Who We Serve

Most security services are built for enterprises or individuals buying off-the-shelf products. Neither describes the people we work with. SuperSimpleCyber serves private individuals, family offices, and professional practices across legal, medical, and financial services, where real assets meet an elevated and often underestimated exposure, and where a direct, expert relationship is worth more than a subscription service.

  • High-profile individuals carry a detailed public digital footprint: data broker profiles, property records, corporate filings, news coverage. That information gives attackers a significant starting point before they have done any additional work. We map that exposure, act on what we find, and harden accounts, privacy settings, and household access.

    Investment fraud accounted for $6.5 billion in reported losses to the FBI in 2024, the single largest category of cybercrime by dollar losses.¹

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  • Family offices manage wealth, operations, and personal information across multiple principals, with staff who hold broad system access and workflows that include large wire transfers. We protect both the principals and the office operation itself, from personal exposure reviews to infrastructure assessments.

    Forty-three percent of family offices globally experienced a cyberattack in the past two years.²

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  • Real estate transactions combine large wire transfers, multiple email parties, and time pressure around closings. That combination is exactly what business email compromise exploits. We assess brokerage email security, closing workflows, and agent exposure, and we help buyers protect the homes they have just acquired.

    Business email compromise in the industry accounted for $2.77 billion in losses in 2024.³

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  • Law firms hold attorney-client privileged communications, wire transfer instructions, trust and estate documents, and client financial data. That combination carries both monetary and pressure-point value. We assess where your practice is exposed and provide ongoing advisory support.

    Thirty-six percent of law firms reported a security incident in the past year.⁴

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  • Private practices and concierge clinics hold patient data that is significantly more valuable on criminal markets than most other categories, are subject to HIPAA obligations, and are increasingly targeted by ransomware and billing fraud. We assess where small practices are exposed and help close the gaps that matter.

    A record 289 million healthcare records were exposed in 2024.⁵

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  • Wealth managers and registered investment advisors hold client financial accounts, initiate transfers, and maintain the kind of trusted relationships that make impersonation plausible. That combination has made the sector a consistent target for business email compromise and credential theft. We assess your firm's exposure and help you meet what regulators and clients now expect.

    The average financial services data breach cost $5.56 million in 2025.⁶

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  • For local businesses with meaningful followings, that audience is a revenue asset built over years of consistent work. Account takeover can erase it, and fake profiles impersonating established businesses are common on most major platforms. We protect the accounts, access controls, and digital presence your business depends on.

    Account takeover fraud volume grew 21% in the first half of 2025 compared to the same period the previous year.⁷

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  1. FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), 2024 Internet Crime Report, ic3.gov.

  2. Deloitte, Family Office Cybersecurity Report 2024.

  3. FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), 2024 Internet Crime Report, ic3.gov.

  4. American Bar Association, 2024 Cybersecurity Tech Report.

  5. HHS Office for Civil Rights, reported via HIPAA Journal, 2024 Healthcare Data Breach Report.

  6. IBM, Cost of a Data Breach Report 2025.

  7. Sift, Q3 2024 Digital Trust & Safety Index (H1 2024–H1 2025 comparison); Security.org, Account Takeover Annual Report 2025.