ManageEngine announced the final report from its recent study, The 2021 Digital Readiness Survey.
The report found that 81% of U.S.-based IT professionals believe that
having remote workers has increased their enterprise's security
challenges, while 74% acknowledge that their company's use of cloud
solutions increased as a direct result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The
report also found that 96% of U.S. organizations plan to stick with
remote work for at least the next two years.
Rising to Security Challenges
The
report found that phishing is the most common threat (62%) identified
by U.S. respondents, with endpoint network attacks (employee devices and
edge devices) (49%) and malware (39%) as the second and third most
prominent threats. Account hijacking and social-media-based attacks
closely followed at 38% and 32%, respectively.
Not
only is this increase in cyberthreats jeopardizing organizational
security, but it is also placing more pressure on IT teams. As a result
of employees working remotely, the majority of organizations in the U.S.
(97%) took necessary security actions to safeguard their data, namely:
- Raising employees' awareness: 77%
- Training employees on cybersecurity: 68%
- Adapting company security strategies: 58%
- Monitoring employee devices: 47%
- Implementing a Zero Trust network: 20%
The
U.S. excelled in limiting shadow IT, ranking the highest in the world
(33%) in terms of IT teams needing to provide approval on all app
purchases-10% higher than the global average. Nearly two-fifths of
respondents (37%) said employees have purchased mobile-specific
applications without direct approval from IT, followed by online meeting
tools (29%) and document sharing applications (26%).
"These
findings indicate that the mass shift to a distributed workforce has
forced IT to fundamentally reevaluate their security practices," said
Ajay Kumar, chief evangelist at ManageEngine. "The results should serve
as a wake-up call for organizations to proactively ramp up their
security measures through employee training and reinforcing their
identity and access management, SIEM and unified endpoint management
practices."
Ramping Up Cloud Solutions
With
remote work here to stay, U.S. executives are relearning how to best
support their workforce. To that end, 53% of U.S. respondents learned
new remote worker support skills and 52% said that their organizations'
remote worker support teams have increased their use of cloud solutions
in the last year.
"Cloud
adoption shows no signs of slowing, especially after the shift to
digital operations that many businesses had to make to survive in 2020,"
added Kumar. "While there are improvements to be made, this survey
solidifies that cloud solutions aren't going anywhere."
Additional cloud-related data points include:
Increased Security is Still Best for Instilling Cloud Confidence
- 56% of respondents said that increased security would in turn increase their company's confidence in cloud solutions.
- Increased performance (48%) and improved reliability (47%) closely follow security.
ITOps Teams Embrace the Cloud, Compliance Teams Resist
- Other
than remote worker support teams, IT operations had the highest
increased use of cloud solutions (60%) as well as data teams (50%).
- Conversely,
disaster recovery and compliance teams had the lowest rate of adoption
at 29% and 22%, respectively, suggesting that cloud solutions should
improve their security function before seeing wide-spread adoption.
Visit ManageEngine's website to access the first report in the study, which covered data-driven decision-making.