Asia Pacific organizations urged to evolve security strategies to boost resilience in the post-pandemic world

Friday 03 September 2021 09:11
Organizations across Asia Pacific that adapted quickly to the pandemic by accelerating their digital transformation could have their hard-won resiliency threatened due to misalignment between business priorities and technology strategies, but a holistic, carefully-aligned security approach and the right partnerships would help them retain their resiliency gains.

A new InfoBrief by IDC, a leading provider of global IT research and advice, spotlights this imperative and reality, reinforcing the commitment by cybersecurity leader Fortinet(R) to helping CISOs and their security teams remain relevant in a digital-first world.

Sponsored by Fortinet, the IDC InfoBrief: Stop Reacting, Start Strategizing (August 2021 IDC Doc #AP241253IB) outlines the unique trends, risks and challenges for businesses in six economies across the region alongside a pattern of mismatched business and technology concerns.

Paradox of Misaligned Priorities

According to IDC's research, CxOs cited building resilience/mitigating risk (61%) and cost reduction/optimization (63%) as top business priorities. For technology teams, both IT security investments and a shift to hybrid cloud models have been proven to address the risk issues of continuity and security. Yet, IDC has found that implementing security technologies to reduce risk (33%) is one of the lowest ranked technology priorities

CISOs in all markets are challenged with recruiting talent which is critical to the success of IT security teams. In contrast, improving the ability to attract and retain the workforce was seventh in terms of C-suite business priorities for 2021[1].

Within this paradox of misaligned priorities, CISOs and cybersecurity strategies must evolve to complement the business and achieve true resiliency.

"Keeping the business safe even as cybersecurity threats escalate and the organization's attack surface expands remains the core concern of the CISO. But to ensure that their team makes a positive contribution to the overall business, tech leaders need to now also align their security strategies with other C-suite priorities, like optimizing costs, enabling business growth and improving business resilience," said Chanvith Iddhivadhana Thailand Country Manager, Fortinet. "Stymied by the misalignment of C-suite priorities and recruitment concerns, CISOs that work with the right partners will be best able to devise the cybersecurity strategy holistically and execute a successful cybersecurity program."

Threat Landscape 

According to IDC, Thailand's top concern[2] focuses on existing corporate network (38%) and operational technology (34%). It is also worth noting that while Thailand has postponed the full enforcement of the Personal Data Protection Act, organizations must being to prepare adequate measures.

In addition, the latest FortiGuard Labs Global Threat Landscape Report from the first half of 2021 demonstrates a significant increase in the volume and sophistication of attacks targeting individuals, organizations, and increasingly critical infrastructure. The expanding attack surface of hybrid workers and learners, in and out of the traditional network, continues to be a target.

  1. 49% of all networks infected with Mirai Botnet Malware
  2. Phishing & Botnet Attacks are most prevalent
  3. Ransomware: Nemocod and Locki Group are very active
  4. Over 18k Remote Desktop Systems directly connected to the Internet
  5. Home Routers & NAS Systems heavily targeted. Often weak due to outdated firmware

Organizations face risks and a threat landscape with attacks on all fronts. However, IDC's Asia/Pacific Digital Resilience Scorecard revealed that only 6.7% of organizations in Thailand have a robust approach to cybersecurity.

Best Practices

Taking these trends and challenges into account, organizations are urged to adopt a range of business and security strategies to ensure they can continue to operate successfully and stay resilient as IT architectures and security risks evolve at pace. The recommendations include:

  • Ensure Alignment of Business and Technology Priorities and Processes: Effective security requires ongoing reinforcement from the executive level down. Organizations have to review their security strategy and make sure it is aligned with their business priorities. Employees now work from anywhere in the new normal and to secure a remote workforce, organizations must align business processes such as finance and HR with best practices around communication privacy and authentication. These processes should also align with cultural processes that promote effective communication in an agile, trust-based environment.
  • Ensure Your Cybersecurity Architecture Can Support New Business Architecture: To secure a distributed workforce, organizations have to update network architectures. Data privacy, integrity, and confidentiality need to be kept top of mind and applied across the network, not just for remote workers, as business applications and workflows need to span from the endpoint to the core network to the company's "distributed edge" in the cloud. Securing this distributed environment requires cybersecurity solutions that are both integrated and automated.
  • Deploy a holistic security solution: As organizations accelerate their digital innovation, ensuring their security can keep up with today's fast-evolving threat landscape is critical. What used to be known as the "network perimeter" is now splintered across the infrastructure due to the explosion of network edges, work from anywhere, and multi-cloud models. Organizations need a broad cybersecurity strategy, implementing a platform with end-to-end security, and a single pane of glass approach to management offering full visibility across the entire attack surface.
  • Adopt a zero trust approach: To respond to increasing and evolving threats, best practices now stipulate a "trust no one, trust nothing" attitude toward network access. IT teams must move toward a zero trust approach to cybersecurity, which means all users, all devices, and all web applications from the cloud must be trusted, authenticated, and have the right amount of access privilege.

Simon Piff, Vice President of Security Practice, IDC Asia/Pacific, said: "This IDC InfoBrief underscores the continuing relevance of CISOs and security teams in a digital-first world. We see a need for CISOs to refine and align their strategies with C-suite concerns, and to combat complexity and resource shortfalls today with trusted security partners which can provide expertise and insights that would be otherwise out of reach."

Cybersecurity industry veteran Fortinet has a broad portfolio of complementary cybersecurity solutions that enable efficient, self-healing operations and a rapid response to known and unknown threats. Its Fortinet Security Fabric brings holistic end-to-end security to organizations of all sizes to enable broad visibility, seamless integration and automation across the entire digital attack surface and lifecycle, with converged networking and security across edges, clouds, endpoints and users.

The IDC InfoBrief: Stop Reacting, Start Strategizing report drew on the findings of various recent IDC surveys, including the IDC Asia/Pacific CxO Study, February 2021, IDC's Global IT Skills Survey, April 2021, and IDC's Asia/Pacific Digital Resiliency Scorecard, March 2021.

Source: Communication Arts