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Tenable · Vulnerability Management · Interview Q&AInteractive · L1 / L2 / L3

Tenable Interview Questions — Nessus, VPR, Lumin & OT Answers

Whether you are sitting for a Tenable VM analyst role or a security-engineer interview at a shop that runs Tenable.io or Tenable One, interviewers probe the same four clusters: Nessus architecture and the platform portfolio, sensor types and scanning strategies, VPR and Lumin exposure scoring, and the OT Security and WAS add-ons. This lesson walks through 16 interview questions — Nessus plugin families, credentialed vs agent vs passive scanning, CVSS vs VPR, Cyber Exposure Score (CES), remediation workflows, OT asset discovery, and WAS authenticated scanning — with crisp, scenario-led model answers grounded in Tenable's 2026 product architecture.

📅 2026-06-20 · ⏱ 20 min · 16 interview Q&As · live scenario · 🏷 10-Q assessment + AI Tutor inline

⚡ Quick Answer

Prepare for a Tenable vulnerability management interview with 16 model answers: Nessus scanner architecture, VPR vs CVSS, Lumin Cyber Exposure Score, OT Security and WAS, and real troubleshooting scenarios.

🎯 By the end you will be able to

Read as:

Pick where you want to start

1

Nessus & Platform

Portfolio, plugin families, scan policies.

2

Sensors & Scanning

Scanner vs agent vs passive, credentialed vs network.

3

VPR, Lumin & Exposure

CVSS vs VPR, CES, remediation workflow.

4

OT, WAS & Scenarios

OT Security, WAS, troubleshooting.

🧠 Warm-up — 3 questions, no score

Just notice which ones make you pause. We answer all three inside the lesson.

1. What is the key difference between a credentialed Nessus scan and a network-only scan?

Answered in Sensors & Scanning.

2. Why does Tenable VPR typically surface fewer critical findings than a raw CVSS score?

Answered in VPR, Lumin & Exposure.

3. Which Tenable product is designed to discover and assess assets in industrial control (OT) environments?

Answered in OT, WAS & Scenarios.

Common interview slip

Many candidates confuse CVSS with VPR, or say 'Nessus and Tenable.io are the same product'. Both errors cost marks in a Tenable interview.

CVSS is a base-severity framework (0–10) driven by exploitability and impact attributes — it is static and context-free, so a CVSS 9.8 on a system you patched last week and a CVSS 9.8 actively exploited in the wild look identical. VPR (Vulnerability Priority Rating) is Tenable's dynamic, threat-informed score: it layers in real exploit activity, Tenable's threat intelligence, and asset criticality, and it updates automatically as the threat landscape shifts — typically shrinking the 'fix now' list to the findings that genuinely matter today. And Nessus is the scanner (standalone or embedded in platforms); Tenable Vulnerability Management (TVM) is the SaaS platform built on top of Nessus and other sensors, with dashboards, asset grouping, and workflow integrations. Knowing these distinctions is exactly what interviewers probe.

① Nessus & the platform — portfolio, plugin families and scan policies

Q: Walk me through the Tenable platform portfolio. Where does each product fit?

Model answer: Tenable has four main tiers. Nessus Essentials is the free version for up to 16 IPs — great for learning or home labs. Nessus Professional is the commercial standalone scanner for compliance auditors, pen testers, and small security teams who want a direct UI with no cloud dependency. Tenable Vulnerability Management (TVM) — formerly Tenable.io — is the cloud-based SaaS platform that aggregates data from multiple Nessus scanners, Nessus Agents, and the Network Monitor into one tenant with asset-based dashboards, RBAC, and API integrations. Tenable Security Center (SC) — formerly Nessus.sc — is the on-premises manager for organisations that cannot send scan data to the cloud (regulated industries, air-gapped networks). And Tenable One is the exposure management platform that sits above all of these: it ingests VM, web app, cloud, identity, and OT data and presents a unified attack surface view with Lumin-powered Cyber Exposure Scores. The clean one-liner: Nessus is the scanner engine, TVM and SC are the management planes, Tenable One is the exposure umbrella.

