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Cyber Essentials Slough: the 2026 guide for Slough businesses

Slough hosts Mars UK, O2 Telefónica UK, BlackBerry UK, and one of the UK's most concentrated data-centre clusters. This guide covers Cyber Essentials for Slough businesses in 2026.

Author

Jay Hopkins

Editor

Edited by Jack Wickham

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Last reviewed

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4 min read

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Cyber Essentials Slough: the 2026 guide for Slough businesses

Slough hosts one of Europe's highest-density data-centre clusters (Equinix, Digital Realty, Virtus), alongside Mars UK HQ, O2 Telefónica UK (until recently), BlackBerry UK, and deep corporate-campus tenancy.

Why Cyber Essentials matters for Slough businesses

Data-centre supply-chain cybersecurity expectations drive very high CE adoption across the Slough SME vendor base. Corporate HQ supplier onboarding adds further demand. Slough Borough Council procurement references CE.

Typical CE drivers:

  • Slough data-centre supply chain. Critical-infrastructure-adjacent cyber expectations reference CE.
  • Mars UK / BlackBerry UK corporate supply chain. References CE.
  • Slough Borough / Berkshire frameworks. Reference CE.

Pricing and turnaround

From £299.99 + VAT. 6-hour turnaround. Full pricing.

Scheme run by NCSC and IASME. Fig Group on the IASME directory.

Bottom line

For Slough - data-centre supply chain, Mars / BlackBerry corporate vendors, Slough Borough suppliers - Cyber Essentials in 2026 is a same-day, sub-£300 exercise with Fig Group.

Start Cyber Essentials from £299.99 + VAT | Free readiness check | Cyber Essentials Online

Local Cyber Essentials evidence for Slough

Slough is relevant for Cyber Essentials because suppliers often work around infrastructure, logistics, and enterprise-service customers. Baseline certification helps remove avoidable friction in procurement.

Local buyers may not need a long security programme before every contract, but they do need confidence that basic controls are present. Fig helps Slough suppliers evidence MFA, patching, access control, malware protection, and firewall scope quickly, then retain that evidence for future onboarding checks.

Relevant local sectors

  • data centres
  • logistics
  • enterprise suppliers

Why buyers ask for it

  • Thames Valley infrastructure customers
  • enterprise security questionnaires

These local signals are why we treat Slough as an indexable regional page rather than a generic city template. The page should help buyers understand when Cyber Essentials is used in the local market, not just repeat national scheme wording.

What local buyers normally want to see

For Slough organisations, Cyber Essentials is most useful when it can answer buyer questions quickly. A strong evidence pack should show the certified legal entity, the scope boundary, the cloud services included, how user access is controlled, whether MFA is enforced, how patches are tracked, and how malware protection is monitored.

How Fig keeps the page useful

Fig keeps this page anchored to Slough by linking the certification use case to the local sectors, procurement drivers, and public sources shown here. The operational advice stays tied to the national Cyber Essentials control set, so the page can rank locally without drifting into unsupported claims about individual buyers or contracts.

Before you submit

Prepare a short scope statement, confirm the organisation name that should appear on the certificate, check MFA coverage across user and admin accounts, remove unsupported software, and confirm that high or critical security updates are being applied within the Cyber Essentials window. If a buyer has asked for the certificate urgently, start with the blockers that most often delay approval: unclear scope, missing MFA evidence, unmanaged devices, legacy authentication, and unsupported software.

If you are choosing between Cyber Essentials and Cyber Essentials Plus, use the local buyer requirement as the deciding factor. Cyber Essentials is the recognised self-assessment baseline; Plus adds independent technical testing. Fig can help a Slough organisation choose the right route before checkout, so the certificate matches the procurement or customer-assurance requirement.

The practical next step is to turn the buyer request into a short control checklist. For data centres, logistics, enterprise suppliers organisations in Slough, that usually means confirming who owns the assessment, which devices and cloud services are included, which evidence is already available, and which fixes must be completed before submission. That keeps the page useful for local search while staying faithful to the official national scheme requirements.

We avoid naming individual local buyers unless there is a public source for the requirement. That matters for trust: regional SEO pages should help customers understand the certification context, not imply a contract, framework, or procurement rule that the source material does not prove.

Local sources

About the author

Jay Hopkins

Jay Hopkins

Managing Director, Fig Group

IASME-licensed Cyber Essentials AssessorIASME Cyber Assurance Assessor

Jay Hopkins is the Managing Director of Fig Group and an IASME-licensed Cyber Essentials assessor. He was previously Head of Technology for a global regulated firm. He works with UK organisations across regulated sectors on baseline compliance, supply-chain assurance, and AI-augmented security tooling.

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