Most breaches don’t happen because of elite hackers hammering firewalls; they happen because someone, somewhere, used a password that could be guessed by a mildly motivated pigeon.
Stronger passwords make your accounts dramatically harder to break into, keeping your data, identity, and business far safer.
A strong password helps protect:
Anything involving pets, kids, birthdays, football teams, or the word “password”.
If burglars don’t reuse the same key for every door, neither should you.
Long, random passwords turn “easy win” into “no chance”.
Simple habits that make your accounts far harder to break into (and far less dependent on your memory).
Reusing passwords is like using one key for your house, your car, and the office — convenient, until someone copies it. Keep every account separate, especially business apps, so one breach doesn’t open every door.
Length beats cleverness every time. A long, random password takes centuries to crack, even with modern tools. Think “fortress”, not “garden shed with a loose latch”.
Names, birthdays, football teams, your dog, your child, your favourite biscuit - all off the table. If it appears on social media or could be guessed in three tries, it doesn’t belong in your password.
Strong passwords are useless if you forget them or write them on a Post-it. A password manager keeps everything encrypted, organised, and auto-filled; no memory tests, no notebooks, no chaos.
Multi-factor authentication adds an extra lock that attackers really hate. Even if someone guesses your password, they still can’t get in without your one-time code or device.
Names, birthdays, football teams, your dog, your child, your favourite biscuit — all off the table. If it appears on social media or could be guessed in three tries, it doesn’t belong in your password.
No. Everything is generated on your device. Nothing is transmitted, saved, or shared. Not even with the office plants.
Yes. This tool is designed for both personal and business use. For shared credentials, use a password manager with team access controls.
Longer = stronger. We recommend 14–20 characters for everyday accounts and even longer for admin or privileged access.
Both are secure. Passphrases are easier to remember; random passwords are harder to crack. Your security software may prefer one format. Either way, use something unique and strong.
Yes. strong passwords and MFA are essential controls. This tool supports best practice for compliance.
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