Arbor Networks, Inc., a leading provider of DDoS
and advanced threat protection solutions for enterprise and service provider
networks, announced the results of a survey it sponsored with the Economist
Intelligence Unit on the issue of incident response preparedness. The Economist
Intelligence Unit surveyed 360 senior business leaders, the majority of whom
(73%) are C-level management or board members from across the world, with 31%
based in North America, 36% in Europe and 29% in Asia-Pacific.
Anton Jacobsz - Managing Director of Networks Unlimited
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The report entitled “Cyber incident response:
Are business leaders ready?” shows that despite 77 percent of
companies suffering an incident in the past two years, over a third of firms
(38 percent) still have no incident response plan in place should an incident
occur. Only 17 percent of businesses globally are fully prepared for an online
security incident.
More prepared firms that do have a response plan in place
typically rely on the IT department to lead this process, but the majority also
draw upon external resources – primarily IT forensic experts, specialist legal
advisers and law enforcement experts.
“There is an encouraging trend towards formalising corporate
incident response preparations. But with the source and impact of threats
becoming harder to predict, executives should make sure that incident response
becomes an organizational reflex rather than just a plan pulled down off the
shelf,”said James Chambers, a senior editor at The Economist Intelligence Unit.
Arbor Networks President Matthew Moynahan added, “As these
findings show, when it comes to cyber-attacks, we live in a “when” not “if”
world. In the wake of recent high profile targeted attacks in the retail
sector, a company’s ability to quickly identify and classify and incident, and
execute a response plan, is critical to not only protecting corporate assets
and customer data, but the brand, reputation and bottom line of the company.”
Key findings:
Level of preparedness is being held back by lack of
understanding about threats
·
Only
17 percent of business leaders feel fully prepared for an incident.
·
41
percent of business leaders feel a better understanding of potential threats
would help them be better prepared.
·
Having
a formal plan or team in place has a significant effect on feeling of
preparedness among executives.
·
Half
of all companies feel that they are unable to predict the business impact when
a breach occurs.
Emphasis on reputation is driving formalization of plans
and processes
·
Two-thirds
of executives say that responding effectively to an incident can enhance their
firm’s reputation.
·
The
percentage of organisations that now have an incident response team and plan in
place is set to rise above 80 percent in the next few years.
·
Firms
that have suffered an incident in the past 24 months are twice as likely to
have an arrangement with a third party expert as firms that have not suffered
an incident.
Firms remain reticent about disclosing incidents and
sharing intelligence about threats
·
57
percent of organisations do not voluntarily report incidents where they are not
legally required to do so. Only
a third of companies share information about incidents with other organisations
to spread best practice and benchmark their own response.
The Economist Intelligence Unit
is the world leader in global business intelligence. It is the
business-to-business arm of The Economist Group that focuses on helping executives make better business decisions by
providing timely, reliable and impartial analysis on worldwide market trends
and business strategies.
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