Incident Response
Prepare playbooks, coordinate response, and track outcomes — with dashboards built for speed, accountability, and audit-ready reporting.
Incident response is a workflow: detect, triage, contain, eradicate, recover, and learn. We focus on making the process repeatable — and measurable.
- Playbooks and runbooks — clear steps, owners, and evidence
- Severity classification and triage standards
- Containment actions and tracking — what changed, when, by whom
- Post-incident review and follow-up controls
- Admin-managed access via invites and role-based authorization
Capture alerts, signals, reports, and trigger criteria.
Confirm scope, severity, owners, and immediate risk.
Execute approved actions to stop spread and reduce impact.
Document evidence, outcomes, follow-ups, and control improvements.
Example D3 view showing time-to-contain trending over recent incidents.
Faster containment reduces impact. Dashboards tie actions to owners and evidence — and keep access role-based so only authorized users can execute critical changes.
Alert, report, anomaly, or confirmed event starts the response flow.
Define affected systems, users, data, priority, and response owners.
Assign tasks, approve changes, track blockers, and record evidence.
Confirm recovery, document lessons, and create follow-up controls.
After account signup, your Aubern dashboard allows collaboration with teammates. Invite teammates to help build a service quote. Turn that quote into a project. Project timelines provide status updates, allow project expansion, and provide a direct feedback loop.
Aubern's integrated AI builds your quote based on business needs you provide during intake. The AI analyzes input responses to derive a comprehensive quote that directly transfers into an active project upon contract and payment completion.
Start you journey with Aubern today!
Who is responsible for each response action.
What changed, when it changed, and why.
Logs, notes, approvals, and verification.
Response work stays tied to roles, approvals, evidence, timelines, and audit history so teams can act quickly without losing control.
What happened and what decisions were made.
Follow-up controls, fixes, and process changes.
Containment time, repeat issues, and readiness.
Lessons learned become updated playbooks, tighter controls, clearer roles, and better response metrics.