Conventional Wisdom Of Information Security

Five truths have emerged from five years of the "Global State of Information Security" survey.

Thu, September 06, 2007CIO After five years of conducting the "Global State of Information Security" survey, we have noted some critical trends in information security. We've also uncovered nontrends—numbers that remain so constant and predictable that we can now call them conventional wisdom. Here, then, are five pieces of wisdom based on numbers in the survey that never seem to change.

Spending lags. You're always about 10 percent happier with security policy's alignment with the business than you are with security spending's alignment. Over the years, roughly 85 percent of you have said that your security policies are completely or somewhat aligned with the business, while just 75 percent said that about spending. After all, who doesn't want more money?

Partners too. You're more confident in your own security than that of your partners, suppliers and vendors. Once again, around 80 percent to 85 percent of you were either very or somewhat confident in your security, but when you were asked about partners and vendors, the number dropped to between 70 percent and 75 percent. Remember, you're someone's partner and he's not too thrilled about you either.

Few are cocky. About one in 12 of you think very highly of yourselves. Since 2003, the number of respondents who claimed 100 percent of their users were in compliance with their security policies hovers around 8 percent.

Size doesn't matter. Company size does not affect spending. When the information security budget is measured as a percentage of the IT budget, it remains constant no matter how many employees a company has or what its revenues are. Size of company matters less in security spending than in industry. Technology companies spend the most; nonprofits and educational enterprises spend the least.

Banks lead. Financial services companies are attacked more but suffer less. Over the years, respondents in the money business have reported more security incidents without an appreciable increase in losses or downtime as a result. They do this despite not having significantly larger security budgets than others. The financial sector models best practices.

Loading...
Security MarketSpace
White Papers
5 Tips for Data Loss Prevention Solutions
RSA® The Security Division of EMC has identified 5 key considerations to help organizations simplify the evaluation process for selecting a DLP solution that is right for their business. Learn more »
Secure Training Videos to Prevent Theft
Learn how Dream Force extended their marketing reach without being constricted. Learn more »
Prevent Intellectual Property Theft
Learn what the key components were in Hock International's purchasing decision. Learn more »
Webcasts
Maximizing the Business Value of the PC Infrastructure
Reduced IT budgets have CIOs hunting for ways to maximize their PC infrastructure, while saving money and IT staff time. Diane Bryant, CIO of Intel Corp., talks with CIO magazine's Gary Beach about how her organization is addressing these challenges. Learn more »
 
SPONSORED LINKS
 

Data Loss Prevention: A Better Way to Approach Security

Software Executives: Take Control of Your Organization's Code Quality

Delivering Secure and Reliable Data through Spreadsheet Automation

Taking the Service Desk to the Next Level

Why Data Loss is Increasing--and What You Can Do About It

Communications and Collaboration Needs at Business Organizations

Using Open Source to Deploy Web Applications

Mid-Sized Company CIO Community: infoBOOM!

Enterprise PBX Comparison Guide

Getting Value from Outdated Networking Equipment

Accenture IT Consulting: Logical meets technological. More . . .

White Paper: 8 Key Ingredients to Building an Internal Cloud

Read about virtualization and consolidation effort best practices

Building the Virtualized Enterprise with VMware Infrastructure

Top 10 Business and IT Drivers for the Wealth Management Sector

Bottom-Line Benefits of Virtualization

White Paper: The Building Blocks for Cloud Computing

Oracle's Application Grid Technical Demo

Next-Generation Application Servers and Infrastructure

Application Infrastructure at Enterprise Organizations

Achieving Business Agility with Application Grid

Learn about The Information Technology Infrastructure Library.

Achieving Pervasive Performance Management

Gartner Shares Predictions for 2009

64-page prescriptive guide to security, compliance, and IT operations.

Stop Application Fraud at the Source with Device Reputation

Ready to Act: 3 Recommendations for Agile Processes

Automating the Generation and Secure Distribution of Excel Reports

Seven Ways ITIL Can Help You in an Economic Downturn

Maximizing the Business Value of the PC Infrastructure

Learn how to managing client systems in the enterprise.

Cloud Computing: Read about VMware's compelling vision & set of products

Enterprise PBX Buyer's Guide

Secondary Market Primer: Your Network at Half Price

Top-line Performance that's Bottom-line Efficient

Accenture: Outsourcing for uncertain times. Click to learn more.

Learn about the VMware vSphere (TM) & Intel (R) Xeon (R) Processor 5500 Series

Learn how a virtualized enterprise can help your company reduce costs

Why Isn't Server Virtualization Saving Us More?

8 Key Ingredients to Building an Internal Cloud

Data Center Optimization: Three Key Strategies

A CIO Executive Guide: Cloud Computing Looms Big on the Horizon

Oracle WebLogic Server Technical Demo

Data Grids and Service-Oriented Architecture

Achieving the Impossible: Unlimited Application Scalability

A Middleware Foundation for Application Grid

Tips for successful virtualization management.

Smart Decisions: The Role of Key Performance Indicators

Reduce risk, gain agility. See how Progress can help your business.

Improve ROI, lower TCO and reduce energy consumption.

 
 
RESOURCE CENTER