Three Cybersecurity Must-Haves for Small Businesses

Three Cybersecurity Must-Haves for Small Businesses

Tips and tactics for ensuring your small business is safe from the threat of cyberattacks.

Pop quiz: What percentage of small businesses in the U.S. suffered a cyberattack in 2017? Without peeking below at the answer, take a guess.

Would you estimate 10 percent? Maybe 25 percent? Higher?

Answer: 47 percent of small businesses had their networks breached at least once by cybercriminals in 2017. (Worse: Almost half those businesses were then hit again.) That’s according to a survey reported in a 2018 USA Today story. After analyzing the alarming data from its survey, the research team concluded that only about three in 10 small businesses would be able to handle a cyberattack if they were hit with one today.

Why most SMBs Aren’t Prepared for a Cyber Attack

Most small companies have limited budgets and lack the IT resources they assume it would take to develop a sophisticated cyber-defense infrastructure.

Also, many SMBs mistakenly believe that their businesses are so small, so insignificant when compared to the giant, multibillion-dollar corporations whose names we all know, that hackers wouldn’t even bother trying to breach their tiny company’s network. However, as you can see from that 47 percent stat, cybercriminals are very interested in hacking small businesses.

The bad news is that hackers know SMBs don’t prioritize cybersecurity, and this is precisely why they target these companies. If you’re a burglar, it makes sense to target the house with the weakest lock.

The good news is that SMBs can significantly harden their cyber defenses without spending the millions of dollars that the mega-corporations budget each year for their cybersecurity. In fact, there are a few steps your company can and should take immediately that won’t break the bank.

1. Train Your Staff on Basic Cybersecurity Awareness

Believe it or not, one of the most successful strategies cyber criminals are still using to access businesses’ networks and data is phishing and similar social-engineering tactics.

In other words, a hacker can breach a business’s systems simply by sending a phony email to an employee (or using a pretext to engage that employee on social media). The hacker then manipulates that individual into some action—opening an attached file, clicking on a link, etc.—which the hacker has set up as a digital lock-picking device to enter the company’s systems and access proprietary data.

Train your employees on the basics of cybersecurity awareness, such as examining the sender’s email address when receiving a suspicious message, and not opening attachments or clicking links from unknown senders.

2. Create a Plan for Mobile Device Security

Let’s assume you’ve secured your company’s on-premise network with firewalls to protect your office’s Internet activity and antivirus software to thwart malicious code from infecting your in-house computers. (You’ve done those things, haven’t you?) None of those measures will matter if your employees access your company’s data or networks offsite from their mobile devices, and those mobile devices themselves are not secure.

So another important step to take is to set up a plan for mobile-device security. You can establish companywide rules, for example, that employees may not use their phones to view, transmit, or download company data unless you have first installed security apps on them and/or these devices have been password-protect.

Remember, your company’s data doesn’t live solely within the walls of your office, and your cybersecurity strategy needs to account for that reality.

3. Conduct a Cybersecurity Threat Assessment with a Third-Party Expert

Once you and your team begin researching small-business cybersecurity strategies, tools, and best practices, it’s easy to become overwhelmed. You will almost certainly discover areas in which your company’s systems and data are vulnerable to hackers right now, and your internal research will probably also reveal that your sensitive data resides in so many places that there’s no way even to keep track of it cost-effectively.

Don’t panic, and don’t throw your hands up in frustration. Given how critical your data is to your company’s operations, your business can’t afford for you to do either. Instead, bring in a team of experts—such as a Managed Security Service Provider (MSSP)—and let them perform a full cybersecurity risk assessment to identify your weaknesses and help you harden them.

Cybersecurity: It’s No Longer Optional

Bottom line: The cyber bad guys know your small business is almost certainly underprepared (if not flat-out unprepared) to stop their attacks, and it’s only a matter of time before they target your company. You won’t need millions of dollars to establish a strong cyber-defense infrastructure, but you will need to establish one. And you need to start now.

Featured

  • The Next Generation

    Video security technology has reached an inflection point. With advancements in cloud infrastructure and internet bandwidth, hybrid cloud solutions can now deliver new capabilities and business opportunities for security professionals and their customers. Read Now

  • Help Your Customer Protect Themselves

    In the world of IT, insider threats are on a steep upward trajectory. The cost of these threats - including negligent and malicious employees that may steal authorized users’ credentials, rose from $8.3 million in 2018 to $16.2 million in 2023. Insider threats towards physical infrastructures often bleed into the realm of cybersecurity; for instance, consider an unauthorized user breaching a physical data center and plugging in a laptop to download and steal sensitive digital information. Read Now

  • Enhanced Situation Awareness

    Did someone break into the building? Maybe it is just an employee pulling an all-nighter. Or is it an actual perpetrator? Audio analytics, available in many AI-enabled cameras, can add context to what operators see on the screen, helping them validate assumptions. If a glass-break detection alert is received moments before seeing a person on camera, the added situational awareness makes the event more actionable. Read Now

  • Transformative Advances

    Over the past decade, machine learning has enabled transformative advances in physical security technology. We have seen some amazing progress in using machine learning algorithms to train computers to assess and improve computational processes. Although such tools are helpful for security and operations, machines are still far from being capable of thinking or acting like humans. They do, however, offer unique opportunities for teams to enhance security and productivity. Read Now

Featured Cybersecurity

New Products

  • ResponderLink

    ResponderLink

    Shooter Detection Systems (SDS), an Alarm.com company and a global leader in gunshot detection solutions, has introduced ResponderLink, a groundbreaking new 911 notification service for gunshot events. ResponderLink completes the circle from detection to 911 notification to first responder awareness, giving law enforcement enhanced situational intelligence they urgently need to save lives. Integrating SDS’s proven gunshot detection system with Noonlight’s SendPolice platform, ResponderLink is the first solution to automatically deliver real-time gunshot detection data to 911 call centers and first responders. When shots are detected, the 911 dispatching center, also known as the Public Safety Answering Point or PSAP, is contacted based on the gunfire location, enabling faster initiation of life-saving emergency protocols. 3

  • Camden CM-221 Series Switches

    Camden CM-221 Series Switches

    Camden Door Controls is pleased to announce that, in response to soaring customer demand, it has expanded its range of ValueWave™ no-touch switches to include a narrow (slimline) version with manual override. This override button is designed to provide additional assurance that the request to exit switch will open a door, even if the no-touch sensor fails to operate. This new slimline switch also features a heavy gauge stainless steel faceplate, a red/green illuminated light ring, and is IP65 rated, making it ideal for indoor or outdoor use as part of an automatic door or access control system. ValueWave™ no-touch switches are designed for easy installation and trouble-free service in high traffic applications. In addition to this narrow version, the CM-221 & CM-222 Series switches are available in a range of other models with single and double gang heavy-gauge stainless steel faceplates and include illuminated light rings. 3

  • EasyGate SPT and SPD

    EasyGate SPT SPD

    Security solutions do not have to be ordinary, let alone unattractive. Having renewed their best-selling speed gates, Cominfo has once again demonstrated their Art of Security philosophy in practice — and confirmed their position as an industry-leading manufacturers of premium speed gates and turnstiles. 3