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Cybersecurity

Cybersecurity is becoming a key enabler of sustainable business growth in a new digital era.

By Lukas van der Merwe, specialist sales executive for security at T-Systems South Africa

Organisations across the globe have had to significantly pick up the pace of their digital transformation push to ensure business continuity in a new era shaped by the global pandemic. However, the adoption of these rushed strategies has left many facing unintended complexities and challenges.

While the transition to a digital economy is fundamental to enabling sustainable business growth, organisations have been forced to adopt various digital platforms much faster than anticipated, resulting in a significant increase in their vulnerabilities to cybersecurity breaches.

Such was the scale and pace of the pandemic-driven disruption that Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella, recently observed that “we have seen two years’ worth of digital transformation in two months”.

This accelerated shift towards a digital economy has seen the emergence of a significantly larger remote workforce and a move to online trading, with many companies transferring their data to third-party platforms. This allows any number of internal and external users to access this data across multiple networks and from potentially unmanaged devices.

These are the typical cybersecurity challenges that enterprises face as part of digital transformation, and they have been further compounded by the complexity of having to manage critical data no longer stored in a data centre, from within a corporate security bubble.

A new approach

Clearly, the traditional “castle and moat” approach to cybersecurity is completely inadequate in a digital economy, forcing organisations to turn to next-generation cybersecurity technology solutions.

If not addressed properly, these cybersecurity risks could negate the very benefits of digital transformation. For example, organisations that stick to a traditional cybersecurity approach, trying to limit the risk by reducing the attack surface, will constrain their ability to transform digitally. On the other hand, businesses that adopt a digital platform and implement digital transformation without deploying appropriate security run the risk of not only being vulnerable to cyberattacks, but also potentially suffering significant damage to their entire organisation.

Neither approach will promote business growth. The challenge then is to find a way to introduce security at every level of digital transformation to ensure the company can operate smoothly, and take advantage of these digital platforms to grow sustainably.

A company that successfully transforms to the digital economy can effectively leverage its digital capabilities, increase its routes to market, operate significantly faster and potentially grow revenue.

However, if companies get their cybersecurity approach wrong, private information could potentially be exposed or exfiltratedand sold on by criminals, which could then have a crippling effect on the business. If this information is used for criminal activity, at a time when customers are becoming increasingly educated about how private information should be treated and secured, they are unlikely to do business with your organisation again.

Keeping it simple

The process to deploy the correct cybersecurity strategy in a digital economy is remarkably simple. First, identify the risks that your organisation will be exposed to, then consider the likelihood of these risks being realised, the impact of a breach event and the cost of defence. You need to understand what it would cost to address the risk versus the impact of the event taking place. Once you’ve built the risk matrix, you can start prioritising how you want to slow down or accelerate your digital transformation while maintaining a healthy security posture.

Using the service of a security practitioner can give enterprises access to next-generation cybersecurity technologies via a cyber defence centre, without restricting their digital transformation strategies, which have become key to longevity in the digital era.

However, in the current time of crisis, companies are seeing their operational budgets slashed significantly, and many are struggling to maintain their revenue streams and profitability while trading under severe restrictions.

This presents both a challenge and opportunity for cybersecurity practitioners, as their offerings can underpin sustainability. However, customers’ investments in cybersecurity solutions must always be positioned against a backdrop of facilitating growth and adding business value under difficult conditions.

Also read more about POPI Act in connection with Cybersecurity

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Lukasd Van Der Merwe – Specialist Sales Executive for security at T-Systems South Africa.

 

 

 

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