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According to data privacy statistics, the annual privacy expenditure has surpassed $1.2 million. Large scale enterprises spend an average of $1.9 million annually on data privacy while small businesses average $800,000.
Most enterprises are not only seeing positive returns on their data privacy investments but 40% of them are even getting twice as much benefit from it. In fact, 42% indicated that their private investments help them stay agile and innovate continuously.
Despite this, most businesses still struggle with emerging data privacy challenges such as ensuring data protection for remote workers and making safe data transfer and migration possible. How can enterprises strengthen their privacy defenses to cope with emerging privacy issues? If you are looking for the answer to this question then you are at the right place.
In this article, you will learn six ways to improve the data privacy of your enterprise.
Here are six ways you can adopt to boost your enterprise’s data privacy.
If you are serious about your enterprise data privacy, the first thing you need to do is to create and maintain an inventory of digital assets. You cannot protect something when you don’t know that it actually exists and you are the one who owns it. Invest in digital asset and inventory management tools that can offer real-time insights into all your digital assets. Ensuring visibility is critical to success when it comes to ensuring the security and privacy of data.
The sad truth is that most businesses are unprepared to deal with remote work. The pandemic has accelerated remote work adoption, creating loopholes in your system that cybercriminals can exploit. Conduct architectural assessments and penetration testing to know your risk posture. Pandemic or not, remote work is here to stay, so your enterprise needs to prepare for it.
According to Kumar Ritesh, Founder and CEO of CYFIRMA “To effectively reduce the number of cyber intrusions, a radical mindset shift is needed. Leaders must redefine the concept of a strong cyber posture and relegate event-based security to its rightful place—as an inferior approach to managing cyber risks and threats. A more effective approach to prevent data breaches and intrusion would be an intelligence-driven approach where a proactive hunt for threats would take centre stage.”
Once you understand the risk posture of your enterprise, it will assist you in dealing with new vulnerabilities in a much better way. Not only that, but it will also help you in making disruptive changes and perform large-scale redesign in an efficient manner. You need to know how good your cybersecurity and privacy defenses are at keeping cyberattacks at bay.
According to Gartner predictions, 65% of world’s population will be covered by modern privacy regulations by 2023. Even though your enterprise privacy policies will hugely be influenced by your local government data privacy laws but creating a data privacy policy and implementing it is crucial. Create a data privacy policy, manage your data securely, and prevent it from abuse. This will help you minimize the risk of potential data breaches and cybersecurity attacks.
Most organizations treat cybersecurity and data privacy as two separate entities. With cybersecurity converging with data privacy, they need to rethink their approach. It is imperative that you hire subject matter experts that know how to protect your data both from a cybersecurity and data privacy standpoint. Look for cybersecurity professionals that are ISACA’s Certified Data Privacy Solutions Engineer. These are competent and highly qualified engineers who know how to develop and implement solutions while mitigating the risks.
Maintaining good security hygiene is pivotal for data privacy and security. This would only be possible if you have access to tools such as encryption, which can help you secure data both at rest and in transit. Focus on protecting your identities irrespective of the cybersecurity maturity of your organization. Next, you should invest in endpoint security so you have clear visibility into all the nodes in your network. Make it a habit to treat personal data responsible irrespective of whether that data belongs to your customers, employees, or any other stakeholder.
Most enterprises manage to protect their data when it is at rest but the real security threat emerges when they are moving or migrating their data from one place to another or when they are accessing their personal data. That is why enterprises need to be extra cautious when moving or migrating their data. Enforce role-based access so your employees only have access to information they need to complete their work. Keep a close eye on employees who have privileged user access. Implement multi-factor authentication to add an extra layer of protection on top so that even if the hackers manage to guess your passwords, they won’t be able to access your accounts.
What steps do you take to boost data privacy in your organization? Share it with us in the comments section below.
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