Q: What are Nessus plugin families and why do they matter?

Model answer: Every Nessus check is a plugin — a small script that tests for a specific vulnerability, misconfiguration, or compliance condition. Plugins are grouped into families such as Windows, Debian Local Security Checks, Web Servers, Databases, CISCO, Firewalls, Policy Compliance, and many more. When you build a scan policy you choose which plugin families (or individual plugins) to enable: a basic network scan enables a broad default set; a credentialed patch audit adds the local security check families for the target OS; a compliance scan loads the relevant CIS or DISA STIG audit file. Interviewers often ask this to see whether you understand that what Nessus finds depends entirely on which plugins are active — a scan with only network families will never catch a missing Windows patch, even with credentials.

Q: What is the difference between Tenable Vulnerability Management and Tenable Security Center?

Model answer: Both are multi-scanner managers, but the architecture differs. TVM (cloud) hosts scan data in Tenable's cloud; organisations with internet-connected assets and no hard data-residency requirement benefit from its elastic capacity, instant updates, and integrations with tools like Jira and ServiceNow without standing up extra infrastructure. Tenable SC (on-prem) keeps all data inside your own network — mandatory for air-gapped environments, heavily regulated sectors, or any organisation with a policy against sending vulnerability data off-premises. Licensing also differs: TVM is asset-based subscription; SC is licensed by number of IP addresses. Feature parity is broadly similar, but Tenable One's Lumin CES features are primarily a TVM/cloud capability. The interview point: describe the cloud vs on-prem trade-off and name the air-gap use case for SC.

Figure 1 — Tenable platform portfolio
Nessus is the scanner engine; TVM and Security Center are the management planes; Tenable One is the exposure umbrella with Lumin.Tenable platform portfolioTenable OneExposure platformNessus ProTenable VM (SaaS)Security CenterTenable WASOT Security
Nessus is the scanner engine; TVM and Security Center are the management planes; Tenable One is the exposure umbrella with Lumin.
Name the air-gap use case for Security Center

When asked 'TVM vs Security Center', the answer interviewers want is about data residency. Say: 'TVM is SaaS — great for most; Security Center is on-premises for regulated industries, government, and air-gapped networks that cannot send vulnerability data to an external cloud.' That one-line distinction shows architectural judgement.

Quick check · Q1 of 10 · Remember

Which Tenable product is the cloud-based SaaS platform that aggregates data from multiple Nessus scanners and agents into dashboards with RBAC and API integrations?

Correct: c. Tenable Vulnerability Management (formerly Tenable.io) is the cloud-based SaaS platform. Nessus Professional is the standalone scanner. Tenable Security Center is the on-premises manager. Tenable WAS is the web application scanning module.
👉 So far: Nessus = scanner engine (Essentials/Pro). TVM = SaaS platform. Security Center = on-prem manager (air-gap). Tenable One = exposure umbrella. Plugin families control what Nessus finds — the right family must be enabled for each scan type.

② Sensors & scanning — scanner, agent, passive and credentialed vs network

Q: Tenable uses multiple sensor types. What is the difference between a Nessus scanner, a Nessus Agent, and the Nessus Network Monitor?

Model answer: These are three complementary ways to collect vulnerability data. A Nessus Scanner runs on a dedicated host and actively reaches out over the network to probe target IPs — you point it at a subnet and it scans remotely. It needs network connectivity to targets and may need credentials for deep results. A Nessus Agent is a lightweight process installed directly on the endpoint (Windows, macOS, Linux). It runs the scan locally, eliminating the need for network credentials or scanner-to-endpoint connectivity, and is ideal for laptops, roaming users, and cloud instances that may be off-network when a traditional scan fires. A Nessus Network Monitor (NNM) is a passive sensor: it listens to network traffic (via a SPAN port or TAP) and infers vulnerabilities from observed protocol banners and traffic patterns without sending a single probe packet — essential for fragile OT/SCADA assets and environments where active scanning is disruptive.

