Fortinet, the global vendor in broad, integrated and automated cybersecurity solutions, revealed additional findings from its Global Enterprise Security Survey. According to the research, 63% of IT decision makers at 250+ employee organisations around the world are confident in their cybersecurity posture. The research is a reminder of the importance of employing cybersecurity best practices and fundamentals as well as the urgency to avoid complacency in defending against cyberattacks.
“ITDMs continue to prioritise the maintenance and upgrade of their cybersecurity solutions in an attempt to combat cybersecurity adversaries,” said Alain Penel, Regional Vice President, Middle East at Fortinet.
“Although important, other security best practices within their broader cyber and technology strategy are still missed opportunities. In particular, the urgency to prioritise security hygiene, educate with broader awareness, or implement security approaches that leverage automation, integration, and strategic segmentation, is critical to defend against the highly damaging Internet attacks possible in our near future.”
Complacency despite clear concerns
Respondents reveal that 24% of breaches experienced in the last two years were the result of social engineering, ransomware and email phishing. In 2018, 74% of businesses are planning programmes to educate employees in IT security, reflecting a growing awareness that breaches are caused by carelessness and ignorance as much as maliciousness.
Another top concern for organisations is protecting access to the network. 38% of ITDMs feel confident that they have full visibility and control of all devices with network access. 42% of ITDMs feel confident that they have full visibility of the access level of all third parties who frequently have access to networks and 48% of ITDMs feel confident that they have full visibility and control of all employees.
This lack of confidence in the network visibility suggests that this is an area that should be treated as a top concern for organisations. Yet, basic security measures like network segmentation are only being planned by 29% of businesses in 2018. Without network segmentation, malware entering a network will often be left to spread.
Employee knowledge key for security in organisations
When asked about what they would have done differently over their career in security, 53% of ITDMs wish they had invested more in employee security awareness training to prevent a security breach. Educating users can lessen the chance that they become victim of an intrusion attempt that targets one of the weakest links in the cybersecurity chain: employees themselves.
In 76% of breach incidents, in the first instance the board blames the IT department – either a specific individual 31% or the department as a whole 45%. Employees outside the IT department get blamed in 40% of breach incidents, even though they are often recognised as the weakest link.
The IT department can no longer be the only one responsible when it comes to a breach. BYOD and IoT, the use of cloud-based applications, and shadow IT, all extend the security responsibility to the broader organisation – and employees.
Balanced cybersecurity investment priorities critical
In 2017, ITDMs investments ranked the following as their key investments:
- 28%, New security solutions and services
- 20%, Implementing security policies and process
- 11%, Upgrading security solutions
- 7%, Employee training
- 2%, Auditing and assessment
Continued technological investment allows businesses to keep pace with malicious attacks and prepare for them by implementing a comprehensive security solution. Investments in new and upgraded security solutions will continue in 2018, but 44 of respondents also reveal that investments towards employee training will become one of the top 3 investment priorities.
Report Methodology
The 2017 Fortinet Global Enterprise Security Survey was undertaken on behalf of Fortinet by independent market research company Loudhouse to examine the changing attitudes towards security in business in July, August 2017. The global survey of IT decision makers with responsibility and visibility of IT security, received 1,801 anonymised respondents across 16 countries US, Canada, France, UK, Germany, Spain, Italy, Middle East, South Africa, Poland, Korea, Australia, Singapore, India, Hong Kong, Indonesia. Respondents to the online questionnaire were not aware of the purpose or sponsor of the report.