Gartner Survey Shows Accelerating Privacy Regulation Returns as the Top Emerging Risk Worrying Organizations in 1Q19
“With the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) now in effect, executives realize that complying with privacy regulations is more complex and costly than first anticipated,” said Matt Shinkman, managing vice president and risk practice leader at Gartner. “More budget dollars from IT, legal and information security are going to address GDPR compliance, just as the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is set to take effect, adding another layer of complexity for companies to navigate in this area.”
Rank | Q2 2018 | Q3 2018 | Q4 2018 | Q1 2019 |
1 | Cloud Computing | Accelerating Privacy Regulation | Talent Shortage | Accelerating Privacy Regulation |
2 | Cybersecurity Disclosure | Cloud Computing | Accelerating Privacy Regulation | Pace of Change |
3 | General Data Protection Regulation | Talent Shortage | Pace of Change | Talent Shortage |
4 | AI/Robotics Skill Gap | Cybersecurity Disclosure | Lagging Digitization | Lagging Digitization |
5 | Global Economic Slowdown | AI/Robotics Skill Gap | Digitization Misconceptions | Digitization Misconceptions |
The CCPA is one of several new global privacy regulations modeled after Europe’s GDPR law, which has been in effect since 2018. An increasingly fragmented data privacy regulatory landscape, with new privacy laws also recently enacted in Australia and Japan, have complicated the path to full privacy compliance for many organizations.
“We are now seeing an evolution from GDPR-specific concerns, which have been on executives’ minds for the past couple of years, to a broader recognition that their organizations need to overhaul their entire data security governance strategies,” said Shinkman. “GDPR compliance is really just the starting gun in this process, and not the finish line.”
Data Shows Magnitude of Privacy Concerns
In addition to being rated the top risk this quarter, accelerating privacy regulation was also rated as a risk with “very rapid velocity,” meaning that the risk would have high organizational impact if it were to materialize. This may hint at a wariness among executives of the potentially large fines and reputational damage associated with violations of GDPR and similar legislation. Accelerating privacy regulation was also rated as the highest-probability risk of any of the top 10 in this quarter’s report, demonstrating that executives view it as a concrete threat to their organizations.
A number of other emerging risks cited in the survey may also be contributing to executive unease around accelerating privacy regulation. “Pace of change” was the second overall risk most concerning to executives surveyed. It was also rated as one with “very rapid velocity,” indicating executives are unnerved by their companies’ inability to avoid disruption and mitigate risk factors. Concerns about lagging or misconceived digitization were both among the top five risks, while outdated policies and procedures were flagged as a top 10 risk.
Last quarter’s top risk, talent shortages, ranked third overall this quarter. This may complicate and add expense to staffing efforts around the technical challenges inherent to complying with the new regulations, such as the hiring of data protection officers.
For executives concerned about complying with emerging data privacy regulations, Gartner has produced a series of recommendations for GDPR for the many functions affected, including strategies on developing a data security governance strategy and guidelines for the appointment of a chief data privacy officer.