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Home - Articles - An Information Security Survival Guide: Five Strategies For Creating A Culture Of Security
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An Information Security Survival Guide: Five Strategies For Creating A Culture Of Security

ISBuzz TeamBy ISBuzz TeamOctober 11, 2016Updated:July 4, 20245 Mins Read
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Information security is viewed in some organizations as a function owned by a few individuals or one department. However, it is important to create a corporate culture that views information security as a shared responsibility among all employees.

When data protection is prioritized and done well, it provides more disciplined operations, increased customer and stakeholder trust, and minimized risk.

One of the best ways to reduce risk is to implement regular and comprehensive training programs for all employees.

According to recent research, U.S. companies are not prioritizing employee training in their fight against fraud and data breaches[1]. Seventy-eight percent of U.S. Small Business Owners and half (51 percent) of C-Suite report that they only conduct employee training on their company’s information security procedures once a year or less. Furthermore, 28 percent of U.S. Small Business Owners report they have never trained employees on how to comply with legal requirements or company information security procedures and 22 percent only conduct training on an ad-hoc basis[2].

Experts suggest that employees may forget 50 percent of training information within one hour of a presentation, 70 percent within 24 hours and an average of 90 percent within a week[3]. When you consider this, it is clear that training once a year or on an ad-hoc basis is insufficient to ensure valuable customer, employee and business data is being protected.

These results demonstrate the importance of proper training repeated throughout the year so employees have the knowledge and skills to protect organizations from serious risks such as theft, fraud, data loss and reputational damage.

While regular training mitigates the risk of data breaches caused by human error or lack of knowledge of security practices, it also serves as an important reminder to employees to follow company policies.  When organizations provide infrequent training for employees, it may give the impression that management is not committed to a culture of information security and employees may not take information security policies and procedures seriously.

Businesses must help their teams become more aware of the risks associated with mishandling confidential information. The following measures can help ensure employees have a solid understanding of company information security policies, procedures and best practices.

  1. 1.Commit to a Culture of Information Security: When management demonstrates a commitment to information security, employees are more likely to follow suit. If managers behave in a way that undermines security policies and procedures, employees won’t take them seriously either. Consider asking employees to take a pledge to make their workplace a more secure environment. Display the pledge in various locations throughout the office. To encourage participation from all areas of the business, consider appointing employees from a range of departments to participate on a committee focused on improving information security practices.
  2. Repetition and Frequency is Key: Repetition and frequency are the keys to a successful training program that builds knowledge and capacity on the right way to safely manage, store, and destroy physical paper and digital data. Training should occur throughout the year and include various modules on organizational information security policies. Consider a “multichannel” approach utilizing a mix of in-person and digitally-delivered video training content to ensure employees are aware of how to handle and dispose of confidential information.
  3. Out of Sight, Out of Mind:Place visual cues throughout the office to remind employees of their responsibilities in protecting confidential information. Reminder posters, such as this series of office security posters from Shred-it that targets common workplace errors and areas that increase the risk of a data breach.
  1. Go where your Employees are:A growing number of employees are now working outside of the traditional office environment. Ensure training addresses the safe destruction of confidential information for both office and remote workers. Also leverage internal newsletters, intranet news feeds, employee and corporate social media accounts to provide constant reminders about different aspects of information security that employees can access regardless of their location. Keep the information short to make it more digestible.
  1. Embed it: Make security best practices a seamless part of daily tasks. Implement a Shred-it allPolicy, which requires all documents to be destroyed once no longer needed and a Clean Desk policy which encourages employees to clear their desks and lock documents and small digital storage devices in a filing cabinet or storage unit when they leave their workstation at the end of each day or for extended periods of time. When these policies become common practice, there is little decision left to employees on what should and shouldn’t be destroyed. In addition, all shredded paper is recycled, adding an environmental benefit to a security solution for businesses.

All businesses should increase the priority of employee training to protect workplace information security. When all employees understand how to manage and identify privacy risks, business leaders are in a better position to protect their customers, their reputation and their people.

[1] Shred-it 2016 Security Tracker U.S Information Security Survey

[1] Shred-it 2016 Security Tracker U.S Information Security Survey

[1] http://www.learningsolutionsmag.com/articles/1379/brain-science-the-forgetting-curvethe-dirty-secret-of-corporate-training

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The opinions expressed in this post belong to the individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Information Security Buzz.

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