v4.0.1 cloud-relevant requirements. Includes the shared-responsibility narrative the QSA accepts for each service used, the AWS Artifact and Azure Compliance Documents that satisfy supplier evidence requests, and the gaps the hyperscaler does not cover.
Module 8. BIN sponsor questionnaire response pattern
The BIN sponsor refresh arrives every nine to twelve months and asks the same questions in different words each time. This module covers the canonical answer library, the evidence pointers each answer cites, and the change-log format that lets a refresh take a week instead of three. Worked example covers the five questions every BIN sponsor asks and the answer patterns that close them without follow-up.
Module 9. Merchant-risk and security advisor handoff
Merchant risk owns the credit and fraud decisions; security advisory owns the cardholder-data-environment view of the same merchant. This module covers the joint review artefact that prevents the two functions from duplicating work, the shared exception register for merchants with documented residual risk, and the quarterly cadence that surfaces a deteriorating merchant before the chargeback report does.
Module 10. CISO board slide and the residual-risk register
One slide a quarter is what the CISO asks for. This module covers the residual-risk register that feeds the slide, the colour coding that lets the board ask the right question, and the three numbers that always belong on the slide for a card-acquiring shop. Worked example shows a slide that says everything material in twelve lines, with the source register that backs every number on it.
Module 11. QSA evidence pack and the year-round refresh
The QSA evidence pack does not have to be built in the six weeks before the audit. This module covers the rolling refresh schedule that keeps the pack audit-ready every month, the storage structure that lets a peer advisor find any control evidence in under five minutes, and the cover-letter template the QSA expects to see on a remediation reply. The worked example is a complete pack for a single control area, requirement by requirement.
Module 12. Holiday cover and peer-advisor onboarding
The control map is only worth what someone else can defend from it. This module covers the onboarding pack a peer advisor uses to take the role for a week, the escalation list for the questions only the lead advisor can answer, and the residual-knowledge audit that surfaces the gaps the lead advisor did not know they had. Worked example walks a five-day cover handover from briefing to first independent QSA response.

How this addresses your situation

Specific modules that map to what you said you are dealing with.

The QSA finding that needs a remediation reply by end of week is modules 2, 11.
The BIN sponsor refresh questionnaire that landed in the inbox is module 8.
The merchant-risk colleague asking for a tokenisation scope summary is modules 3, 9.
The CISO asking for a board slide on cardholder-data exposure is modules 1, 10.

What you get with this course

  • 12 written modules with worked examples specific to a card-acquiring payment processor.
  • The four-audience control-map template in spreadsheet form.
  • A CDE boundary narrative template the QSA will accept.
  • The BIN sponsor questionnaire answer library covering the five recurring questions.
  • A merchant-onboarding security review checklist scaled by merchant risk tier.
  • The CSA Cloud Controls mapping spreadsheet for AWS and Azure acquiring footprints.
  • The CISO board-slide template plus the residual-risk register that feeds it.
  • The hand-built implementation playbook fitted to the buyer's acquiring stack and merchant mix.
  • 30-day money-back guarantee.

What you will have in hand by Day 1, Week 1, Month 1

Within 24 hours your account in the learning environment is provisioned and the tailored implementation playbook is delivered alongside it.

Week 1: modules 1, 2, 11. Build the control map skeleton and the CDE boundary narrative.

Week 2: modules 3, 4, 5. Tokenisation scope, P2PE chase, vendor assessments.

Week 3: modules 6, 7, 8. Merchant onboarding, hyperscaler mapping, BIN sponsor library.

Week 4: modules 9, 10, 12. Merchant-risk handoff, CISO board slide, peer-advisor onboarding.

Before and after

Before

Four audiences, four artefacts, the same control evidence rebuilt three times a quarter. QSA remediation runs forty hours a cycle. BIN sponsor refresh takes three weeks. Merchant risk asks the same scope question twice a month. The CISO board slide takes a Saturday.

After

One control map. Each audience gets the artefact it expects out of the same source. QSA remediation runs in a working week. BIN sponsor refresh is a five-day exercise. Merchant risk pulls the scope summary themselves. The board slide is a fifteen-minute refresh.

What happens if you do not address this

Every quarter that the control evidence stays in the lead advisor's head, the function depends on one person being available, audit-ready, and able to write four different artefacts for four different audiences from memory. Holiday cover is a risk event. A finding that escalates to the BIN sponsor while the lead advisor is on leave is a much larger risk event. The control map is the cheap insurance against that.

Who it is for

A Security Advisor inside a card-acquiring payment processor or independent sales organisation. Day job is PCI DSS scope, tokenisation, merchant onboarding security review, CDE boundary defence, vendor security assessments, and the security inputs to merchant agreements. Reports into a CISO or Head of Security Risk. Audiences include external QSAs, the BIN sponsor bank, merchant risk colleagues, the engineering teams running the acquiring rails, and merchant-facing sales. Not a generalist GRC analyst, not a CISO, not an external QSA.

Who this is NOT for. Generalist GRC analysts outside payments. CISOs looking for a strategy course. External QSAs running the audit from the other side. Merchant-side compliance leads who do not handle cardholder data directly. Engineers building card-present hardware. Anyone working in cryptocurrency, blockchain payments, or non-card payment rails.

How it arrives

Text-based course in the Art of Service learning environment, plus downloadable templates and worked examples for every module, plus the hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access.

Time investment. Three to five hours per module if the buyer is using the templates against their own acquiring stack as they go. Roughly a working week of cumulative effort across the four weeks.

Why $199 is the right number

A QSA can audit the control evidence, not build it. A managed-GRC platform stores the evidence, it does not write the four artefacts. A PCI consultant can write one of them on an hourly engagement but not feed all four from one source. The course is the inhouse build, owned by the security advisor, sized for a single buyer's acquiring stack.

FAQ

How is this different from a PCI DSS implementation course?
PCI DSS implementation courses teach the standard. This teaches the working artefact set a Security Advisor inside an acquirer keeps current and feeds to four audiences. The standard is one input; the artefact is the output.
Does this cover PCI DSS v4.0.1 specifically?
Yes. The CDE boundary, tokenisation scope, and cloud-controls modules are written against v4.0.1 with the v3.2.1 differences flagged where they still appear in legacy evidence.
Does this cover non-card payment rails like ACH or open banking?
No. The course is built for card-acquiring payment processors. ACH, open banking, and non-card rails have different control sets that would dilute the artefact.
What does the implementation playbook contain?
A hand-built version of the four-audience control map, the BIN sponsor answer library, the CDE boundary narrative, and the CSA cloud mapping fitted to the buyer's specific acquiring stack and merchant mix. Built after purchase against the inputs the buyer provides.
What if the buyer is one person, not a team?
The course assumes a single-advisor function. The handover module covers peer-advisor onboarding for cases where a second person joins later or where holiday cover needs the artefact set to be self-explanatory.

30-day money-back guarantee. If after a week of working through the materials this is not what you needed, reply to the receipt email and a full refund is processed. No questions, no forms.

Within 24 hours your account in the learning environment is provisioned and the tailored implementation playbook is delivered alongside it.