CTOs on the Move

Huff and Huff

www.huffhuff.com

 
Huff and Huff is a Oak Brook, IL-based company in the Business Services sector.
  • Number of Employees: 25-100
  • Annual Revenue: $1-10 Million
  • www.huffhuff.com
  • 915 Harger Rd Ste 330
    Oak Brook, IL USA 60523
  • Phone: 630.684.9100

Executives

Name Title Contact Details

Similar Companies

Clockwork

Human-centered digital agency building solutions that make business better for everyone. Transforming strategy, design, and tech for 20 years.

NXTP Consulting

NXTP Consulting is a Topeka, KS-based company in the Business Services sector.

Silkin Managment Group

Silkin Managment Group is a Lake Oswego, OR-based company in the Business Services sector.

FedWriters

Headquartered in Fairfax, VA FedWriters is a professional writing support company that offers a complete suite of writing services emphasizing clear, compelling, and compliant documentation. We are a single source for all tasks surrounding document sup...

Fathom Cyber

Fathom Cyber`s mission is to empower officers, directors, and other senior executives with the information they need to effectively govern cybersecurity. In short, we help senior executives fathom the unfathomable; or, more simply, we make cybersecurity make sense. This means that cybersecurity plans will be more comprehensive, and the corresponding increase in oversight will make it harder for issues like unpatched or misconfigured systems to persist in the organization for any length of time. It also means that organizations understand their cybersecurity shortcomings, can create plans for addressing those shortcomings, and can monitor the execution of those plans so that the entire organization understands its cybersecurity risk posture, risk tolerance, and its priorities. Without this fundamental information, even the best cybersecurity tools will only be of limited effectiveness. At Fathom Cyber LLC, we saw all of the incredible tools that exist in the market today, and started to wonder why cybersecurity wasn`t more effective. When we looked at what happened with some of the biggest, headline-grabbing data breaches, we realized that those breaches didn`t occur because of a lack of tools. Instead, the tools either were not being used properly, or the output of the tools was being ignored. To us, this meant that cybersecurity didn`t need more tools; instead, it needed better oversight and governance. But we also recognized that the people in the best position to govern cybersecurity, the organization`s senior executives, were reluctant to take on that responsibility, because cybersecurity is perceived as being complex and dynamic, making it difficult to understand unless you are a cybersecurity expert.