Q: What does a credentialed scan add over a network-only scan, and when would you use each?

Model answer: A network-only (uncredentialed) scan sees only what is visible from the outside: open ports, service banners, TLS certificate info, and network-level vulnerabilities. It is quick and requires no credentials, but it misses everything inside the OS: installed software versions, missing patches, local misconfigurations, and weak file permissions. A credentialed scan — providing an SSH key, Windows domain account, or database credential to Nessus — lets the scanner log in and run local checks. It can enumerate installed applications, service pack levels, registry settings, local firewall rules, and patch status far more accurately than a banner grab. In practice: use network-only for external attack-surface enumeration; use credentialed scans for internal asset audits, patch compliance, and CIS benchmark checks. A key interview detail: credentialed scans reduce false positives because Nessus can directly confirm whether a patch is installed rather than guessing from a version string.

Q: How do Nessus Agents help with transient or cloud-hosted assets?

Model answer: Traditional scanners struggle with laptops that are off the corporate network during a scan window, auto-scaling cloud instances that spin up and down, and remote workers on VPN where scan traffic is slow. Nessus Agents solve this by running the scan on the asset itself at a scheduled time regardless of network topology. Results are reported back to TVM or SC when the endpoint next phones home. Agents also eliminate the need to maintain a credential store for every host — a significant operational saving. The trade-off: agents must be deployed and kept up to date on every managed host, and they are not useful for discovering unknown assets (that still requires network scanning or passive monitoring).

Figure 2 — Scanner vs Agent vs Passive
Each sensor type fills a different gap: network scanner for broad discovery, agent for roaming endpoints, passive monitor for fragile OT assets.Scanner vs Agent vs PassiveNessus ScannerActive network probingNeeds network accessGreat for subnet sweepsOptional credentialsNessus AgentRuns locally on endpointNo network path neededIdeal for laptops/cloudNo credential store
Each sensor type fills a different gap: network scanner for broad discovery, agent for roaming endpoints, passive monitor for fragile OT assets.
🔍
Nessus vs TVM vs SC
tap to flip

Nessus is the scanner engine. Tenable Vulnerability Management (TVM) is the SaaS platform aggregating multiple sensors. Tenable Security Center is the on-prem manager for air-gapped or regulated environments. Tenable One is the exposure umbrella above all of them.

🤖
Scanner vs Agent
tap to flip

A Nessus scanner actively probes targets over the network — needs connectivity and optionally credentials. A Nessus Agent installs on the endpoint and runs the scan locally, reporting back to TVM — ideal for roaming laptops and cloud instances that are off-network during scan windows.

📊
CVSS vs VPR
tap to flip

CVSS is a static, context-free base severity (0–10). VPR is Tenable's dynamic score that adds real exploit activity, threat intelligence, and asset criticality — it typically surfaces a much shorter, more actionable 'fix now' list than raw CVSS.

🏭
OT Security
tap to flip

Tenable OT Security uses passive DPI of industrial protocols (Modbus, DNP3, EtherNet/IP) and selective safe active queries to discover and assess OT assets without risking a PLC crash — something standard Nessus active scanning can cause.

'Network scan alone is enough' mistake

Candidates often say a network scan covers everything. It does not — without credentials, Nessus cannot confirm installed software versions, missing patches, local firewall rules, or misconfigurations inside the OS. A network scan misses the patch-level findings that make up the bulk of real risk. Name both scan types, explain what credentials unlock, and mention agents for hosts you cannot credential over the network.

Quick check · Q2 of 10 · Apply

A security team needs to scan laptops used by remote workers who are often off VPN during scheduled scan windows. Which sensor type is most appropriate?

Correct: c. Nessus Agents run the scan locally on the endpoint regardless of network connectivity and report results to TVM when the device next phones home — ideal for roaming laptops that are off-network during scan windows. Network scanners need connectivity to targets; NNM is passive traffic analysis; WAS is for web applications.
👉 So far: Three sensor types: Nessus Scanner (active, network), Nessus Agent (local, no network path needed), Nessus Network Monitor (passive, no probes). Credentialed scans confirm patch level and misconfigurations — network-only scans infer from banners and produce unverified findings.

