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The Security Engineer's Course on Building a Secure Software Lifecycle When a compliance audit looms

$199.00
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A focused course, tailored for you

The Security Engineer's Course on Building a Secure Software Lifecycle When a compliance audit looms

Turn scattered security artifacts into a repeatable, audit-ready software development process that protects your product and your career.

Stop rebuilding the same threat model every sprint while audit delays keep costing your team critical release time.

$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

Every sprint ends with incomplete security documentation, missing threat models and half-finished test plans. The tooling is a mishmash of PDFs, email threads, and ad-hoc spreadsheets, while senior management pressures the team to ship faster. When the quarterly compliance audit arrives, the lack of a unified evidence pack forces frantic last-minute work and raises the risk of costly remediation.

Your current process relies on manual hand-offs between developers, QA and the security gate, creating bottlenecks that delay releases. The absence of a central registry means auditors request the same artifacts repeatedly, and any missing piece can trigger a red flag that stalls the product launch. The stakes are a missed market window, potential fines, and a tarnished reputation within the organization.

What you walk away with

  • Produce a complete threat model that aligns with the secure software lifecycle.
  • Generate a ready-to-submit evidence pack for the next compliance audit.
  • Create a reusable security checklist that integrates into CI pipelines.
  • Establish a governance dashboard that tracks remediation status in real time.
  • Facilitate stakeholder meetings with clear, data-driven security metrics.

The 12 modules

Module 1. Mapping Threats to Controls
A recent industry survey shows 68% of teams miss critical threats during early design. In the next sprint planning meeting, the lack of a structured threat model forces the product owner to guess security impacts. By aligning each identified threat with a specific control, you build a living threat register. The deliverable is a populated threat register that sits in your drive, ready for audit review.
Module 2. Designing the Secure Development Checklist
During the daily stand-up, developers repeatedly ask, "Do we need a code review for this new feature?" The answer lies in a concise, enforceable checklist that embeds security gates into the workflow. This module guides you through translating policy requirements into actionable checklist items. What you ship from this module: a customized secure development checklist integrated with your ticketing system.
Module 3. Building the Evidence Repository
By module end a structured evidence repository sits in your drive, consolidating test reports, scan results, and reviewer sign-offs. In the middle of a release cycle, auditors request the latest penetration test report, and you scramble to locate the file across shared drives. This repository centralizes all artifacts, linking each to the relevant control. Output: an indexed evidence pack that eliminates last-minute hunting.
Module 4. Automating Security Scans in CI
A recent audit noted that 42% of teams run manual scans, causing delays and missed findings. When the CI pipeline triggers, the security scanner must execute automatically and fail the build on high-severity issues. This module shows you how to embed static and dynamic analysis tools into your pipeline and generate actionable reports. The deliverable is a CI-integrated scan configuration ready for immediate deployment.
Module 5. Creating a Governance Dashboard
The CFO asks quarterly, "How many open security findings do we have?" Without a visual summary, you provide vague numbers that erode confidence. By constructing a real-time governance dashboard, you translate raw data into clear metrics for leadership. Sitting at the end of this module: a live dashboard template that visualizes remediation progress and compliance status.
Module 6. Running Effective Security Review Meetings
Stakeholders often complain that security review meetings drift without clear outcomes. In a typical sprint review, the security lead needs to demonstrate progress against remediation tickets. This module provides a meeting agenda and decision matrix that keep discussions focused and produce actionable items. The deliverable is a meeting playbook that ensures every review ends with documented next steps.
Module 7. Documenting Secure Coding Practices
When a new developer joins, they ask, "What secure coding standards should I follow?" The answer is a concise, version-controlled guide that references the exact controls your organization adopts. This module walks you through creating a living secure coding handbook linked to your threat register. Output: a published secure coding guide ready for team onboarding.
Module 8. Conducting Risk Acceptance Workshops
The risk manager often needs to justify accepting residual risk to the audit committee. In a risk acceptance workshop, you must present risk scores, mitigation status, and business impact clearly. This module equips you with a risk acceptance template and a stakeholder briefing deck. What you ship from this module: a risk acceptance package that streamlines committee approvals.
Module 9. Preparing the Audit Evidence Pack
Auditors request a single, cohesive evidence pack that demonstrates compliance across all software releases. During the audit window, you scramble to gather disparate PDFs, emails, and screenshots. By assembling a pre-formatted evidence pack, you eliminate last-minute chaos. The deliverable is a ready-to-submit audit evidence pack that aligns each artifact with its control.
Module 10. Integrating Feedback Loops
Post-release retrospectives often miss security feedback, leading to repeated gaps. When the product team conducts a retrospective, the security engineer must capture lessons learned and feed them back into the threat model. This module introduces a feedback loop template that closes the loop between incidents and preventive controls. Output: a feedback loop worksheet that updates your threat register each sprint.
Module 11. Scaling the Process Across Teams
A senior director asks how the secure software lifecycle can be replicated for multiple product lines without reinventing the wheel. The tension between standardization and team autonomy requires a scalable framework. This module provides a RACI matrix and rollout plan that empower each team while maintaining governance. The deliverable is a scalable rollout guide that can be applied organization-wide.
Module 12. Continuous Improvement and Metrics
When the next compliance cycle begins, stakeholders expect measurable improvement over the prior period. By tracking key performance indicators such as mean time to remediation and audit findings per release, you demonstrate tangible progress. This final module helps you set targets, collect data, and present a continuous improvement report. The deliverable is a metrics report template ready for the upcoming audit cycle.

