Bitwarden announced the results of a new global survey of
enterprise security decision makers commissioned by Bitwarden and
conducted by 451 Research, part of S&P Global Market Intelligence.
The survey explores enterprise password management practices and intent.
Overall, the survey finds that strong passwords remain a priority
strategy and are important in shoring up the confidence of enterprise
security decision makers. But, while security sentiments fall in line
with best practices, implementation often falls short.
Weak
passwords are vulnerable to password theft or compromise, which has led
the enterprise to complement passwords with strategies such as OTP (one
time passwords), email verification codes, SMS, or biometric factors.
Almost all (96%) of global respondents claim familiarity with these
types of passwordless authenticators. Yet, 55% of all global respondents
and 60% of all U.S. respondents said passwords are ubiquitous.
Increased
remote work has compelled 63% of U.S. respondents to deploy password
management technologies, compared with 57% globally. When asked about
the main reasons for adopting password managers, efficacy won out over
convenience. In the U.S., around half (51%) of respondents cited
‘preventing credential theft/account takeover attacks' as the top reason
for adopting password managers. Globally, the number one priority was
‘anti-fraud', cited by 51% of respondents, and a rationale that was
second-most-popular in the U.S. Time-saving and reducing help desk calls
were of lower priority, both in the U.S. and globally.
Other key takeaways from the report:
- 93% of enterprise respondents said they are maintaining or increasing their password management budgets
- Almost
half (46% and 47%) of U.S. enterprises and global enterprises believe
organizations should provide password management tools for employees
both at work and at home
- A
minimum password length is the most common password management
requirement, mandated by 67% of U.S. enterprises and 60% of global
enterprises
- More
than half (55%) of U.S. companies and 45% of global enterprises view
third parties (outside contractors, consultants etc.) as high security
risks. This was followed by remote/mobile non-IT staff, at 44% (U.S.)
and 42% (global)
- Despite
the perceived contractor riskiness, only 41% of U.S. enterprises and
34% of global enterprises have deployed password managers to third
parties
- A
sizable percentage (62% of U.S. enterprises and 59% of global
enterprises) said recent security breaches in other organizations made
them more likely to deploy better password management
- A
whopping 88% of U.S. enterprises and 80% of the slightly-more-humble
global enterprises believe their current password security policies
provide sufficient protection
- Around
half (52%) of U.S. and global enterprises say the most common password
‘bad habit' within their organization is poor password strength
"Enterprises
have always been at a heightened risk for security incidents," said
Bitwarden CEO Michael Crandell. "The majority store some combination of
sensitive personal information, intellectual property, and financial
information. This type of data is valuable to cybercriminals, who are
aware that most employees don't always use strong and unique passwords.
Add in the remote work factor, and you've laid the groundwork for a
password security perfect storm."
Added
Crandell, "In the U.S., over one-third (35%) of respondents experienced
a security incident caused by poor password management. While that may
not seem high at first glance, it is a strikingly large percentage
considering how destructive data leaks can be from a reputational,
logistical and financial standpoint. Fortunately, this is a solvable
problem. Over two-thirds (71%) of U.S. respondents said employees would
adopt better password practices if their companies provided them
appropriate tools. For enterprises, this should be a no-brainer, as
strong password management is proven to mitigate risk."
Enabling Password Management for Businesses
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