Insyte delivers Information Technology education to a wide spectrum of people, from students seeking a career in computers to IT specialists requiring entry to advanced skills, at a reasonable price. Insyte supplies IT certification programs where students learn by doing employing the same tools and methodologies used every day in business.
Reviews (21)
Michael Hunter
Jan 06, 2022
John Haider
Nov 09, 2021
Nicholas Riggins
Apr 02, 2021
Bryan McGill
Nov 26, 2020
Will Richter
May 09, 2020
Thank you Secure Ninja helping our team getting through all our Mission Critical IT Certification Requirements for our cyber security needs. We have used other trainers and providers in the past with some success. But you guys helped our team succeed like no other. Truly the best IT training we have ever had. We will use you in the future for our Consulting and Certification needs. Happy to give reference as such. We would highly recommend your company Secure Ninja for IT training needs. Thank you again for a great job. We our all truly grateful.
Michael Chadic
May 08, 2020
Hands down one of the best training companies I have worked with. I am active duty Coast Guard in the Alexandria area, and we have sent many members through here for various training, and have had them all pass their exams and receive their certifications! The personnel and instructors are amazing, and a personal shout out to our sales rep I have been working with, Enrique Kalb, who has been instrumental in coordinating and processing our member's request quickly and ensuring they had everything they needed.
Thanks to Enrique, signing up for classes has been pain free and no issues with any of our members! I would highly recommend Secure Ninja for any training you or your company needs to stay certified in this ever changing IT world.
Thanks to Enrique, signing up for classes has been pain free and no issues with any of our members! I would highly recommend Secure Ninja for any training you or your company needs to stay certified in this ever changing IT world.
Omar Chaaban
Mar 04, 2020
I wish I have taken these two cool courses CEH and Advanced Cyber War before. They are exactly to what I needed and expected. I have learned a lot of tips on how to use my expertise in performing offensive and defensive. The boot camp provided me enough knowledge and by studying during the 5 days period I was able to pass the CEH exam. I would recommend these coursed for those who are black Hat as well as white hat. Special thanks to our instructor Joe. Looking forward to take more follow up course in 2020.
Jeremy Parker
Jan 25, 2020
5/5 stars for SecureNinja! Secure Ninja is an amazing Organization. Outstanding staff and experts training. Fuwad Tufail was fantastic! Assisted me from registration up to the completion of the course. Answered all my questions in detail. Amazing person to work with, extremely detail oriented! Can't wait to attend my next training/bootcamp at secure ninja Alexandria!
Paul S.
Dec 15, 2019
READ BEFORE GETTING SCAMMED THOUSANDS. The staff is EXTREMELY RUDE and the training courses is WORTHLESS and a SCAM! I have taken numerous cybersecurity training courses during my career and Secure Ninja is by far the WORST training that I have ever taken. The course started out with our instructor explaining how he had entire training groups fail the CISSP exam after taking his course.
He provided a spot-on recommendation for the training course. After completing the training course and studying the material prior to the exam for weeks, I came to find out when taking the exam that the course did not cover any material on the test. I contacted Mehr (manager of the program), where she told me that the training material that I was taught was missing numerous sections.
I also contacted Enrique regarding the CISSP course and he was very rude to me. I highly encourage watching Professor Messer training videos, Mike Myers training videos, or taking a Phoenix TS training course. These training courses have helped me to successfully pass my cybersecurity exams.
He provided a spot-on recommendation for the training course. After completing the training course and studying the material prior to the exam for weeks, I came to find out when taking the exam that the course did not cover any material on the test. I contacted Mehr (manager of the program), where she told me that the training material that I was taught was missing numerous sections.
I also contacted Enrique regarding the CISSP course and he was very rude to me. I highly encourage watching Professor Messer training videos, Mike Myers training videos, or taking a Phoenix TS training course. These training courses have helped me to successfully pass my cybersecurity exams.
Ervin M.
Nov 26, 2019
Robert D.
Aug 28, 2019
SecureNinja is absolutely amazing. I took a few courses there and every time I do so I am always impressed. The instructors are very engaging with both the online and in-class students which is excellent. The best part is that breakfast and lunch are all included that way I wouldn't have to go out of my way to find a nice place to eat around the area.