③ VPR, Lumin & exposure — scoring, prioritisation and the Cyber Exposure Score

Q: Compare CVSS and VPR. Why does Tenable recommend prioritising by VPR?

Model answer: CVSS (Common Vulnerability Scoring System) is an industry-standard base severity score (0–10) that captures the inherent characteristics of a vulnerability: exploitability (attack vector, complexity, privileges required) and impact (confidentiality, integrity, availability). It is static — CVSS does not change unless the vulnerability is re-scored — and it is context-free: the same score applies to every organisation running the same software, regardless of whether an exploit is actively used in the wild or has never been seen in the field. VPR is Tenable's dynamic, threat-informed score. It layers in real-time threat intelligence (exploit kit presence, active exploitation campaigns, malware association) and updates automatically — a 7.0 CVSS vulnerability with active exploit code in the wild may jump to a VPR 9.5. In practice, most environments have thousands of CVSS Critical findings; VPR typically surfaces a much shorter list of findings that combine real exploitability with environmental context, letting teams fix the things that attackers are actually using first. The interview gold line: CVSS tells you what could be bad; VPR tells you what is likely to be exploited on your network today.

Q: What is Tenable Lumin, and what is a Cyber Exposure Score (CES)?

Model answer: Tenable Lumin is an add-on to Tenable VM that translates raw vulnerability and asset data into a business-level exposure picture. Its core output is the Cyber Exposure Score (CES) — a 0–1000 score (lower is better) that aggregates VPR scores, asset criticality, and remediation velocity across an asset group or the whole organisation. Lumin also provides benchmarking: it can compare your CES against industry peers (same sector, similar size) so you can answer the executive question 'Are we better or worse than our competitors?' with data. Additionally, Lumin surfaces Asset Exposure Score (AES) per host and identifies the assets that, if compromised, would have the highest business impact. The interview point: Lumin is the executive-facing layer — it answers 'How exposed are we?' and 'Where should we focus?', while raw CVSS/VPR data answers 'What is technically wrong?'

Q: How does a typical Tenable remediation workflow work end to end?

Model answer: A mature Tenable remediation workflow has five steps. First, discover and scan: scanners, agents, and passive sensors feed asset and vulnerability data into TVM or SC. Second, prioritise: filter the finding list by VPR (fix VPR 9–10 this sprint, triage VPR 7–8 next), further narrowing by asset criticality tags. Third, assign: TVM integrations push findings into a ticketing system (Jira, ServiceNow) with the VPR score, affected asset, and recommended fix. Fourth, remediate and re-scan: the ops or patching team applies the fix, and a verification scan (or agent check-in) confirms the vulnerability is gone. Fifth, track and report: dashboards in TVM or Lumin show fix rate, mean time to remediate (MTTR), and CES trend over time. Interviewers value candidates who can describe the re-scan confirmation step — many teams apply patches but never verify, leaving the vulnerability open in the system.

Figure 3 — CVSS vs VPR
CVSS is a static base score; VPR adds threat intelligence and asset context to surface what attackers are actually exploiting.CVSS vs VPRCVSS (base score)Static — does not updateContext-free by designSame score for all orgsMany Critical findingsVPR (dynamic score)Updates as threats shiftFactors real exploit activityAsset criticality inputShorter fix-now list
CVSS is a static base score; VPR adds threat intelligence and asset context to surface what attackers are actually exploiting.
Figure 4 — Tenable remediation workflow
A mature Tenable workflow flows from scanning through VPR prioritisation to ticketing, remediation, and verification.Tenable remediation workflowScanscanners + agentsPrioritiseVPR + asset tagsAssignJira/ServiceNowRemediatepatch + fixVerifyre-scan confirm
A mature Tenable workflow flows from scanning through VPR prioritisation to ticketing, remediation, and verification.
Always close the loop with a re-scan

One of the most common VM programme failures is patching without verifying. Applying a patch removes the finding from the scanner only after a new scan confirms it. In a Tenable interview, always mention the re-scan or agent check-in step after remediation — it is what closes the finding in TVM, updates the MTTR metric, and gives the team credit for the fix.

