NEW

How to Prepare Microsoft 365 Permissions for a Safe Copilot Rollout

A safe Microsoft Copilot rollout starts with a permissions audit before any trial license is enabled. Microsoft 365 Copilot retrieves files, emails, and chats using each user's existing Microsoft 365 permissions. In most tenants, those permissions are broader than...

5 Microsoft 365 Settings Worth Checking in Your Tenant

Microsoft has tightened several default settings in Microsoft 365 over the past few years. Newer tenants get more protection out of the box than tenants set up before 2022 or so. The problem is that legacy configurations stay in place. A setting changed for new...

What Immutable Backup Means on Your Cyber Insurance Form

Cyber insurance applications include a question that catches a lot of small business owners off guard: “Do you maintain immutable, air-gapped, or offline backups of your critical business data?”Carriers added that question to renewal forms because ransomware operators...

Why Human Habits Are Your Biggest Security Risk

Most cyberattacks do not start with a sophisticated intrusion. They start with a click on a personal email, a reused password, or a file uploaded to a familiar cloud service because the approved option felt slower.The Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report found...

What is Passkey Migration and How Can It Help Your Team Eliminate Passwords?

Your team locks everything down with passwords. Some are strong, some are not, and most have been reused somewhere over the years. Every month, IT fields reset requests. Every year, the same breach reports list stolen credentials as the leading cause.There is now a...

The “Zombie” SaaS Audit: Finding the 3 Apps Your Former Employees Still Access

Someone leaves the company on a Friday. By Monday, their email account is disabled, and their laptop is back in the pile.What nobody checks is their login to the project management tool they signed up for in Q3, the cloud storage folder they shared with a contractor,...

Stop the Bleeding: How Revoking Admin Rights Eliminates Support Tickets

The most time-consuming ticket in your queue is rarely a hardware failure. It’s the PC infection that started when a user installed something they shouldn’t have been able to. Or it’s the broken configuration left behind after someone changed a setting IT can’t...

Is Your Invoice a Deepfake? Securing Your Accounts Payable Process Against Voice and Email Cloning

It’s a statistic that sends a shiver down the backs of SME owners, managers and employees.  According to the FBI's 2025 Internet Crime Report, business email compromise (BEC) cost US businesses more than $3 billion last year.This makes it one of the most financially...

Adversary-in-the-Middle Attacks: How Phishing Sites Steal Your Active Login

You click a link, sign in, approve the MFA prompt, and get on with your day. Completely unaware that someone else just logged into your account at the same moment.That scenario surprises many businesses, particularly those that rely on multi-factor authentication...

The “Session Cookie” Hijack: Why MFA Can’t Always Save You

MFA is a strong front-door lock. But it’s not the only thing that decides whether someone can get in.After you sign in, your browser keeps you logged in using a session token (often stored as a cookie). It’s the digital version of a wristband at an event: once you’ve...

Guest Wi-Fi is a convenience your visitors expect and a hallmark of good customer service. But it’s also one of the riskiest points in your network. A shared password that’s been passed around for years offers virtually no protection, and a single compromised guest device can become a gateway for attacks on your entire business. That’s why adopting a Zero Trust approach for your guest Wi-Fi is essential.

The core principle of Zero Trust is simple but powerful: never trust, always verify. No device or user gains automatic trust just because they’re on your guest network. Here are some practical steps to create a secure and professional guest Wi-Fi environment.

Business Benefits of Zero Trust Guest Wi-Fi

Implementing a Zero Trust guest Wi-Fi network is not just a technical necessity; it’s a strategic business decision that delivers clear financial and reputational benefits. By moving away from a risky shared password system, you significantly reduce the likelihood of costly security incidents. A single compromised guest device can act as a gateway for attacks on your entire business , leading to devastating downtime, data breaches, and regulatory fines. The proactive measures of isolation, verification, and policy enforcement are an investment in business continuity.

Consider the Marriott data breach where attackers gained access to their network through a third-party access point, eventually compromising the personal information of millions of guests. While not specifically a Wi-Fi breach, it serves as a stark reminder of the massive financial and reputational damage caused by an insecure network entry point. A Zero Trust guest network, which strictly isolates guest traffic from corporate systems, would prevent this lateral movement and contain any threat to the public internet.

Build a Totally Isolated Guest Network

The first and most crucial step is complete separation. Your guest network should never mix with your business traffic. This can be achieved through strict network segmentation by setting up a dedicated Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) for guests. This guest VLAN should run on its own unique IP range, entirely isolated from your corporate systems.

Then, configure your firewall with explicit rules that block all communication attempts from the guest VLAN to your primary corporate VLAN. The only destination your guests should be able to reach is the public internet. This strategic containment ensures that if a guest device is infected with malware, it cannot pivot laterally to attack your servers, file shares, or sensitive data.

Implement a Professional Captive Portal

Get rid of the static password immediately. A fixed code is easily shared, impossible to track, and a hassle to revoke for just one person. Instead, implement a professional captive portal, like the branded splash page you encounter when connecting to Wi-Fi at a hotel or conference. This portal serves as the front door to your Zero Trust guest Wi-Fi.

When a guest tries to connect, their device is redirected to the portal. You can configure it securely in several ways. For example, a receptionist could generate a unique login code that expires in 8 or 24 hours, or visitors could provide their name and email to receive access. For even stronger security, a one-time password sent via SMS can be used. Each of these methods enforces the ‘never trust’ principle, turning what would be an anonymous connection into a fully identified session.

Enforce Policies via Network Access Control

Having a captive portal is a great start, but to achieve true guest network security, you need more powerful enforcement, and that is where a Network Access Control (NAC) solution comes into play. NAC acts like a bouncer for your network, checking every device before it is allowed to join, and you can integrate it within your captive portal for a seamless yet secure experience.

A NAC solution can be configured to perform various device security posture checks, such as verifying whether the connecting guest device has a basic firewall enabled or whether it has the most up-to-date system security patches. If the guest’s device fails these posture checks, the NAC can redirect it to a walled garden with links to download patch updates or simply block access entirely. This proactive approach prevents vulnerable devices from introducing risks into your network. 

Apply Strict Access Time and Bandwidth Limits 

Trust isn’t just about determining who is reliable, it’s about controlling how long they have access and what they can do on your network. A contractor doesn’t need the same continuous access as a full-time employee. Use your NAC or firewall to enforce strict session timeouts, requiring users to re-authenticate after a set period, such as every 12 hours.

Similarly, implement bandwidth throttling on the guest network. In most cases, a guest only needs basic internet access to perform general tasks such as reading their emails and web browsing. This means limiting guest users from engaging in activities such as 4K video streaming and downloading torrent files that use up the valuable internet bandwidth needed for your business operations. While these limitations may seem impolite, they are well in line with the Zero Trust principle of granting least privilege. It is also a good business practice to prevent network congestion by activities that do not align with your business operations.

Create a Secure and Welcoming Experience

Implementing a Zero Trust guest Wi-Fi network is no longer an advanced feature reserved for large enterprises, but a fundamental security requirement for businesses of all sizes. It protects your core assets while simultaneously providing a professional, convenient service for your visitors. The process hinges on a layered approach of segmentation, verification, and continuous policy enforcement, and effectively closes a commonly exploited and overlooked network entry point.

Do you want to secure your office guest Wi-Fi without the complexity? Contact us today to learn more. 

Featured Image Credit

This Article has been Republished with Permission from The Technology Press.