Protect your Business From Cyber Threats
Information Security Management
Manage and enforce security policies, procedures, and controls to protect your business.
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Security Strategy
Having a well-defined security strategy is crucial for a company as it protects sensitive data from cyber threats, reducing the risk of breaches and financial losses. It ensures compliance with regulatory requirements, safeguarding the company’s reputation and building trust with customers and partners. Additionally, a proactive security strategy enables a company to respond swiftly to emerging threats, minimizing potential damage and ensuring business continuity.
Security Management
The goal of security management procedures is to provide a foundation for an organization’s cybersecurity strategy. The information and procedures developed as part of security management processes will be used for data classification, risk management, and threat detection and response.
These procedures enable an organization to effectively identify potential threats to the organization’s assets, classify and categorize assets based on their importance to the organization, and to rate vulnerabilities based on their probability of exploitation and the potential impact to the organization.
Business Continuity
Business continuity is a process-driven approach to maintaining operations in the event of an unplanned disruption such as a cyber attack or natural disaster. Business continuity planning covers the entire business—processes, assets, workers, and more. It isn’t focused solely on IT infrastructure and business systems.
Business resilience encompasses crisis management and business continuity. It requires a response to all types of risk that an organization may face. An organization that is business resilient is essentially in a constant state of “expecting the unexpected.” It means continuously preparing to meet disruptions head-on, including events of extended duration that may affect more than one facility or region.
A well-crafted and tested BCP can go a long way toward helping a business recover swiftly from a disruption. These are key steps a business may want to take.
Multi Layer Security
Layered security, a fundamental cybersecurity strategy, involves deploying a series of defensive measures across various levels of a network or system. The goal is to provide multiple levels of protection to ensure that if one layer is breached, other layers remain intact to prevent further compromise, thereby reducing the overall risk of a successful breach.
Endpoint Security
Endpoint security is the process of protecting devices like workstations, servers, and other devices (that can accept a security client) from malicious threats and cyberattacks. Endpoint security software enables businesses to protect devices that employees use for work purposes or servers that are either on a network or in the cloud from cyber threats.
The modern business landscape is seeing an increasing volume of cybersecurity threats from increasingly sophisticated cyber criminals. Hackers launch a cyberattack every 39 seconds, with a daily total of 2,244 attacks. Endpoints are one of the most common targets, given the sheer number of them in use to connect to networks. According to Strategy Analytics insight, there were already 22 billion connected devices in 2018, which is predicted to rise to 38.6 billion devices by 2025 and 50 billion devices by 2030. As a result, Verizon’s threat report found that up to 30% of data breaches involved malware being installed on endpoints.
Cloud Security
There is some ambiguous terminology concerning cloud technology, so it’s worth taking a moment to define a few common terms. When we talk about ‘the cloud’, ‘cloud services’ or ‘cloud computing’ we mean:
‘An on-demand, massively scalable service, hosted on shared infrastructure, accessible via the internet. Typical services provide data storage, data processing, and pre-built functionality, such as logging.’
This follows the NIST definition of cloud computing in identifying common traits of cloud services.
Data Protection
Data protection is the process of protecting sensitive information from damage, loss, or corruption.
As the amount of data being created and stored has increased at an unprecedented rate, making data protection increasingly important. In addition, business operations increasingly depend on data, and even a short period of downtime or a small amount of data loss can have major consequences on a business.
The implications of a data breach or data loss incident can bring organizations to their knees. Failure to protect data can cause financial losses, loss of reputation and customer trust, and legal liability, considering most organizations today are subject to some data privacy standard or regulation. Data protection is one of the key challenges of digital transformation in organizations of all sizes.