According to a survey of nearly 3,000 risk management professionals, COVID-19 continues to be viewed as a top business risk for 2021 alongside Cyber Incidents (both at 40% of those surveyed) and comes in second only to Business Interruption (41%). While cyber incidents have been a growing concern for years, the pandemic has increased the risks due to increased reliance on remote technology, as well as the speed with which new technology was adopted.
Due to the surge in these risks, cyber insurance premiums, which now total around $5 billion annually, have drastically increased and are expected to continue to increase 20 to 30% per year on average. A few reasons for these increased premiums are as follows:
The Costs of Not Having Cyber Insurance
Cyber Insurance is critical to your business and continues to be as threats grow in number and sophistication. Here are just a few reasons why it’s so important you protect your company with substantial coverage:
6 Ways Lower Your Risk and Mitigate Cyber Insurance Costs
Despite the growing cost of cyber insurance, and the necessity of robust coverage, there are some key methods and best practices to reduce your liability:
- 1Use enterprise-level antivirus: Enterprise-level, next generation antivirus solutions combine various technologies such as behavior analysis, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, live monitoring, and intention monitoring to find threats, instead of just scanning for signatures. Traditional consumer-level antivirus can’t full protect your data and systems.
- 2Conduct regular penetration testing: Regularly check your entire system for vulnerabilities, exposed endpoints, software weaknesses, necessary updates, and any flaw that a hacker could potentially exploit. If any issues are found, you can quickly resolve them before your business is exposed.
- 3Adopt a data recovery and backup solution: If your data becomes corrupted due to a security incident, a comprehensive data backup and recovery solution will keep your business moving forward. Your chosen solution should also be tested regularly to ensure that you are able to recover your data if an incident were to occur.
- 4Patch management: Many cybersecurity incidents have been the result of unpatched software. In fact, 57% of cyberattack victims report their breaches could have been prevented by installing an available patch. Patches secure any weak spots or vulnerabilities that have emerged, leaving you open to ransomware or malware attacks.
- 5Make sure your website is secure: Always use a trustworthy provider for website hosting and regularly conduct audits to ensure there are no vulnerabilities that could leave your company and data open to cyberattacks.
- 6Notify and train employees: Keep your employees up to date on the latest threats and trends in cybercrime so they can stay vigilant to not fall victim to suspicious emails and other vulnerabilities.
For a detailed checklist of ways to prepare your business and a complimentary security assessment, please reach out to info@gowp.tech.