Chief information security officers were urged to take a more strategic
approach to guarding corporate networks at a gathering of security leaders in
Amsterdam this week. The current obsession with tactical issues raised costs and
impeded business efficiency, they were warned.
Speaking at the start of its
Security
Forum EMEA in Amsterdam,
Forrester Research principal
analyst Jonathan Penn argued that CISOs need to create efficiencies through
strategies like outsourcing, and then invest in tools to measure and report on
these efficiencies in a way their chief executives can understand.
"CISOs are asking themselves 'how can I meet the challenges if I don't have
the budget or skills in my team that I need?'," he said. "They should be looking
at things that aren't too complex but can make a difference."
"CISOs' lack of influence comes from having to respond to every single
security issue and not focus on projects which can help them gain influence,"
he added. "So they need to work more with business groups by setting up things
like security steering committees to get buy-in for projects."
Quick-win projects may include ensuring application bugs are fixed during the
development phase, a greater focus on staff training, and introducing a
proactive scanning and patching system for system vulnerabilities, he added.
IT security chiefs are rarely afforded much time to flesh out business cases,
so it is imperative they can convey their priorities succinctly, argued Andrew
Strong, global security director of
Unilever. Getting business backing for
security initiatives required him to design processes which were "lightweight,
understood and business-relevant".
He estimated that he is given "half an hour" to explain security priorities t
o other executives. Unless he can do that, he "won't get into their diary," he
said.
Strong added that executive sponsorship is vital for transformational risk
management initiatives, but that establishing dialogue with key sponsors can be
a long process. "You need to determine their risk appetite, but it takes some
time – new personalities can come in, people change and priorities change with
that," he said.
He also advised firms to create a decision-making framework to ensure all
stakeholders are working to the same consistent definitions of risk. This can
enable the business to manage risk themselves and only use the security
department "as a trusted advisor in an exception", Strong added.
The ability to define security policies in terms of risk was gaining
acceptance with the financial services sector, reported Jan Douw, a director in
risk and security at banking giant ING. Colleagues are practised at assessing
risks, and find it easier to assess the business impact of IT security when it
is expressed in terms of risk, he added: "The better it is understood and
managed the more growth can be achieved."
But there can be dangers when explaining IT risks to business colleagues, he
warned. "As risk managers we need to try and find a way to interest and work
with business managers," he explained. "But never accept responsibility for
risk, that is the line manager's responsibility."
Douw added that security risk managers should follow existing processes -
such as the Basel II Advanced Measurement Approaches (AMA) for operational risk
- when they engage with the business, rather than inventing new risk management
processes
In an opening keynote at the forum, Forrester analyst Thomas Raschke argued
that although CISOs are beginning to appreciate the importance of risk
management initiatives, many still ignore "the risk elements that are not
obvious". He added that technology should only form a very small part of the
overall security strategy.
"You need to understand business risk and tolerance, translate risk decisions
into risk policies, codify those policies into processes, then support the
processes with technology and people," he explained. "Technology should not take
up most of your time; it's just a small layer between the processes and people.
"
Forrester's Penn added that firms must include corporate as well as customer
data in their data security programmes, as many firms underestimate the cost of
intellectual property breaches.
"When you lose corporate data it won't get in the headlines but could be just
as damaging and the controls you put in place should be the same," he explained.
"There are a lot of compliance requirements looking at data protection and
having a compliance framework to rationalise controls is important otherwise
people spend recklessly on piecemeal solutions."
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