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The 4 things you need to pass your CISSP certification.

A free video tutorial from Thor Pedersen | 670,000+ Enrollments Worldwide
Best Selling & Highest Rated CISSP, CC, PMP, CISM instructor
Rating: 4.6 out of 5Instructor rating
46 courses
288,990 students
The 4 things you need to pass your CISSP certification.

Lecture description

What we cover: A study approach emphasizing knowledge application, question deconstruction, best-answer selection, and time management.

Why it matters: These skills enable accurate security judgment under constraints rather than memorization.

Exam relevance: Questions test scenario interpretation, keyword-driven intent, and choosing the best control or action within time limits.

Learn more from the full course

CISSP: How to study (plans, tips, materials, approach) 2026

Learn smarter CISSP study approaches, exam tricks, tips, and format, and how to answer the exam questions right - 2026

02:52:05 of on-demand video • Updated April 2026

How to take the CISSP exam RIGHT!
Where to start on your CISSP certification journey.
How to study efficiently for the CISSP certification.
How to use logic on CISSP practice and exam questions to answer questions from the right point of view.
What to do when you pass or fail the exam and how to get free CPE's.
Learn why you want to get your CISSP certification, what it can give you.
Prepare for the 2025 version of the Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP) Certification Exam.
English
Hi, my name is Thor Pedersen, and in this video series, I'm going to try to answer one of the questions I get most commonly from my students, "How should I prepare for my CISSP certification?" It is a difficult question to answer because everybody learns differently. There is so much material out there that how can you know if it is good. And the CISSP really is different than any other certification I have taken, which also means you need a different approach. So in this series, I'm hoping to help you answer some of those questions, help you find the right materials for you, help you build a study plan, and show you how you should study to get the highest possible chance of passing your exam. I know even this slide might seem confusing and overwhelming. Don't worry, we will get to all of it, and I will help you design your path towards your CISSP. In this video, we're going to talk about this slide at a very high level so you can get an idea of where to start. Then in the subsequent videos, I'm going to go much more in-depth, both with the resources that I recommend and the ones that my students like. Because I clearly understand that I may not be the right instructor for everybody. Every student has unique needs, and they need to be taught in a certain way. I have for a while said that you need 4 distinct things to pass your CISSP certification; you need the knowledge, you need the ability to deconstruct questions to figure out what are they actually asking here. Then you need to be able to pick the most right answer in the world of ISC2. Then finally, time management. You only have so many seconds per question. And with the CAT exam, it might be smart to spend more time on the first 20-30 questions. To pass your exam, I think you need those 4 things. Now, let's start looking at number 1. First off, you need to find your study materials. That's the videos, the books, the questions, and all the other stuff that you need to get the knowledge and get ready for the exam. I am a firm believer in more is better up to a certain point. For videos, I recommend getting at least one, but maybe up to 3 good video courses. Which ones I think are good, which ones my students like, I will cover in another lecture. Books. Get one main book and a couple of the secondary books. For the practice questions, this is where you're going to spend maybe 50% of your time. it is very normal for a student to do somewhere between 3,000 and 5,000 practice questions before the exam. Somewhere between half and two-thirds can be easy to mid-level questions. The last third to a half should be hard questions. When we cover questions, I'll explain why that is and how you should use them. On top of all the paid resources, there are also a ton of free ones. And the ones I recommend here are really good. So use and incorporate them in your study plan to give yourself a better chance of passing your exam. Next up, you need to make your own study plan. In the study plan video, I will share how you should do it and some templates that you can use to get going. You can think of the study plan just like the mission and vision we have in our organization. We're here today, we want to be here in the future; how do we get from A to B? In this case, your end goal is passing your CISSP certification. How do you get from where you are now to passing your exam? After you have built your plan, then we need to get the knowledge. It is not just watching a bunch of videos, reading a bunch of books, answering questions, and done. You need to be able to explain the concepts; what, where, when, why, and how would we use this? While there are some things that you need to memorize, you also need to be able to use the knowledge. You're never going to see a question that says, What is the third phase of whatever? It's going to be, in this scenario, this is the situation, what would be best to do? What should we do first? Which is least desirable? If at this point your knowledge is, 3DES is 'this' many bits, and 'this' key length, you're not going to pass the exam. You need to be able to, in this situation, we want to do this, and this is why. So as part of your gaining the knowledge, you need to explain it to someone. That someone can be you. Now, let's move to the second thing you need. You need to be able to deconstruct the questions to figure out what are they actually asking here. And very important, answer what they ask. Do not answer what you want to answer. If they are asking you, how would we do this? It doesn't matter that you think it is better to do it another way. Answer exactly what they ask. And then look at the question, what are they really asking here? Read it a couple of times. How much of the question is just distractions? It doesn't matter. It doesn't change the question. Boil the question down to the essentials. This is what they're actually asking. And be a little careful here. One single keyword in a certain location can completely change what the right answer is. After deconstructing the question, you're completely clear, this is what they're asking, this is what they want me to answer, then we move to number 3, the ability to pick the most right answer in this situation. There might be two more or less right answer options. Which one is the most right answer in this specific situation in the eyes of ISC2? When you explain the concepts to yourself, other than learning it much easier, it is also a benefit when you have to argue in your head, why is this the most right answer? And then, finally, time management. With the CAT exam, you can get up to 150 questions and you have 3 hours to answer them. That means on average, if you get the full exam, the 150 questions, you have 72 seconds to answer each question. So learning to pace yourself and keep an eye on every 25 or 50 questions, I should be here timewise. This is something you need to train when you do practice questions, maybe not to begin with, but maybe somewhere about halfway. Don't force yourself to answer questions faster, but just keep an eye on the clock so you know how well you are doing. I hope this has been a good overview of how you should start your studying, find your materials, build your plan, gain the knowledge, and then how you need to approach your time and questions. And as promised, in the next videos, we're going to go much more in-depth with all of this. Thank you for being here and I will see you in the next video.