The research, which surveyed over 1,000 senior IT executives in 18 countries, found that only 9% of organisations have made cybersecurity a board-level priority. This is despite respondents acknowledging that digital is opening their businesses to more cybersecurity vulnerabilities than ever, with 60% of respondents saying there are more emerging cyber threats than they can currently control.
The report found that cybersecurity vulnerabilities stem from a range of sources, including not only technology itself, but also the design and execution of business processes and, employees within the organisation. Respondents believe that migrating data to the cloud (74%), social media (66%) and careless employees (64%) pose the highest risk to businesses in the next 12 months, stating that they need to be addressed now to bolster their organisation’s security.
Rather worryingly though, over 60% of respondents believe they have inadequate resources (namely access to cybersecurity talent due to staffing budget issues) to address gaps in the business’s cyber defences. As a result of this shortage, unsurprisingly, almost a third (31%) also admit they only refresh their cybersecurity strategies on an annual basis, potentially leaving glaring gaps in their cyber defences.
Combined with fast-changing threats, this talent and budget shortage has many organisations looking to technologies, particularly artificial intelligence (AI)-driven automation, to improve their cybersecurity outlook. However, while technology can close the gap, it cannot solve the security short fall alone.
Future-proofing digital operations
The study identified four critical elements that organisations can follow to bolster their cybersecurity strategies, allowing them to future-proof digital operations:
Euan Davis, European Lead for Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work said: “While not a silver bullet, the introduction of AI tools into cybersecurity platforms will spur organisations to rethink how they approach cybersecurity and reduce the burden left by talent shortages. Cybersecurity needs to be an ongoing endeavour however, and failure to adapt processes and systems on a regular basis will leave an organisation open to further attacks.
“Leadership must take the initiative when it comes to ensuring this is embedded into the business’s DNA, or else face losing customers, reputation and revenue. Ultimately, any company that hopes to do business in the digital economy must make cyber defences a key part of their business strategy.”