Securing the ‘new normal’ – survey shows organizations’ security priorities as they emerge from Covid-19 lockdown

Check Point survey shows 75% of IT and security professionals fear a further increase in cyber-attacks and exploits as they start to re-open offices, while also maintaining mass remote working.

Check Point Software Technologies Ltd., a leading provider of cybersecurity solutions globally, has today released the findings of a new survey showing how organizations managed their cyber-security during the lockdowns forced by the Covid-19 pandemic, and also listing their security priorities and concerns over the coming months as they move to the ‘new normal.’

Over 86% of respondents said their biggest IT challenge during the pandemic was moving to mass remote working, and their biggest security concern was maintaining VPN capacity for staff. 

Key findings from the survey of over 270 IT and security professionals globally are:

  • Top security concerns at the start of Covid-19 lockdowns: 62% of respondents said their main concern during initial lockdowns was maintaining secure remote access and VPN capacity for staff, followed by preventing social engineering attacks (47%), and securing staff endpoints and home networks (52%).
  • The ‘new normal’ begins as offices start to re-open: 75% of respondents said their offices were open again for limited numbers of employees as lockdowns lift.  But on average, staff are still working 4 days out of 5 at home – meaning remote-working vulnerabilities and threats will persist for a long time.
  • The remote-working security gap: While 65% of respondents said their company blocks unmanaged PCs from corporate VPNs, just 29% deploy endpoint security on employees’ home PCs, and only 35% run compliance checks. 42% say their company invests in cyber-security training. This highlights how exposed organizations are to fast-moving, 5th generation cyber-attacks that target remote workers.
  • The security priorities for the ‘new normal’ over the coming months: 79% of respondents said their main priority is tightening security and preventing attacks as employees continue to work flexibly from home.  43% stated they plan to implement mobile security solutions, and 39% plan to consolidate their security estates to help eliminate ‘blind spots’ across their enlarged network perimeters.
  • Companies’ leading cyber-security concerns for the next 12 months: Over 75% of respondents said their biggest concern was an increase in cyber-attacks, especially phishing and social engineering exploits. 51% said that attacks on unmanaged home endpoints was a concern, followed by attacks against employee mobile devices (33%).

“Organizations had to restructure their network and security fabrics almost overnight to respond to the Covid-19 pandemic, and doing this inevitably meant that security gaps opened up, increasing their attack surface and creating new opportunities for criminals,” said Moti Sagey, Chief Evangelist at Check Point Software Technologies.  “Now that we are moving towards a ‘new normal’ way of working as lockdowns lift globally, organizations need to close off those security gaps and secure their networks, from employees’ home PCs and mobiles to the enterprise data center, with a holistic, end-to-end security architecture.  The Covid-19 pandemic may be fading, but the cyber-crime pandemic it triggered is here to stay. However, with the right approach to security, we can prevent attacks from causing widespread damage and disruption.”

In April, a survey by Check Point showed that organizations were being hit by a ‘perfect storm’ of increased cyber-attacks while having to manage the massive and rapid changes to their networks and employee working practices during the pandemic.  71% of respondents reported an increase in cyber-attacks during February and March 2020, and 95% said they faced added IT security challenges with the provision of large-scale remote access for employees, as well as managing shadow IT usage.

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