▶ Watch a vulnerability finding travel from scan to closed ticket — and see what breaks without credentials

Step through how a Tenable VM finding moves from scan discovery through VPR prioritisation to a Jira ticket and verified fix. Press Play for the healthy path, then Break it to see what happens with a network-only scan.

① Credentialed scanA Nessus scanner with SSH credentials logs into the Linux server and runs local security checks, confirming the exact package versions and patch levels installed.
② Finding createdNessus detects a missing patch (e.g. a kernel update). TVM creates a finding with CVSS 7.8 and VPR 9.2 because Tenable threat intelligence shows active exploitation.
③ VPR prioritisedThe finding lands in the VPR 9+ queue on a Tier-1 asset, automatically tagged for Sprint 1 remediation. A Jira ticket is created via the TVM integration.
④ Patch + re-scanThe ops team applies the kernel patch. A follow-up credentialed scan confirms the package version is updated and Nessus closes the finding in TVM.
Press Play to step through a healthy Tenable credentialed scan to closed finding. Then press Break it.
Quick check · Q3 of 10 · Understand

Why does Tenable VPR typically result in fewer 'fix now' items than CVSS Critical would suggest?

Correct: c. VPR layers real exploit activity, malware association, and asset criticality on top of the base vulnerability data. A high CVSS score for a vulnerability with no known exploit in the wild will have a lower VPR, keeping the critical list shorter and more actionable. VPR is not OS-specific and does not ignore impact.
👉 So far: CVSS = static base severity, context-free. VPR = dynamic, threat-informed, updates automatically. VPR 9+ on critical assets = the 'fix now' list. Tenable Lumin = Cyber Exposure Score (CES, 0–1000 lower is better) for executive reporting and peer benchmarking.

④ OT, WAS & scenarios — industrial control, web app scanning and troubleshooting

Q: What is Tenable OT Security, and why can't you just run a standard Nessus scan against OT assets?

Model answer: Tenable OT Security (formerly Tenable.ot, originally Indigo.io) is Tenable's purpose-built industrial cybersecurity solution for operational technology environments — PLCs, HMIs, RTUs, DCS, historians, and engineering workstations. Standard Nessus active scanning is dangerous in OT: the aggressive probing that works safely on IT equipment can crash or freeze PLCs and other real-time controllers, causing production outages or even safety incidents. Tenable OT Security addresses this with passive discovery (deep packet inspection of industrial protocols — Modbus, DNP3, EtherNet/IP, Profinet, IEC 60870-5-104 and others) to identify assets without sending a single probe, plus selective active querying (safe, protocol-native queries at a pace the devices can handle). It also provides ICS-specific vulnerability checks, firmware version tracking, configuration baselining, and Purdue model network mapping. The integration point: OT Security feeds asset and vulnerability data into Tenable One, giving a unified IT/OT exposure view — interviewers value candidates who name this convergence.

Q: What is Tenable WAS, and what does 'authenticated scanning' mean for web applications?

Model answer: Tenable WAS (Web Application Scanning) is Tenable's dynamic application security testing (DAST) module for finding vulnerabilities inside web apps and APIs. The critical distinction over a standard network scan is authenticated scanning: WAS can log into the application (form-based login, SSO, API key) and crawl behind the authentication wall, finding OWASP Top 10 classes like SQL injection, cross-site scripting, broken access control, and IDOR in the pages that only authenticated users can reach — vulnerabilities a network scanner simply cannot see. WAS integrates with TVM/Tenable One so web app findings appear alongside infrastructure findings in unified dashboards, with VPR scores applied. For APIs, WAS can ingest an OpenAPI/Swagger spec to drive coverage of REST endpoints. The interview point: name authenticated scanning as the key value, explain that unauthenticated DAST only sees the login page, and connect WAS results to the Tenable platform's unified risk view.