They have these fancy whiteboards that work really well and is better than an old fashioned whiteboard. In that case, I do recommend anyone who is trying to get certified to try out secure ninja as to their excellent service and care for all students.
They have these fancy whiteboards that work really well and is better than an old fashioned whiteboard. In that case, I do recommend anyone who is trying to get certified to try out secure ninja as to their excellent service and care for all students.
Serap R.
Jun 19, 2019
Taimur K.
May 16, 2019
Thomas B.
May 16, 2019
Neural Neural
May 03, 2019
I've been trained in their facility on technically advanced computer security topics that require sharp programming skills multiple times and hands down their instructors are top notch pros with a solid theoretical knowledge of the material that gets shadowed by their even more pronounced real life experiences applying it in Gov'nt and Military organizations, reputable financial/banking institutions and retail giants.
My evaluation is based on the quality of the material used to help the students digest the concepts taught along with the hands-on skills of the instructors teaching the class in such a short period of time and NOT on the logistics of setting up a class that's COMPLETELY UNrelated with the main focus of a training course, which is to LEARN, the best ROI money can buy. I'll confidently be re-joining future sessions at SecureNinja on the same or other topics to refresh my skill set or pick up a new one and help my career advancement.
My evaluation is based on the quality of the material used to help the students digest the concepts taught along with the hands-on skills of the instructors teaching the class in such a short period of time and NOT on the logistics of setting up a class that's COMPLETELY UNrelated with the main focus of a training course, which is to LEARN, the best ROI money can buy. I'll confidently be re-joining future sessions at SecureNinja on the same or other topics to refresh my skill set or pick up a new one and help my career advancement.
Marshall P.
Apr 19, 2019
I attended the CCISO (Certified Chief Information Security Officer) course. The week long course was by far one of the best training weeks I have had. I hold numerous certifications, but the instructor and everyone associated with Secure Ninja went out of their way to handle all issues in a prompt and highly satisfactory manner. Great materials, outstanding course and support infrastructure. I will be utilizing Secure Ninja again very soon.
Steve Kadish
Feb 04, 2019
I travelled from New York to Virginia to attend SecureNinja's week-long "Python Immersion" class, taught by Joe McCray. I was pretty excited about it. My excitement faded quickly. I guess I should have worried when I when I walked through the unlocked back door of the office building and was shown into a classroom without anyone asking my name or confirming my enrollment.
I should have worried when there was only one other student in the class. I should have worried when SecureNinja's Director of Customer Success had a Colorado phone number. By the end of the first day I had realized how bad this was going to be. You will not get immersed in Python in this class. Rather, you'll occasionally get splashed with Python from Joe's shallow pool of knowledge.
This will mostly take the form of running other people's scripts to automate offensive and defensive security tasks. Joe didn't write most of the scripts, and sometimes doesn't really know what's in them. There was a lot of Googling to find answers to questions we asked. In the meantime, Joe expected us to learn Python the way HE learned it - from YouTube.
He assigned it for homework - ten YouTube videos a night. Not Joe's videos mind you. Just a series of Python tutorials posted five years ago by some young coder named Bucky. There were no coursebooks. No hand-outs. No slide decks. There was just Joe, plowing through a bunch of text he'd put on PasteBin five years ago. Much of the text - the entire lesson on Regex, the entire lesson on Python classes - was pulled verbatim from other people's lessons or articles.
I could take the text and plug it into Google to find the original source material. Joe's stuff is old. He teaches Python 2, despite the fact that it's going to be deprecated in less than a year. The class material hasn't changed much in the last five years. You can look at his PasteBin to see how he's been copying from class to class for years. The software you use in the class is old.
We used a copy of Olly Debug that was from 2004. On the second day, Joe laid out his philosophy on programming for us. Don't be a programmer. Don't get too involved in the syntax of any one language. All the interpreted languages are pretty much the same, anyway. Don't code more than an hour a day. Don't reinvent the wheel. Pretty much everything you're looking for has been done by someone else and you can find it via Google.
After a lot of emails back and forth between myself, my boss, and the SecureNinja Director of Customer Success, the class started to become less structured. This was both good and bad. Good because Joe was actually talking about stuff he knew, bad because it wasn't about Python. He started pulling material from his other PasteBin "classes." One morning was all about Web Application security testing.
