A recent Kaspersky study found
that 61% of employees don't feel isolated while working remotely, and 37% of
remote workers alternatively said they manage to communicate even better with
their colleagues this way. The extensive use of non-corporate communication services
enables better connections but increases the level of risk from unmonitored IT
resources.
Kaspersky surveyed 4,303 IT workers from 31 countries to
learn how businesses and people have managed to adjust to new work from home
restrictions and how the new work formats correlate with employee wellbeing in
the long-term. While the majority of employees have successfully transitioned
to the digital communications era, a substantial number of respondents couldn't
adopt the remote way of life and still feel isolated (39%) while working at
home. Given the fact that loneliness contributes to employee burnout, not less
than other demotivating factors like
exhaustion and anxiety, this statistic should be a matter of concern for
business executives.
One reason for better connections formed with colleagues,
reported by more than half of employees, could be the extensive use of
non-corporate communication services that have increased according to the
survey. Communicating for work purposes via non-corporate email services has
risen from 67% to 69%, non-corporate messenger use has risen from 61% to 64%,
non-corporate resource planning software from 42% to 45%, web-conferencing
platforms from 83% to 86%, and social networks from 67% to 70%.
The challenge is that less formal interaction between
colleagues via non-corporate means does not only facilitate the communication
and give the feeling of being connected, but it also increases cyber-risks for
the company. The so-called ‘shadow IT' services are not deployed and controlled
by corporate IT departments and could be potentially
dangerous.
"People usually use additional tools for good reasons,
and there is nothing wrong with employees trying to make their work and
communications more convenient," explains Andrey Evdokimov, head of
information security at Kaspersky. "Of course, non-corporate services
or applications are not necessarily malicious (though this is possible too).
Shadow IT solutions don't let security or IT specialists gain the complete
picture of the company's digital infrastructure. That situation results in
increased risk because defenders don't consider unsanctioned tools when
developing threat models, data flow diagrams, and planning. IT departments also
don't control access to shadow services and employees can compromise valuable
corporate information such as by adding new members to an unauthorized work
chat or not deleting former coworkers from it. Among other worrying aspects are
careless utilization of unpatched apps or wrong privacy settings which lead to
data leakage. Moreover, handling personal information via unreliable services
causes fines for regulatory requirement violations."
Kaspersky shares the following recommendations to help
businesses enable secure communication opportunities for their employees:
- Provide clear guidelines
on the usage of external services and resources. Employees should know
which tools they should or shouldn't use and why. If they want to use new
software for work, there should be a clear procedure of approval with IT
and other responsible roles.
- Encourage employees to
have strong passwords for all digital services they use.
- Set up an access policy
for corporate assets, including email boxes, shared folders, and online
documents. Keep it up to date and remove access if an employee left the
company. Use cloud access security broker software that helps manage and
monitor employee activity within cloud services and enforces security policies.
- Conduct basic security
awareness training for your employees. This can be done online and should
cover essential practices including those that protect against phishing,
such as account and password management, email security, endpoint
security, and web browsing. Kaspersky
Automated Security Awareness Platform provides such training in
an easy and effective way.
- There are dedicated
tools which provide visibility over cloud services and employees can
access from corporate devices. This capability is available in Kaspersky
Endpoint Security Cloud that also provides a strong endpoint
protection with EDR as well as dedicated data security functions.
The full report and more advice on employee wellbeing is
available here.