When it comes to your business, the value generated for every dollar spent is critical to the success of your organization. When considering how to achieve maximum value from hiring outside expertise, allocating your budget to technology is an investment that supports operational efficiency while cutting costs.
No matter the field or industry, your business depends on technology. This need will only increase as more of your operational processes become digitally transformed. Whether you are seeking to ensure business continuity in the face of disaster, enable remote work, or protect company data, the value of your technology investments has the potential to significantly outweigh the costs.
C-level roles like CFO are always concerned about the numbers associated with investing in anything and the prospect of evaluating information technology services providers can be slightly intimidating. But regardless of your role, you don’t have to be a technology expert to do it well. An experienced IT services provider will be able to give you the confidence and visibility you need to make smart business decisions.
This guide provides the best practices for investing in cybersecurity controls for their business and how to best evaluate its service providers. Read on to learn more!
Cybersecurity protection is not about preventing the single one-time attack—that’s short-sighted. While you are not expected to know how to prevent or solve them, as a financial leader, it’s important that you’re aware of these types of attacks, along with the financial impact they can have on your business. According to Hiscox, a cyberattack costs a business an average of $369,000. With 61% of firms reporting an attack in the past year, it’s not a matter of if your business will suffer an attack, but of when, and how much it will cost your business.
The more common entry points continue to be the most susceptible for businesses today:
Although cybersecurity incidents of larger, well-known businesses continue to dominate news headlines, the threat exists as a harsh reality for organizations of all sizes. With the increase in ransomware attacks this year, businesses can’t afford to pull back on cybersecurity spending.
It's imperative that you look for an IT service provider that embed cybersecurity protection into every product or service offered and will be a true IT partner, not a just a software reseller.
Many service providers are only in the business of reselling vendors’ products, unconcerned with how those products are delivered or supported. This means that once you purchase a product, you are on your own. Adopting new technology without support can lead to lost productivity and prevents you from fully optimizing your investment.
As a business leader, seek out an IT services provider that offers free consulting, during which they will make the effort to learn your specific external requirements whether legal, contractual, or regulatory, your business objectives, internal workflows, and current cybersecurity posture. The provider will then craft a unique solution that addresses your immediate and long-term needs. With a cybersecurity assessment that outlines where you are now and a technical roadmap showing what you should focus on next, you will be in complete control to unload specific areas of concern to your provider as you see fit.
Your business may have unique security needs to consider. For example, a government municipality that must adhere to compliance regulations will have completely different needs than a business with multiple office locations and remote employees. When evaluating IT service providers, it’s important to determine if they offer enterprise-grade security features that are tailored to your current and future business needs.
According to Small Business Information Security: The Fundamentals a "service provider should work with you to define and deliver a cybersecurity posture based on the recommendations and guidelines of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)." Expect your provider to determine the specific controls you need for your business—such as active threat hunting or cybersecurity monitoring—and then create a documented process to ensure those controls are implemented and executed as stated in the Service Level Agreement (SLA).
Like any technology investment, there is a wide range of cybersecurity solutions and services that all vary wildly in cost. Though some make more financial sense to manage in-house, others are more cost-effective to outsource to an IT service provider.
When comparing your options, consider the value of the solution that is being provided. In addition to establishing a consistent and reliable solution for protecting your data, your IT team can win back time to focus on other business-critical tasks.
The right provider will help you maximize the full potential of the products and services you purchase through training, provisioning, and support. As you assess providers, look for one that offers consolidated billing reports as part of their tailored solution—outlining all monthly and annual cybersecurity costs. This allows you to adequately plan for cybersecurity spending that will align with your business goals.
When considering IT service providers, there are qualifications and services you can request in writing so that you can make a value comparison, such as:
In addition, consider a provider that specializes in working with businesses of similar size and industry as your own. Select a provider that offers the people, processes, and technology you can count on to secure your business while being invested in your business goals and success.
Cybersecurity is on the most important aspects of any of your systems in place. Centre recommends making sure you have things like and Incident Response Plan (IRP), frequent scanning for risk, and cloud based Backup Disaster and Recovery (BDR) that will protect you in the long run. Contact us today to help make sure you're covered (we promise we're already vetted for you).