Why a Security Posture Assessment is Critical for Modern Organizations

By Abhishek Bansal

In January 2023, the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) published the Global Cybersecurity Outlook 2023. Some of its key findings include:

The main takeaway from this report is that modern organizations must be more cognizant of their cyber risks and risk landscape. Only then can they take appropriate action to secure their assets and improve their cyber-resilience. And cyber-related cognizance, action, and resilience all have a common starting point: security posture assessment.

Your organization likely has a complex technical stack and digital supply chain that are vulnerable to many attack vectors, increasing the risk of a serious cyberattack or data breach.

But how big is this risk?

How prepared are you to deal with it?

Can you quantify your cybersecurity strength in terms of tools, processes, policies, and controls?

Are you confident in your ability to quickly recover from security events?

The only way to discover the answer to all these questions, and more importantly, to strengthen your security defenses, is to conduct a security posture assessment.

What is a Security Posture and Security Posture Assessment?

A strong security posture is the first and most important line of defense for an organization against malicious cyber adversaries. It refers to the collective security status of all the digital assets used in the firm – devices, applications, software, people, and so forth – and their ability to withstand cyberattacks. This ability depends on whether appropriate security tools, policies, and solutions are in place to prevent and respond to different kinds of attacks, including costly data breaches, devastating ransomware attacks, embarrassing social engineering attacks, wide-ranging supply chain attacks, and more.

But to strengthen this ability and thus their security posture, organizations first need to understand how strong or weak the posture currently is. Here’s where a security posture assessment comes in. A comprehensive security posture assessment can help them understand their cybersecurity strength and also evaluate their preparedness to react to and deal with cyberattacks in future.

So now the question is: does your organization need a security posture assessment?

Do You Need a Security Posture Assessment?

The WEF’s Global Risks Report 2023 surfaces the most critical risks that economies and societies all over the world will face over the next two years. You may be surprised to learn that along with expected risks like environmental damage and infectious diseases, the report also mentions “failure of cybersecurity measures” as a serious and constant concern in many countries. Such failures can be devastating to any firm, especially those that are facing high levels of cybersecurity risk.

Do any of these apply to your firm:

All of the above are risk factors that increase the size of an organization’s attack surface and make it more vulnerable to all kinds of cyberattacks, including malware and ransomware attacks, phishing, Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), supply chain attacks, and data theft. So, if any of these factors apply to your organization, you need to evaluate them thoroughly and find ways to mitigate them. Here’s where a security posture assessment will be very useful.

A detailed security posture assessment will enable your cybersecurity team and top leaders to enumerate the controls that are already in place and evaluate the effectiveness of each at reducing the firm’s cyber risk. In addition, it will allow them to:

Wrap Up

Cyberattacks and data breaches are serious issues for organizations in every industry and country. According to a report by IBM, the global average cost of a breach in 2023 topped $4.45 million – an all-time high and 15% higher from just three years ago. Furthermore, 40% of breaches in 2023 resulted in the loss of data across multiple environments, 95% of studied organizations experienced multiple breaches, and threat actors have reduced the average time to complete ransomware attacks.

All these facts should tell you how important it is to maintain a strong security posture. And a strong posture starts by assessing your current situation in terms of attack vectors, asset inventory, and security controls, and then finding the gaps that may weaken your defenses. In other words, you need a security posture assessment. The sooner, the better.

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