Achieving organizational resilience through digital trust (Guest blog by BSI)
In today's interconnected world, everything from plant equipment to safety and emergency systems can be accessed remotely. This creates inherent risk and vulnerabilities that can be exploited by cyberattacks. To counter this, organizations should understand the impact of digitalization on their people and ensure they are trained to protect and secure the integrity of digital systems, platforms, and hardware. Given the mass migration to remote and hybrid working over the last two years, this task takes on even greater significance. In general, businesses need to do far more thinking about how technology, innovation and collaborative working can improve organizational resilience. If digitalization didn’t exist, operational resilience could not have happened in the way it has.
The journey to digital trust
Digital trust is a critical part of ensuring your organization’s reputation and resilience, and it is fast becoming a core part of corporate culture. Failure to implement and embed deep digital trust will undermine information and organizational resilience. When it comes to protecting information, trust is our most valuable ally. Businesses recognize the scale of the digital transformation upon them—everything from cybersecurity and information security to AI, where the ethics are at least as important as the software.
Tearing down the walls
The world is at an information resilience crossroads. Information security has traditionally been a compliance topic driven by sector-based regulation, national regulation, or stock market-listing compliance rules. In other words, organizations have traditionally focused on security because they have to, but few have understood the benefits, and most have only counted the cost.
Today’s reality is that digital transformation and Industry 4.0 are happening. We’re seeing a frenzied rush to cloud adoption. Information resilience is no longer just about security; it’s about whether organizations making multimillion dollar investments in technology can trust that it’s going to deliver as intended, whether teams are going to embrace these new technologies and new ways of working and whether suppliers are going to provide a trusted digital ecosystem.
Investing in the cyber castle
Organizations are putting significant funding behind their efforts to make their cyber fortresses impregnable. However, organizations face tough investment decisions and must adapt from traditional compliance mindsets to balanced risk management decisions. The boundaries of an organization have all been torn down. In 2022, information resilience is all about harnessing how companies can leverage digitalization to enable their business going forward. Not so long ago, it seemed the value of a business was approximately 80% based on its tangible assets and 20% based on intangible assets and goodwill. That has now flipped completely, and a significant proportion of that intangible asset is the information around its product, its customer, and its unique differentiators to gain market share. If you lose any aspect of that information privilege, the value of your company reduces.
Taking the right steps
It is against this backdrop that information resilience and the establishment of digital trust through detection, disruption and deterring cyber adversaries is now a key organizational resilience priority. Addressing it, however, is not straightforward. Smaller companies that lack internal IT expertise are putting their faith in global supplier giants such as Microsoft, AWS, and Google, but there is a sense that storing and processing data in the cloud is based on an expectation of a safe, secure ecosystem. Companies should validate these expectations through supply chain controls, such as SOC2 reporting, which ensures that the controls included are in place and operate effectively.
Larger organizations should continue the trend of reworking information security management at a corporate governance level. More should be invested in information security training, and companies should clamp down on the use of software or platforms that have not been vetted and sanctioned centrally.
Original source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbestechcouncil/2022/09/19/achieving-organizational-resilience-through-digital-trust/?sh=3d87841111e
Help to shape and govern the work of techUK’s Cyber Security Programme
Did you know that nominations are now open* for techUK’s Cyber Management Committee? We’re looking for senior representatives from cyber security companies across the UK to help lead the work of our Cyber Security Programme over the next two years. Find out more and how to nominate yourself/a colleagues here.
*Deadline to submit nomination forms is 17:00 on Tuesday 18 October.
Upcoming events
Get involved
All techUK's work is led by our members - keep in touch or get involved by joining one of the groups below.