Q: A scan returns hundreds of CVSS Critical findings. How do you help a client prioritise without overwhelming the patching team?

Model answer: This is the VPR conversation in practice. First, switch from CVSS to VPR as the primary sort — the list of VPR 9.0–10 findings is almost always a fraction of the CVSS Critical list. Second, intersect with asset criticality: findings on production servers or assets tagged as business-critical are promoted above the same finding on a dev laptop. Third, check exploit context: within the VPR 9+ list, surface findings where Tenable's threat intelligence flags active exploitation in the wild. Fourth, set sprint-sized batches: give the team a realistic number of findings per sprint (e.g. VPR 9.5+ on Tier-1 assets this week) so they stay motivated and make visible progress. Fifth, track MTTR and CES trend in Lumin to show leadership that the programme is moving. The interview gold line: don't hand a team 400 Critical findings — filter to VPR 9+ on critical assets, confirm active exploitation, and timebox the work.

Q: A Nessus scan shows a finding as 'unverified plugin'. What does that mean and what should you do?

Model answer: An unverified (or confidence-limited) plugin result means Nessus could not conclusively prove the vulnerability because it lacked the access to run the definitive check — typically because the scan was network-only without credentials. Nessus inferred a likely vulnerability from a version string or banner but could not log in to confirm the patch level. The correct response is: (1) add credentials for the target and re-scan — a credentialed scan will either confirm or clear the finding definitively; (2) if credentials cannot be provided, treat it as valid for remediation purposes rather than dismissing it; (3) in some cases, deploy a Nessus Agent on the host to get a credentialed local check without needing network credentials. The interview point: understanding the confidence of a finding and knowing that credentials are the fix for unverified results is a mark of a Tenable practitioner rather than a tool user.

Figure 5 — OT Security sensor layers
Tenable OT Security uses passive protocol inspection and selective active queries to avoid crashing real-time industrial devices.OT Security sensor layersTenable One (unified view)IT + OT exposure in one consoleOT Security managerasset inventory, CVEs, baselinesSelective active queriessafe, protocol-native pollingPassive DPIModbus, DNP3, EtherNet/IP...
Tenable OT Security uses passive protocol inspection and selective active queries to avoid crashing real-time industrial devices.

Priya at FinSecure India in Bengaluru faces this

FinSecure runs Tenable VM and has just completed its quarterly scan. The dashboard shows 1,200 Critical findings across 300 assets. The CTO asks the patching team to fix them all within two weeks, but the team of three engineers is overwhelmed and pushing back. Priya is the VM lead and must propose a better approach.

Likely cause

The 1,200 findings are sorted by CVSS — every CVSS 9.0+ is flagged Critical. Many are on non-production, non-internet-facing dev servers and cover vulnerabilities with no public exploit code. The raw CVSS list does not differentiate between what attackers are actually exploiting and what is theoretically severe.

Diagnosis

Priya filters the TVM dashboard by VPR instead of CVSS. The VPR 9.0+ findings on assets tagged as Tier-1 (payment processing servers) number only 38. Of those, 12 have Tenable threat intelligence showing active exploitation in the wild. The Lumin CES for the payment asset group has risen 40 points in 30 days, confirming the exposure trajectory.

Tenable VM ▸ Findings ▸ Filter: VPR ≥ 9.0 ▸ Asset Tag: Tier-1 ▸ Sort by Threat Intelligence: Active Exploitation
Fix

Priya presents a two-sprint plan: Sprint 1 — fix the 12 VPR 9+ actively-exploited findings on Tier-1 assets (the team can do this in three days). Sprint 2 — address the remaining 26 VPR 9+ Tier-1 findings. Lower VPR and non-Tier-1 findings go into the standard patching backlog sorted by VPR. A Jira integration pushes tickets automatically. Lumin CES is set as the KPI in the monthly CISO report.