Basic SQLi & XSS stuff I learned ten years ago when I did my GSEC. We used SQLmap which is *written* in Python - does that count? On Friday Joe decided we were going to develop our own tools with Python. This was great except he had nothing prepared. So the day was just us trying to write our own scripts while Joe Googled stuff and read tutorials, trying to help but mostly working on his own on his laptop.
At 1:45 pm he announced that class was over, because he had to get to the airport and fly to his next conference speaking gig. By the way, if you are considering paying SecureNinja $3,000 for one of Joe's classes, first be aware that all of his lessons are publicly available on PasteBin. Also, that he sells his classes online at his other organization, InfosecAddicts, for considerably less money.
Not to mention the fact that he has actually recorded a bunch of his LIVE classes and thrown them up on YouTube. But your $3,000 will get you lunch every day, and fancy smart whiteboards. So that's what SecureNinja is good for. Meanwhile, if you want to learn to write Python scripts, maybe do it the way Joe did? Watch YouTube.
I should have worried when there was only one other student in the class. I should have worried when SecureNinja's Director of Customer Success had a Colorado phone number. By the end of the first day I had realized how bad this was going to be. You will not get immersed in Python in this class. Rather, you'll occasionally get splashed with Python from Joe's shallow pool of knowledge.
This will mostly take the form of running other people's scripts to automate offensive and defensive security tasks. Joe didn't write most of the scripts, and sometimes doesn't really know what's in them. There was a lot of Googling to find answers to questions we asked. In the meantime, Joe expected us to learn Python the way HE learned it - from YouTube.
He assigned it for homework - ten YouTube videos a night. Not Joe's videos mind you. Just a series of Python tutorials posted five years ago by some young coder named Bucky. There were no coursebooks. No hand-outs. No slide decks. There was just Joe, plowing through a bunch of text he'd put on PasteBin five years ago. Much of the text - the entire lesson on Regex, the entire lesson on Python classes - was pulled verbatim from other people's lessons or articles.
I could take the text and plug it into Google to find the original source material. Joe's stuff is old. He teaches Python 2, despite the fact that it's going to be deprecated in less than a year. The class material hasn't changed much in the last five years. You can look at his PasteBin to see how he's been copying from class to class for years. The software you use in the class is old.
We used a copy of Olly Debug that was from 2004. On the second day, Joe laid out his philosophy on programming for us. Don't be a programmer. Don't get too involved in the syntax of any one language. All the interpreted languages are pretty much the same, anyway. Don't code more than an hour a day. Don't reinvent the wheel. Pretty much everything you're looking for has been done by someone else and you can find it via Google.
After a lot of emails back and forth between myself, my boss, and the SecureNinja Director of Customer Success, the class started to become less structured. This was both good and bad. Good because Joe was actually talking about stuff he knew, bad because it wasn't about Python. He started pulling material from his other PasteBin "classes." One morning was all about Web Application security testing.
Basic SQLi & XSS stuff I learned ten years ago when I did my GSEC. We used SQLmap which is *written* in Python - does that count? On Friday Joe decided we were going to develop our own tools with Python. This was great except he had nothing prepared. So the day was just us trying to write our own scripts while Joe Googled stuff and read tutorials, trying to help but mostly working on his own on his laptop.
At 1:45 pm he announced that class was over, because he had to get to the airport and fly to his next conference speaking gig. By the way, if you are considering paying SecureNinja $3,000 for one of Joe's classes, first be aware that all of his lessons are publicly available on PasteBin. Also, that he sells his classes online at his other organization, InfosecAddicts, for considerably less money.
Not to mention the fact that he has actually recorded a bunch of his LIVE classes and thrown them up on YouTube. But your $3,000 will get you lunch every day, and fancy smart whiteboards. So that's what SecureNinja is good for. Meanwhile, if you want to learn to write Python scripts, maybe do it the way Joe did? Watch YouTube.
Imaad T.
Dec 17, 2018
Ron S.
Jun 21, 2015
I would give zero stars if I could. I signed up for a 1-week ISSMP training course in April 2015. Two weeks before the training date, I got a notice that the course had been moved by one month "for administrative reasons". I was quite unhappy with the date change because it's VERY difficult to adjust my schedule for a week-long class. However, I acquiesced and moved around some travel plans to ensure I could take the class.
