Conventional wisdom says businesses must balance the cost of security with user experience – implying that security is a tax on digital interactions. And to achieve optimal performance, security must be kept lean.
According to Foundry, the need for improvements in cybersecurity was cited as the number one reason for the increase in tech budgets this year. Further, CEOs’ top priorities for IT in 2023 are:
- Strengthen IT and business collaboration
- Upgrade IT and data security to reduce corporate risk
- Improve the customer experience
The Security Paradox
To understand the “tradeoff” mentality, let’s review the ‘security paradox’. Cyberattacks are increasing exponentially every year. According to NETSCOUT, one DDoS attack occurs every three seconds, and MITRE has reported more than 25,000 new CVEs (common vulnerabilities and exposures) in 2022, which is a 24% increase year-over-year from 2021. For most organizations, it’s not if a cyberattack is going to occur, but when. As the latest attacks and statistics make headlines, leaders often tend to overcompensate by implementing chains of security solutions, often layering on top of each other in a disjointed fashion to protect against new exploits and prevent service interruption in case of an attack. A chain is no stronger than its weakest link. These disjointed solutions can add latency and performance bottlenecks between security layers and create single points of failure, which impact the speed and availability of businesses online. Therein lies the security paradox: an organization could inadvertently harm itself while attempting to secure its network and applications.The Cost of a Data Breach
Beyond the implicit cost of security, what is the actual cost of a data breach when one strikes an organization? Reaching an all-time high last year, IBM’s annual Data Breach Report revealed that the average data breach cost in 2022 was USD 4.35 million. Average! Gartner has estimated the cost of downtime from DDoS attacks to be $300,000 per hour. What these numbers don’t include is the potential damage to a brand’s reputation and to its customers. CIO Insight reported that 31% of consumers stopped doing business with a company due to a security breach; a significant number of these said they had lost trust in the brand. And certainly, poor performance leads to higher bounce rates and lower conversion rates. With layers of piecemeal security solutions increasing operational complexity and reducing application performance, coupled with the increased frequency of cyberattacks, it’s no wonder these factors lead to negative impacts on customer experience and their ability to quickly and safely interact with businesses online. The good news is that a holistic approach to approach security can detect and mitigate attacks quickly before they hit the bottom line. With the right unified security solutions, performance and customer experience can improve, too.Debunking Conventional Wisdom
As already stated, businesses can indeed increase security while improving performance, operational efficiency, and customer experience. But, how can this be achieved without tradeoffs? By adopting holistic edge-enabled security solutions built on an extensive, globally distributed platform, businesses can address the latest cybersecurity threats and achieve comprehensive protection across networks and applications without a single point of failure or performance bottleneck. The benefits of an edge-enabled holistic security solution are- Massive scale and resiliency to ensure uptime
- Intelligent rules execution for faster threat detection
- Integration with edge logic and CI/CD workflows to improve operations
- Attacks mitigated at the source to improve performance and user experience.