Tenable Study Finds Indian Organisations Cannot Prevent 42% of Cyberattacks
Tenable Inc., the Exposure Management Company, published a new study
revealing that Indian organisations could not prevent 42% of cyberattacks on
their businesses, only successfully thwarting 58% of cyberattacks over the past
two years. Consequently, organisations have had to rely on reactive measures
rather than preventing attacks from occurring in the first place.
The study further revealed that 78% of Indian
respondents believe their organisations could better defend against
cyberattacks with more resources dedicated to preventive cybersecurity.
However, a concerning 64% indicated that their cybersecurity teams spend the
majority of their time addressing critical incidents, hampering their capacity
to take a proactive stance.
The data is drawn from, “Old
Habits Die Hard: How People, Process and Technology Challenges Are Hurting
Cybersecurity Teams in India,” a commissioned study of 825 IT and cybersecurity
professionals including 69 Indian respondents conducted in 2023 by Forrester
Consulting on behalf of Tenable.
The study, which emphasises the significance of adopting
a proactive cybersecurity approach, found that a core reason for the
prevalent reactivity in Indian organisations’ cybersecurity
practices is the lack of alignment in goals between IT and security teams.
Seven in 10 (71%) organisations say their IT teams are more concerned with
uptime than patching and remediation. The disparity results in a lack of
coordination between the two teams, a challenge acknowledged by 43% of Indian
organisations.
"In today's threat landscape, by the time
organisations react to cyberattacks, the battle is half lost,” said Kartik Shahani, Country Manager for Tenable
India. “Organisations in India simply cannot afford to remain in reactive
mode. The study we conducted sheds light on the inherent issues within Indian
organisations' own structure and operations. This misalignment in goals between
IT and security teams results in a palpable lack of synchronisation, making it
challenging for these vital components of an organisation to work cohesively
toward a shared goal.”
This goal misalignment is further exacerbated as
organisations race to adopt new and emerging software-as-a-service applications
from third-party providers. Eight in 10 respondents (81%) of their organisations
use a third-party program for SaaS apps and services. However, only over half
(54%) have visibility into these third-party environments making proactive
security measures elusive.
Shahani noted, “While there are no quick fixes to these challenges,
implementing an exposure management program enables security professionals to
better allocate time and resources so they can focus on taking the preventive
actions that legitimately reduce an organisation’s cyber risk. It requires
security teams to place as much importance on proactive efforts as they
currently do on reactive incident response efforts. It requires security and IT
professionals to consider how siloed organisational structures — and the myriad
security tools used in support of those silos — are hindering their ability to
see what an attacker sees. And it requires a way for security professionals to
analyse the data coming from disparate tools to empower them to draw meaningful
insights they can apply to their risk reduction goals.”
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