Verify

After Sprint 1 remediation, a re-scan confirms the 12 findings are cleared. The Lumin CES for the payment group drops noticeably. Priya exports the VPR trend report from Tenable VM to show the CTO a quantified risk reduction rather than a raw count.

Quick check · Q4 of 10 · Analyze

A Tenable scan returns a finding with the label 'unverified plugin result'. What is the most likely cause and the correct next step?

Correct: b. An unverified plugin result means Nessus lacks the access to run the definitive local check, typically because no credentials were provided. The fix is to add credentials (or deploy a Nessus Agent) and re-scan so Nessus can confirm or dismiss the finding conclusively. Do not dismiss unverified findings without verification.
👉 So far: OT Security uses passive protocol DPI (Modbus, DNP3, EtherNet/IP) + safe active queries — never raw Nessus active scanning against PLCs. WAS = authenticated DAST for web apps and APIs. Unverified finding = no credentials — add credentials or deploy an agent and re-scan. Always verify remediation with a re-scan.

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Q5 · Remember

Which Tenable product is designed for on-premises deployment in air-gapped or heavily regulated environments that cannot send vulnerability data to the cloud?

Correct: a. Tenable Security Center (formerly Nessus.sc) is the on-premises management platform that keeps all scan data inside the customer's network — mandatory for air-gapped environments and regulated sectors with data-residency requirements. TVM is the cloud SaaS equivalent. Nessus Essentials is the free standalone scanner. NNM is the passive sensor.
Q6 · Understand

Why is running standard Nessus active scanning against PLC or HMI devices in an OT environment considered dangerous?

Correct: b. Real-time industrial controllers (PLCs, HMIs, RTUs) are not designed to handle the volume and pace of probes that standard Nessus scanning sends. The probing can cause devices to freeze, reboot, or enter a fault state — potentially triggering production stops or safety issues. Tenable OT Security addresses this with passive DPI and selective safe active queries.
Q7 · Apply

You have 800 CVSS Critical findings and need to hand the patching team a manageable list this week. What is the best Tenable approach?

Correct: d. Filtering by VPR 9.0+ on critical assets and prioritising those with active exploitation flags uses Tenable's threat intelligence to collapse 800 CVSS Critical findings into the handful that genuinely need immediate attention. CVSS sorting alone does not differentiate between exploited-in-the-wild vulnerabilities and theoretical severity.
Q8 · Analyze

A Nessus Agent scan and a network scanner scan of the same host disagree — the agent shows 15 findings, the network scan shows 3. Which result should you trust and why?

Correct: b. The Nessus Agent runs local checks inside the OS, reading package databases and registry keys directly — it can definitively confirm installed software versions and missing patches. The network scanner can only see what is visible from outside the OS, so it infers from banners and may miss local vulnerabilities. The agent result is authoritative for patch and configuration findings.
Q9 · Evaluate

A web application's login page scans clean in a Tenable WAS unauthenticated scan. A developer claims there are SQL injection issues behind the login. How do you resolve this?

Correct: b. An unauthenticated WAS scan can only see the login page and public content — it cannot reach any pages behind authentication. Configuring WAS with valid application credentials (form login, SSO, or API key) enables authenticated scanning, crawling the full application including the pages the developer claims have SQL injection. This is the primary value of WAS authenticated scanning.
Q10 · Evaluate

Your CISO asks whether the organisation's vulnerability posture is improving compared to last quarter and how it compares to industry peers. Which Tenable feature answers both questions?

Correct: c. Tenable Lumin's Cyber Exposure Score (CES) tracks exposure over time as a single 0–1000 metric (lower is better), showing whether the posture is improving. Lumin also provides peer benchmarking, comparing the CES against similar organisations in the same sector — directly answering both the CISO's trend question and the competitive comparison question. Raw CVSS reports do not trend or benchmark; NNM is a discovery sensor; SC compliance summaries do not benchmark against peers.
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🧠 In your own words

Type one line: what is VPR and how does it differ from CVSS? Then compare with the expert version.

