advisory
Advisory
Selective advisory services and partnerships — built around real constraints, not theater.
Nexorium Group is primarily a holding company — but it also keeps a small advisory footprint for organizations that need help at the intersection of digital safety, cyber / DFIR, and operational reality.
If you’re here because you need someone who can translate “security speak” into a plan that normal humans can execute, you’re in the right neighborhood.
What I’m good for
This is not a giant agency menu. It’s a focused set of lanes that map to how I actually work.
1) Digital safety programs (top lane)
Programs for families, schools, and community organizations that want practical guardrails and repeatable routines — without fearmongering.
Examples:
- parent education series and playbooks
- staff training that doesn’t assume everyone is a sysadmin
- clear policies and escalation paths for “device drama” scenarios
2) Web development from a DFIR / cybersecurity nerd (second lane)
Fast, crawlable sites built with an evidence mindset: clarity, performance, and long-term maintainability.
Examples:
- Hugo + Tailwind builds (precompiled, no bloated stacks)
- conversion structure and routing (not hype)
- security-minded defaults and sane operational handoff
3) General consulting (third lane)
When the ask is “we have a system, a mess, a deadline, and a lot of unknowns.” I can help you structure the problem and build a plan.
Examples:
- forensic readiness and evidence workflow design
- incident response planning and “known-good baseline” hardening
- compliance-aware thinking (CJIS mindset, NIST 800-53 / RMF familiarity, and the ability to ramp quickly)
What I will not do
This is a strict boundary:
- Anything illegal
- Anything unethical or “gray”
- Anything that relies on deception, abuse, or boundary-pushing
- Full-time engagements (unless you’re offering a real role in my field)
If the vibe is “can you help us get away with something,” the answer is no.
How to start
Use the router so you land in the right lane:
When you write, one paragraph is perfect:
- what you’re trying to do
- who’s involved
- your timeframe
- what “success” looks like