When the pandemic hit the world, organizations were scrambling to get their employees prepared for working remotely. That created a major headache for IT teams as well as Chief Information Security Officers (CISO). The sudden change left security on the backburner as companies prioritized business operations to stay afloat. Of course, it's important to drive revenue and keep customers happy, however, letting security fall through the cracks can easily mean the end for any company.
Cybersecurity vendor Netwrix held a survey in June after about three months of remote work to see how the pandemic and the work from home (WFH) shift had affected the IT risk landscape. The common trend through all the attack vectors that companies reported experiencing seems to involve an employee doing something they weren't supposed to. These actions include phishing at 48%, administrator mistakes at 27%, and improper data sharing from employees at 26%.
The survey also shows that every fourth organization feels that they are more exposed to risks than they were before the pandemic took the world by storm. Of those, 63% reported seeing an increase in cyberattacks, and 60% found new security gaps resulting from the transition to remote work. One of the most alarming statistics found in the survey was - you guessed it - that 85% of CISOs admit to sacrificing security to ease the transition to remote work.