On the rescheduled training date in May, I arrived at the location of the training (a local hotel) on Monday morning. The hotel was completely confused and had no information about the scheduled training. I called Secure Ninja, and the Operations Director told me she would call me back in a few hours. (Not sure what required so much time to get me a status on the class; I drove home.) She called me back 3 hours later to tell me that the class had been canceled and I should have received an automated email (nope, no communication!).
Apparently I was the only one who signed up for the class. I requested a full refund for the class. The Ops Director told me it would take 30 days for the refund, but she would push it through faster -- which I appreciated, because I had to reimburse my company for the cost. 15 days later, no refund, so I emailed. No response. After 25 days, I emailed again.
No response. On day 30, I called to complain about not getting the reimbursement, and it was done in 5 minutes. Unbelievable. Any hope of my future business or positive recommendation was lost right then.
On the rescheduled training date in May, I arrived at the location of the training (a local hotel) on Monday morning. The hotel was completely confused and had no information about the scheduled training. I called Secure Ninja, and the Operations Director told me she would call me back in a few hours. (Not sure what required so much time to get me a status on the class; I drove home.) She called me back 3 hours later to tell me that the class had been canceled and I should have received an automated email (nope, no communication!).
Apparently I was the only one who signed up for the class. I requested a full refund for the class. The Ops Director told me it would take 30 days for the refund, but she would push it through faster -- which I appreciated, because I had to reimburse my company for the cost. 15 days later, no refund, so I emailed. No response. After 25 days, I emailed again.
No response. On day 30, I called to complain about not getting the reimbursement, and it was done in 5 minutes. Unbelievable. Any hope of my future business or positive recommendation was lost right then.
Angel M.
May 26, 2014
I came here for a CISSP class taught by Clement Dupis. The office was very clean and always had a fresh pot of cffee. The staff was helpful and friendly no matter my odd request. The AC works almost too well so keep that in mind if you're taking a class in the summer. Everyday, the office orders lunch and they pass around order menus for the students and the teachers.
The food isn't fantastic so I would suggest brining your own food or taking a walk to get food during the lunch break. There is a smoking area in the back of the building for those so inclined. Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed using this provider for my education and would love to go back if given the chance. The one thing I disliked was the parking.
If you aren't there by 7am, you won't get a decent parking spot. However, the "2 Hour Parking" isn't enforced whatsoever. I tested this all week and came out with zero tickets.
The food isn't fantastic so I would suggest brining your own food or taking a walk to get food during the lunch break. There is a smoking area in the back of the building for those so inclined. Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed using this provider for my education and would love to go back if given the chance. The one thing I disliked was the parking.
If you aren't there by 7am, you won't get a decent parking spot. However, the "2 Hour Parking" isn't enforced whatsoever. I tested this all week and came out with zero tickets.
Mike S.
May 26, 2013
I just took a Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH) course there, and it was great, mostly because of the instructors. They really knew their stuff, and also made it fun. I got a 90% on the certification exam. Larry Greenblatt was funny and entertaining. As an instructor myself, I was very impressed with his presentation. Tom Updegrove helped us through the labs, and made sure we really understood them.
They added a couple that taught us things missed by the standard material. Both of them were involved with the development of the CEH exam, so they knew what to focus on and warn us about. What can I say that's negative? Parking is scarce unless you get there very early. It is Metro-accessible, though not right next to a station; it's a 5-minute bus ride or 15-minute walk to one.
The "continental breakfast" is donuts, apples, OJ, and coffee. Lunch was carry-out orders, but was good food and different each day. Sodas were available in a fridge, though not much selection, and they'd run out of a particular type sometimes. The classroom was fine, though it got a little warm later in the day. On the whole, I'm glad I took the course there, and would like to take future ones with them to. Definitely recommended.
They added a couple that taught us things missed by the standard material. Both of them were involved with the development of the CEH exam, so they knew what to focus on and warn us about. What can I say that's negative? Parking is scarce unless you get there very early. It is Metro-accessible, though not right next to a station; it's a 5-minute bus ride or 15-minute walk to one.
The "continental breakfast" is donuts, apples, OJ, and coffee. Lunch was carry-out orders, but was good food and different each day. Sodas were available in a fridge, though not much selection, and they'd run out of a particular type sometimes. The classroom was fine, though it got a little warm later in the day. On the whole, I'm glad I took the course there, and would like to take future ones with them to. Definitely recommended.