Immersive Labs announced its
2023 Cyber Workforce Resilience Trend Report,
conducted by Osterman Research. The report reveals a steady increase in
cyberattacks and evolving threat landscape are resulting in more
organizations turning their attention to building long-term cyber
resilience; however, many of these programs are falling short and fail
to prove teams' real-world cyber capabilities. The report, which
surveyed 570 senior security and risk leaders at UK, US, and
German-based enterprises with at least 1,000 employees, found that while
86% of organizations have a cyber resilience program, more than half
(52%) of respondents say their organization lacks a comprehensive
approach to assessing cyber resilience.
Strengthening cyber capabilities tops the list of strategic priorities
for organizations in 2023, with increasing the cyber resilience of
cybersecurity team members (83%) and the general workforce (75%)
identified as the two highest overall focus areas. Organizations have
taken steps to deploy cyber resilience programs; however, 53% of
respondents indicate the organization's workforce is not well-prepared
for the next cyberattack (of any kind) and just over half say they lack a
comprehensive approach to assessing cyber resilience. These statistics
indicate that although cyber resilience is a priority and programs are
in place, their current structure and training are ineffective.
"Cyber resilience is at the top of everyone's mind today, amid an
evolving threat landscape where ransomware, supply chain risks, and
vulnerabilities are chief among security leaders' concerns. And while
it's promising to see organizations and leaders implementing tactics and
programs to increase cyber resilience, many unfortunately are still
missing the mark," said James Hadley, CEO & Founder of Immersive
Labs. "Despite all the classroom training and certifications, half of
respondents indicate that employees, cybersecurity teams, and the
organization are under-prepared. It's clear that current programs need
to be restructured to drive a successful cyber resilience agenda."
Additional key takeaways from the research report are highlighted below,
spotlighting the need for more - and modernized - cyber resilience
programs across organizations, not just for the security team:
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Organizations lack confidence that their general workforce will know how to respond to a cyber incident:
For every two out of three organizations, there is a lack of confidence
that 95% of their workforce will not know how to recover from a cyber
incident. High-priority tasks include maintaining business operations
without the availability of core IT systems, handling urgent tasks using
manual processes, and not exacerbating the recovery process by
connecting compromised devices to the network.
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Organizations are questioning the reliability of industry
certifications, classroom training, and ad hoc learning pathways to
build cyber resilience: While almost all organizations encourage
industry certifications, only 32% say they are effective at mitigating
cyber threats. Classroom training is offered too infrequently to be
effective, with only around a quarter (27%) of respondents indicating
they are receiving monthly training. Almost half of respondents (46%)
say their employees would not know what to do if they received a
phishing email, despite years of security awareness training and
phishing tests.
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Most companies lack a framework with metrics to measure and demonstrate cyber resilience: Having
the right metrics in place to prove cyber resilience amongst teams is
important, particularly as Boards and C-level executives are looking for
concrete evidence. Despite this, almost half (46%) of senior security
and senior risk leaders say they do not have the metrics they need to
fully demonstrate their workforce's resilience in the face of a
cyberattack. Only around 6% of organizations are using informative
metrics - such as response times - to address vulnerabilities, track
intrusion rates, metrics on internal data loss, and incidence rates of
various threat types.
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Communication with the Board and senior leadership about cyber resilience is imperative to drive change:
During the past six months, a request for the security team to prove
the organization's cyber resilience was only made by the Board at less
than half (46%) of organizations. For the senior leadership team, at 51%
of organizations. Raising awareness around the importance of cyber
resilience is an important step in gaining more support from these
critical leaders. When communicating with the Board and senior
leadership, security and risk leaders should embrace cyber resilience
messaging, rather than focusing on the status of piecemeal inputs, such
as deploying new cybersecurity solutions.
"Any legacy cyber training approach that cannot deliver continuous
exercising is not fit for purpose given the realities of today's
evolving cyberthreats," added Hadley. "As organizations work to
strengthen their cyber resilience agenda, they should focus on
continuous assessment and building cyber skills and proving stronger
outcomes. We need a renewed focus on better cybersecurity capability
solutions and cultivating a workforce with the expertise to handle the
real-world impact demands of new and emerging threats."
For other valuable insights, download the full research report here.