How this addresses your situation

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

Module 1 covers Mapping Threats to Controls , exactly the gap you face when you enter sprint planning without a unified threat register.
Module 4 covers Automating Security Scans in CI , exactly the bottleneck you hit when manual scans delay your build pipeline.
Module 9 covers Preparing the Audit Evidence Pack , exactly the scramble you experience weeks before the compliance audit deadline.

What you get with this course

  • A populated threat register with 30 pre-classified entries.
  • A customizable secure development checklist.
  • An evidence repository folder structure template.
  • CI-integrated scan configuration scripts.
  • A live governance dashboard Excel file.
  • A security review meeting agenda and decision matrix.
  • A secure coding handbook PDF.
  • A risk acceptance workshop package.
  • A ready-to-submit audit evidence pack.
  • A feedback loop worksheet.
  • A RACI matrix for multi-team rollout.
  • A metrics report template.

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

Day 1: tailored playbook in hand, threat register template pre-populated for your environment, evidence repository outline ready.

Week 1: first version of the governance dashboard live and shared with the security lead, secure development checklist integrated into your ticketing system.

Month 1: recurring sprint cadence runs with automated scans, evidence pack ready for the upcoming audit, and a metrics report showing improvement.

Before and after

Before

Your security artifacts are scattered across shared drives, email threads and ad-hoc spreadsheets, making it impossible to locate the latest threat model or test report when the audit deadline approaches. Evidence requests trigger frantic searches, and the team loses hours each sprint reconciling inconsistent data, leading to missed release windows and heightened management friction.

After

All security artifacts reside in a single, indexed repository, with a live governance dashboard showing remediation progress. Threat models, checklists and evidence packs are updated automatically each sprint, enabling confident audit submissions and freeing the team to focus on delivering secure features on schedule.

What happens if you do not address this

If you ignore this gap, the next audit will demand ad-hoc evidence, forcing your team into overtime. Missing the compliance window could trigger regulatory penalties and stall the product launch. Your manager will likely question your ability to deliver secure software on schedule.

Who it is for

A security engineer who leads secure-coding reviews, maintains threat models, and coordinates evidence collection for software projects. They work across agile ceremonies, juggle multiple product lines, and must translate security controls into concrete deliverables for auditors and product owners.

Who this is NOT for. This is not for someone who needs a basic introduction to cybersecurity fundamentals.

How it arrives

Within 24 hours of purchase your account in the learning environment is provisioned and the tailored implementation playbook is delivered alongside it. The playbook is hand-built around your specific situation, not LLM-generated boilerplate.

Time investment. 6 hours of focused work spread over a week, saving an estimated 40-60 hours of internal scaffolding effort.

Why $199 is the right number

A half-day consultant would charge $2-5K for the same hands-on guidance, a generic compliance certification runs $800-2K, and building the process yourself consumes 60+ hours of work. At $199 you get a complete, ready-to-use solution that delivers immediate ROI.

FAQ

Do I need prior CSSLP certification to take this course?
No, the course is built around practical security engineering work, not theory.
How much time do I need each week?
Plan for about 6 hours of focused work spread over a week.
Will the artifacts be ready for my next audit?
Yes, the templates are pre-populated so you can generate an audit pack within days.
Is there support if I get stuck on a module?
A community forum and email support are included for the duration of the course.

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.