-
Frank Elsner, based in Vancouver, British Columbia, shares a time-boxed plan individuals can use to cut common security risks without turning life into a full-time project.
British Columbia, Canada, 25th February 2026, ZEX PR WIRE, Most people do not fail at security because they do not care. They fail because they are busy. Bills, messages, logins, kids, work, errands. Risk sneaks in during the rush.
At the same time, the stakes keep climbing. IBM reports the global average cost of a breach reached USD $4.88 million. Verizon reports the human element was involved in 68% of breaches. Verizon also reports ransomware was present in 32% of breaches. The FBI’s IC3 reports 859,532 complaints and reported losses exceeding $16 billion.
This release outlines a practical plan built for limited time and attention, based on repeatable habits and a short checklist mindset.
Early warning signs matter, and small signals get missed most often when people feel hurried.
“Early in my career, I watched a small issue turn into a national headline because no one wanted to escalate it.”
“In intelligence work, the biggest failures happen when people dismiss small signals. A strange pattern in data. A rumor. A minor breach.”
“In policing, we trained constantly. You do not wait for a crisis to test your system. You practice before it counts.”
“When I moved into corporate leadership, I stopped talking about threats first. I talked about downtime. Insurance costs. Regulatory exposure. Once you frame risk in business language, boards pay attention.”
The Practical Plan for Limited Time
The 10-Minute Plan
Best for: People who want quick protection today.
Steps (10 minutes total):
-
Turn on two-step verification for your main email account.
-
Change your email password to a long passphrase (12+ words beats 12 characters).
-
Add a second recovery method (backup email or phone).
-
Pick one rule for money requests: never act from a message alone, always verify via a second channel.
Expected outcomes:
-
Harder for account takeovers to stick
-
Faster recovery if something goes wrong
-
Fewer rushed payments based on fake urgency
The 30-Minute Plan
Best for: People who want a stronger setup with a bit more coverage.
Steps (30 minutes total):
-
Do the full 10-minute plan.
-
Turn on two-step verification for banking, payment apps, and your primary social account.
-
Review account recovery settings for those services. Remove old emails or phone numbers.
-
Create a simple contact list called “Verify List” with 3 to 5 trusted people (family, work lead, bank contact line).
-
Set one “pause trigger”: if a message says urgent, time-sensitive, or confidential, you stop and verify.
Expected outcomes:
-
Fewer weak links across key accounts
-
Lower chance of losing money through rushed approvals
-
A clear habit that blocks most social engineering attempts
The 2-Hour Weekend Plan
Best for: People who want a clean, repeatable system.
Steps (2 hours total):
-
Do the full 30-minute plan.
Make a short “recovery sheet” (notes app or printed page) with:
-
Bank phone number
-
Credit provider phone number
-
Key account recovery steps
-
A list of accounts that matter most
Set alerts:
-
Bank transaction alerts
-
Card-not-present alerts if your bank supports it
Clean up old access:
-
Sign out of old devices where possible
-
Remove unknown sessions
Run one practice drill:
-
Pretend you lost your phone
-
Write the exact steps you would take in the first 15 minutes
Create a monthly 10-minute “account check” reminder:
-
Review alerts
-
Review recovery options
-
Spot anything strange
Expected outcomes:
-
Clear recovery steps under pressure
-
Less panic if an account gets hit
-
A simple routine that keeps protection from decaying over time
What to Avoid
-
Clicking fast because it feels routine
-
Acting on money requests from a single message
-
Reusing the same password across important accounts
-
Leaving old recovery emails and phone numbers attached to accounts
-
Treating security as a one-time setup instead of a light monthly habit
-
Ignoring small anomalies like unexpected login prompts or odd account emails
Start with the 10-minute plan today. Set a timer. Do the four steps. Then choose the 30-minute plan this week or the 2-hour weekend plan when you want a stronger reset.
About Frank Elsner
Frank Elsner is Chief of Safety and Security for the Natural Factors Group of Companies in Vancouver, British Columbia. He has over 30 years of policing experience, including seven years as a Chief of Police, and has worked in undercover, investigative, intelligence, tactical, and senior leadership roles. He also leads Umbra Strategic Solutions, providing security solutions for local and international organizations.
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Market Insight Lab journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
