The Theater of Operations is CDA's strategic framework for organizing and executing security engagements as military-style campaigns. Borrowing from defense doctrine, it structures security work into Wars (organizational engagements), Campaigns (progressive phases), Missions (individual work units), and Active Theaters (domain-specific operational areas). This hierarchy provides strategic coherence to tactical security work, ensuring every action contributes to the organization's overall defensive posture.
A War represents a client organization's security engagement with CDA, encompassing all defensive work over the contract period. Within each War, Campaigns define progressive phases of maturity: C-RECON (reconnaissance and assessment), C-BUILD (foundational implementation), C-HARDEN (advanced hardening), C-DRILL (testing and validation), and C-COMMAND (autonomous operation). Each Campaign contains Missions selected from the 94-mission catalog based on the organization's FRM assessment results and current maturity level. Active Theaters track which PDM domains are currently engaged, who commands each, and their operational status. Mission assignments track operator allocation, progress, deliverables, and quality scores.
Security programs without strategic structure produce disconnected tactical outcomes. Teams patch vulnerabilities without considering identity risks, deploy detection rules without addressing the underlying posture gaps that generate alerts, or achieve compliance without improving actual defense. The Theater methodology ensures every tactical action -- every mission, every deliverable -- connects to a strategic campaign that progressively builds comprehensive defensive capability across all six PDM domains.
The Theater of Operations is CDA's operational backbone. It provides the structure that connects the PDM's strategic vision to the Arena's performance measurement, creating an end-to-end system where strategy drives operations, operations generate metrics, and metrics inform strategy in a continuous improvement cycle.