Palo Alto Network Security Service Edge Engineer Cert Exam

Master Prisma Access Deployment & Operations to Pass the Security Service Edge Engineer Certification

Palo Alto Network Security Service Edge Engineer Cert Exam

Palo Alto Network Security Service Edge Engineer Cert Exam udemy course

Master Prisma Access Deployment & Operations to Pass the Security Service Edge Engineer Certification

Palo Alto Networks Security Service Edge Engineer Certification

Master Prisma Access Deployment, Security, and Operations

Are you ready to become a certified expert in Prisma Access and cloud-delivered security?

This comprehensive course is designed to help you understand, configure, deploy, and manage Palo Alto Networks' Security Service Edge (SSE) solution — Prisma Access. Whether you're an aspiring cloud security engineer, network architect, or IT professional, this course equips you with real-world, job-ready skills aligned with the official certification objectives.


What You Will Learn

  • Understand Prisma Access architecture and core components

  • Configure and deploy service infrastructure for remote networks and mobile users

  • Implement Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) for private applications

  • Design and configure routing, traffic steering, and IP addressing

  • Enable identity authentication with SAML, LDAP, RADIUS, and Cloud Identity Engine

  • Deploy advanced features like IoT security, app acceleration, and traffic replication

  • Secure web traffic using web policies and Remote Browser Isolation (RBI)

  • Manage Prisma Access using Panorama and Strata Cloud Manager (SCM)

  • Configure logging, compliance, and Best Practice Assessments (BPA)

  • Monitor and troubleshoot connectivity, policy enforcement, and user experience

Who Should Enroll

  • Network Security Engineers and Cloud Architects

  • Professionals preparing for the Palo Alto SSE Engineer Certification

  • Teams deploying Prisma Access in enterprise or hybrid environments

  • Consultants implementing Zero Trust and cloud-first security strategies