With an unprecedented number of employees now working in hybrid or fully remote environments, combined with an increase in cyber threats and a more overwhelmed, COVID-19 information fatigued workforce, there has never been a more critical time to effectively create and maintain a cyber-secure workforce and an engaged security culture.
“People have become the primary attack vector for cyber-attackers around the world,” said Lance Spitzner, SANS Security Awareness Director and co-author of the report. “Humans rather than technology represent the greatest risk to organizations and the professionals who oversee security awareness programs are the key to effectively managing that risk.”
SANS Security Awareness, the global provider of security awareness training, has released its seventh annual SANS Security Awareness Report after analyzing the data of over 1,000 security awareness professionals worldwide. The 2022 report establishes updated global benchmarks for how organizations manage human risk and provides actionable steps to improve with key metrics from the Security Awareness Maturity Model Indicators Matrix to track progress.
“Awareness programs enable security teams to effectively manage their human risk by changing how people think about cybersecurity and help them exhibit secure behaviors, from the Board of Directors on down,” said Spitzner. “This report enables security awareness professionals to make data-driven decisions on how to best secure their workforce and speak to leadership about risk in a compelling way that demonstrates value and support for their strategic priorities.”
Key Findings:
“The most mature security awareness programs not only change their workforce’s behavior and culture but also measure and demonstrate their value to leadership via a metrics framework,” continued Spitzner. “Organizations can no longer justify an annual training to check the compliance box, and it remains critical for organizations to dedicate enough personnel, resources, and tools to manage their human risk effectively.”