45% of Organizations Experienced Third Party-Related Business Interruptions During the Past Two Year
Despite increased investments in third-party cybersecurity risk
management (TPCRM) over the last two years, 45% of organizations experienced
third party-related business interruptions, according to a new Gartner, Inc.
survey.
“Third-party cybersecurity risk management is often
resource-intensive, overly process-oriented and has little to show for in terms
of results,” said Zachary Smith, Sr
Principal Research at Gartner. “Cybersecurity teams struggle to build
resilience against third party-related disruptions and to influence third
party-related business decisions.”
The survey was conducted in July and August 2023 among 376 senior executives involved in third-party
cybersecurity risk management across organizations from different industries,
geographies and sizes.
Effective TPCRM Depends on Delivery of Three Outcomes
Successful management of third-party cybersecurity risk depends on the security organization’s
ability to deliver on three outcomes – resource efficiency, risk management and
resilience and influence on business decision making. However, enterprises
struggle to be effective in two out of those three outcomes, and only 6% of
organizations are effective in all three.
Four Actions for Security Leaders to Manage
Third-Party Cybersecurity Risks
Based on the survey findings, Gartner identified
four actions that security and risk management leaders must take to increase
their effectiveness in managing third-party cybersecurity risk. The
survey found that organizations that implemented any of these actions saw a
40-50% increase in TPCRM effectiveness.
These actions include:
1. Regularly
review how effectively third-party risks are communicated to the business owner of the third-party
relationship: Chief
information security officers (CISOs) need to regularly review how well the
business understands their messaging around third-party risks to ensure they
are providing actionable insights around those risks.
2. Track third-party
contract decisions to help manage risk
acceptance by business owners: Business owners will often
choose to engage with a third party even if they are well-informed about
associated cybersecurity risks. Tracking decisions helps security teams align
compensating controls for risk acceptances and alerts security teams to particularly
risky business owners that may require greater cybersecurity oversight.
3. Conduct third-party incident response planning (e.g., playbooks,
tabletop exercises): Effective TPCRM
goes beyond identifying and reporting cybersecurity risks. CISOs must ensure
the organization has strong contingency plans in place to prepare for
unexpected scenarios and to be able to recover well in the wake of an incident.
4. Work
with critical third parties to mature their security risk management practices
as necessary: In a hyperconnected environment, a critical third-party’s risk is also
an organization’s risk. Partnering with the critical third parties to improve
their security risk management practices helps promote transparency and
collaboration.
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