A new Symantec survey indicates that small and midsized business security budgets are either holding at established levels or growing slightly, despite t6he economic downturn. Good thing, too, because the survey also found high levels of vulnerabilities, including a third of businesses running <em>no</em> anti-virus protection.

Keith Ferrell, Contributor

April 9, 2009

3 Min Read

A new Symantec survey indicates that small and midsized business security budgets are either holding at established levels or growing slightly, despite t6he economic downturn. Good thing, too, because the survey also found high levels of vulnerabilities, including a third of businesses running no anti-virus protection.The February, 2009 Symantec survey of more than 1,400 small and midsized businesses worldwide (200 of them in the U.S.) focused on storage and security issues, finding more than a few issues in each area.

Among the shockers:

  • 59% of small and midsized business have no endpoint protection

  • 47% have no desktop backup/recovery tools in place

    42% have no ant-spam solution in place (How do they get anything done, at least in their e-mail queues?)

    38% are without server backup/recovery solutions

And, lower in percentage, but to me most shocking of all:

  • 33% of small and midsized businesses surveyed are running no anti-virus protection.

  • The result, no surprise, is gaps that result in security breaches and worse:

    47% have experienced breaches as a result of hardware failure

    32% experienced a breach as a result of improper or out-of-date security tools

    42% have experienced lost or stolen data devices

    25% have faced deliberate sabotage by employees

    19% have dealt with a security breach that was the result of "improper security procedures/education within the workplace"

That last speaks for all of the above -- improper security procedures and especially education are both the largest vulnerability for small and midsized businesses, and also the most easily (though not without effort, and disciplined effort, at that) corrected.

The need for that corrective education is clear; security gap explanations (and excuses) found in Symantec's survey include:

  • 42% of small and midsized businesses have no dedicated IT staff

  • 41% feel employees lack proper IT/security skills

    33% lack a thorough awareness of threats

    Budget, of course, is an issue as well, with 37% of the survey participants citing finances as the reason for their security vulnerabilities.

    Median IT security budget for small and midsized businesses is $4,500

    Median IT storage budget is likewise $4,500

Those budgets are expected to remain or constant or increase slightly in the coming year, despite the economy, reflecting the awareness of security needs, if not an understanding of their nature.

Which brings us back to the corrective: education.

  • Review your security (and backup/restore) tools for comprehensiveness, need for updates, proper deployment and use.

  • Review every employee's understanding of the security environment, and implement/introduce training and re-training where necessary.

    Develop and implement a thorough security and computer/device usage policy, insist that your employees read, sign, and adhere to it.

    Long past time to close the gaps in small and midsized business security, gaps especially gaps based on ignorance, apathy, or denial.

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