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Small businesses are low-hanging fruit
While the headlines focus on major security breaches at major companies, small and medium sized businesses are actually the more common victims of cyber attacks. In fact, the Federation for Small Businesses (FSB) estimates that small firms are being hit with upwards of 10,000 attacks daily. Even though the rewards may be less, cybercriminals see smaller organizations as low-hanging fruit because – due lack of education and resources – they usually invest less in IT security and don’t often train their staff on cybersecurity risks. -
Small businesses are more vulnerable to social engineering
Social engineering is an act of manipulating people into doing things like share confidential information or wire money. Small businesses tend to be more exposed to this risk for a number of reasons: they have less basic security in place, like two-factor authentication; they don’t often know the risk or train employees; they usually work with a variety of third-party partners to run their business which is the root cause of 41% of data breaches, and they almost always makes and receive payments using wire transfers. -
Small businesses often feel they must pay ransoms
Faced with choosing between paying a ransomware demand that may get them back online faster or enduring a long period of potentially business-crippling downtime, small businesses often feel that they have no choice but to pay these demands in the event of an attack. Without anyone to turn to for help, this is particularly true of those without access to the cyber incident specialists that cyber insurance can provide.
Faced with choosing between paying a ransomware demand that may get them back online faster or enduring a long period of potentially business-crippling downtime, small businesses often feel that they have no choice but to pay these demands.
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Small businesses are the ‘gateway’ to larger organizations
Many SMEs are connected electronically to the IT systems of a range of larger, partner organizations. So when cybercriminals are looking to infiltrate these larger and more cyber secure organizations, they are increasingly targeting their humble downstream suppliers to see if these small businesses offer a less-secure way in. What’s more, many of these IT relationships are visible through publicly available data. -
Small businesses are sometimes not targeted at all, but simply collateral damage
From the WannaCry attack of 2017 to the Blackbaud attack more recently (where over 125 UK organizations have already reported to the ICO that they’ve had a potential data breach), SMEs are often collateral damage in large-scale cyberattacks that have nothing to do with them. Small businesses might think they are safe because they outsource their IT and their data is stored in the cloud, but if a cyber attack is launched against one of these technology providers, it’s the businesses that rely on it that are often left footing the bill, whether paying for the business interruption costs involved, privacy notifications to customers, or reputational harm.
This article originated from a webinar series - if you'd like to listen to the original recording for your country, you can find them here.
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