Even the most prepared of organizations can suffer a cybersecurity breach or data loss - and according to surveys, the majority of large organizations already have. The impact can be substantial -- ranging from fines, lost revenue and out-of-pocket costs for credit monitoring to reputational damage, negative publicity, and operational slow-downs.
Put simply, organizations must understand their exposure to threats (see the previous sections on cybersecurity risk assessment and data classification) in order to define processes for the acceptance and/or transfer of risk. The typical process for evaluating and addressing threats is prone to human bias, which unfortunately creates an altogether new risk.
The solution is leveraging a systematic, objective framework to define, evaluate and determine the disposition of any credible threats to data and information.
A formalized, objective risk acceptance and risk transfer structure reduces the likelihood of human bias, integrates diverse perspectives from across an organization and allows for a more holistic picture of the risk environment and related impacts.
Human beings are famously bad at understanding risk. The fact that driving is far more dangerous than flying does not stop people from calmly driving to the airport only to white- knuckle their way through a flight. While psychologists have identified numerous reasons for this, a particularly influential (and relevant) cause is the fact that the excitement and drama surrounding unlikely events actually strengthens memory of them – allowing people to believe that rare events are more likely to occur than they actually are. (This is also why people believe they will win the lottery!)
In cybersecurity risk analysis, this phenomenon manifests itself as an overestimation of the risks we predict to be most significant and an underestimation of the everyday risks that may actually be more likely. Absent a systematic and objective risk framework, organizations often fall into a series of all-too-human mistakes. Specifically, the process for risk acceptance and transfer tends to be:
A formalized, objective risk acceptance and risk transfer structure reduces the likelihood of human bias, integrates diverse perspectives from across an organization and allows for a more holistic picture of the risk environment and related impacts.
The process underlying risk transfer and risk acceptance is a cyclical, objective exercise that involves engaging stakeholders from across the organization and undergoing a systematic information gathering and assessment effort that is repeated at regular intervals. The key steps in a risk acceptance and risk transfer framework include the following:
At this point, all stakeholders should approve and sign off on the decisions and outcomes. This is often the single most difficult part of the process as some stakeholders (finance and compliance, for example) will be more accustomed to taking responsibility for how risks are going to be managed than other stakeholders might be. Even so, the process is only effective if the organization chooses to own the risk – even those they have elected to transfer.
Implementing a risk acceptance and risk transfer framework is easier said than done. Understandably, it is not always painless to be vocal about what could go wrong with systems that are within your control. At the same time, you may not have exposure to issues that are within someone else’s purview. It is a process that involves a lot of stakeholders and requires extensive collaboration.
For many organizations, it makes sense to bring a third party into the process to control the element of bias and provide an independent, objective sensibility to the effort. For those that choose to take matters into their own hands, the key is to define an accepted, objective and replicable process to ensure all risks are carefully understood and evaluated.
In the end, the payoff is a clear view of the risk exposure, associated costs (financial, compliance, operational, and reputational) and appropriate strategies to handle the risks. While the process itself will take some effort, it will also provide answers to many of the ‘what if’ questions that keep leaders up at night.
For more information on this topic, or to learn how Baker Tilly specialists can help, contact our team.