After you've trimmed the fat and then cut muscle down to bone, it's tempting to start looking at ways to trim core infrastructure. IT is always a target for cost reduction, but one area where you should be very cautious about cutting spending is security. If you don't increase the number of servers or invest in that CRM tool, it may well crimp your business growth, but in and of itself, it probably won't put you out of business. By contrast, a security breach can kill your business -- and that's even more true right now when margins have moved beyond thin to nonexistent. Do you have the cash reserves to fight a lawsuit over hacked customer data, to have your sales pipeline filched, to butt heads with regulators, or any of myriad other security disasters waiting to happen?
Yet, security still gets the axe. According to a (ICS)2 survey released at the RSA Conference, more than 70% of information security professionals saw their budgets reduced in the last six months. That's sobering, if you figure that many of the 1,500 survey respondents worked in large enterprises, it's reasonable to assume there was some redundancy and excess to be trimmed; small and midsize companies rarely have that luxury in the IT department or elsewhere. But the follow-up question about budgets is also telling: 55% said they expected no further cuts this year. As for the 225 respondents who, we infer, anticipate further budget cuts, they may have more fat to trim or just figure a security breach won't happen to them. However, these results indicate a slight majority have drawn a line in the sand.
When you slash your security budget, you're pinning your hopes on the unrealistic belief that it won't happen to you. Witness another survey of CIOs (the folks charged with seeing the big picture) where the runaway spending priority for the coming year was security. The Robert Half Technology survey found that 43% of CIOs tapped information security as the number one spending priority. The distant second was virtualization at 28%.
Two surveys, one showing security budgets cuts and another indicating security investment. Ah, the conflict., So where do small and midsize businesses fall in this mix?
According to yet another survey, almost half (42%) of SMBs are holding steady on IT spending and a fifth (20%) plan to increase it. The findings of the Compass Intelligence SMB Online Experience research don't break out security spending independently, but it's not unreasonable to infer that if all IT spending holds even or increases, security spending will too.
And just as this mish mash of numbers and surveys isn't clean and neat, neither is securing your business. Spending alone won't save you, but smart spending may. Now's a time to review your security budget, but not with a blunt cutting instrument, but rather to identify ways you maintain or even boost your safeguards without spending big. This Wednesday, we'll be digging into exactly that issue at bMighty's virtual event: bMighty bSecure: SMB Security On A Budget. We've assembled a host of experts, analysts, and small and midsize business people to share their insights and experiences (and take your questions) about issues ranging from security budgeting to the most pressing internal and external security threats to disaster recovery, security appliances, and more -- all with an eye toward pragmatic, achievable outcomes that account for today's budget realities. Check out the full event agenda here.
Unlike many other IT investments, security has an inverted ROI equation -- the result you hope for is that NOTHING will happen. And the only indicator you'll have of whether you've spent enough is a security breach and then it's too late.
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