The study from Code42 titled CTRL-Z showed that a staggering number of business owners aren’t taking any steps to protect their companies from cyber attacks. CEOs in particular are the problem, with 75 percent of them admitting that they use applications and programs that are not approved by their IT department, despite 91 percent acknowledging that their behaviors could be considered a security risk to their organization. These numbers, for lack of a better word, are bad, particularly considering the speed at which cybersecurity is evolving. If those numbers weren’t enough to make your blood boil, these ones probably will: 51 percent of business decision makers have had a security breach within the last 18 months; 83 percent of business decision makers admit that their actions would be considered a security risk to their organizations; and 10 percent of information technology decision makers don’t believe they have full visibility over corporate data. So why are CEOs, business decision makers, and IT professionals being so cavalier about cybersecurity? They’re reasons, while ignoring basic security protocols in the face of financial loss, are noble. 80 percent of CEOs and 65 percent of business decision makers said they only use unauthorized applications and programs to ensure productivity, while 59 percent of CEOs and 52 percent of business makers do it because it simply makes life easier.
These reasons are admittedly hard to argue with. Secure programs take longer to load and cybersecurity measures waste precious hours of the day. As CEOs and business decision makers, they are in the business of getting work done. And without seeing a hacker in a black ski mask and burlap sack with a dollar sign printed on it, cyber attacks aren’t going to be perceived as that much of a threat. However, cybersecurity is a lot like insurance: it’s better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it. Cyber attacks are getting more sophisticated and detrimental every single day. And if you want to make sure your company doesn’t end up in the Startup Graveyard because of a single hacker, you need to make some changes to your cybersecurity strategy. And listen to your IT employees! Sheesh! Read more about protecting your company here on Tech.Co