Expert version: CVSS (Common Vulnerability Scoring System) is a static, context-free base severity score (0–10) that captures the inherent exploitability and impact of a vulnerability — it does not change over time and is the same for every organisation. VPR (Vulnerability Priority Rating) is Tenable's dynamic, threat-informed score that adds real-world exploit activity, malware association, Tenable threat intelligence, and asset criticality, and updates automatically as the threat landscape shifts — so a CVSS 7.2 with an active exploit kit may score VPR 9.5 while a CVSS 9.8 with no known exploit in the wild may score VPR 5. VPR produces a much shorter 'fix now' list than raw CVSS, letting teams focus on what attackers are actually using rather than theoretical severity.

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📖 Glossary

Nessus
Tenable's vulnerability scanner engine — available as Essentials (free, 16 IPs), Professional (commercial standalone), and embedded inside TVM and Security Center. Plugin families control what each scan checks.
Tenable Vulnerability Management (TVM)
The cloud-based SaaS platform (formerly Tenable.io) that aggregates data from Nessus scanners, agents, NNM, WAS, and OT Security into a single tenant with RBAC, dashboards, and integrations.
Tenable Security Center (SC)
The on-premises VM manager (formerly Nessus.sc) for organisations that cannot send vulnerability data to the cloud — regulated sectors, government, and air-gapped networks.
VPR (Vulnerability Priority Rating)
Tenable's dynamic threat-informed score (0–10) that adds real exploit activity, malware association, and asset criticality to base vulnerability data. Updates automatically and surfaces a shorter, more actionable fix list than CVSS.
Cyber Exposure Score (CES)
Tenable Lumin's 0–1000 metric (lower is better) aggregating VPR severity, asset criticality, and remediation velocity — used for executive trend reporting and industry peer benchmarking.
Nessus Agent
A lightweight process installed on an endpoint that runs vulnerability checks locally and reports back to TVM or SC — ideal for roaming laptops, cloud instances, and assets off-network during scan windows.
Nessus Network Monitor (NNM)
A passive sensor that listens to network traffic via SPAN or TAP and infers vulnerabilities from protocol banners and traffic patterns — zero active probes, safe for fragile OT assets.
Tenable OT Security
Tenable's industrial cybersecurity solution (formerly Tenable.ot) using passive industrial-protocol DPI (Modbus, DNP3, EtherNet/IP) and selective safe active queries to assess OT assets without risking PLC crashes.
Tenable WAS
Tenable Web Application Scanning — authenticated DAST that logs into web apps and APIs to crawl behind authentication walls and find OWASP Top 10 class vulnerabilities unauthenticated scans miss.
Credentialed scan
A Nessus scan that logs into the target (SSH key, Windows domain account, database credential) to run local checks and confirm installed software, patch levels, and misconfigurations — more accurate than network-only scans.

📚 Sources

  1. Tenable — Tenable Vulnerability Management (TVM) user guide. docs.tenable.com/vulnerability-management
  2. Tenable — Nessus Professional and Nessus Agents: scanner vs agent architecture. docs.tenable.com/nessus
  3. Tenable — VPR (Vulnerability Priority Rating) enhancements FAQ and methodology. docs.tenable.com/pdfs/VPR-enhancements-FAQ.pdf
  4. Tenable — Tenable Lumin: Cyber Exposure Score (CES) and peer benchmarking. docs.tenable.com/vulnerability-management/Content/Lumin
  5. Tenable — Tenable OT Security 4.0 user guide: passive discovery and OT protocol coverage. docs.tenable.com/OT-security
  6. Tenable — Tenable Web Application Scanning (WAS): authenticated scanning and OWASP coverage. docs.tenable.com/was

What's next?

Done with the interview prep? Go deeper on Tenable architecture — Nessus plugin families, Tenable Security Center policy workflows, advanced VPR tuning, OT passive discovery design, and WAS authenticated scan configuration.