When it comes to public health, good hygiene is paramount in avoiding infection. For companies looking to prevent cyber attacks, good cyber hygiene becomes vital. According to a report by Accenture, the average number of security breaches a company faces each year has increased by 67 percent since 2014. Additionally, Ponemon Institute found that the average cost of successful attacks increased 78 percent between 2017 and 2019, from $5.01 million to $8.94 million.
Companies need to look at how they approach cybersecurity from the bottom up to mitigate the risk posed by the growing threats to cybersecurity. Cyber hygiene practices like patching and updating user systems regularly, encouraging the use of multi-factor authentication, and limiting admin privileges need to become ingrained within organizations.
The growing importance of cyber hygiene is linked to the rise in remote workforces. Many remote workers use personal devices that are less secure than corporate ones, which makes them susceptible to attacks that would otherwise be blocked. Seemingly insignificant online habits, like saving passwords in browsers and lending family members corporate devices for personal use, can pose serious breach risk to companies as well.
The last few months have shown that remote work doesn't destroy productivity. Many companies have noticed improved performance and the potential to reduce overhead permanently. However, remote work still has some disadvantages. Almost three-quarters of VPs and C-suite IT leaders think that remote workforces present a higher security risk than on-site employees. They’re not wrong. More than 75 percent of remote employees don’t take any privacy measures when working in a public space, making them easy targets for hackers. Furthermore, nearly half of all remote workers say they transfer files between personal and work devices. By exposing data outside the corporate network, these bad habits could have devastating consequences for your organization.
Insisting that all employees use a VPN can help. But while VPNs provide some security of access, they need a dependable internet connection to work. Unfortunately, compared to corporate wireless networks, home and public WiFi networks are unreliable. Between 2017 and 2018, 81 percent of organizations reported experiencing WiFi-related security incidents due to employees using WiFi in public spaces like cafes and hotels. Ultimately, remote workers, especially those accessing corporate data through a browser on their personal devices, have to rely on endpoint protection tools. This increases the potential for a breach of sensitive corporate data, purely because users are outside the additional protections of the corporate network..
Even though the FBI has reported a 300 percent jump in cybercrime since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, most employees aren't phased. According to a recent study by the cybersecurity firm Promon, 77 percent of remote employees in the U.K. don’t have any security concerns about working from home. Now, more than ever, it’s vital that managers introduce workers to good cyber hygiene practices, such as:
People have always been the weakest link in the cybersecurity chain. Even the best security tools can’t protect against someone who clicks on a link in a spearphishing email, reuses their personal password on a work account, or allows someone they shouldn’t to use their corporate device. These issues are magnified with remote workers, who are outside the ability of IT teams to monitor and ensure compliance, requiring paradoxically more work to ensure they remain compliant.
Ultimately, it’s important to understand that the remote workforce is here to stay. Regardless of whether employees work from home full-time or part-time, they create a higher risk for IT and security teams than employees working on-site. For this reason, it’s crucial that organizations invest money and time in teaching employees how to handle computer security. Only when employees practice good cyber hygiene regularly will enterprises be able to truly reduce the risk of disruption.