Site icon Information Security Buzz

Will Your Home-Workers be the Cause of Your Company’s Next Data Breach?

data breaches

Every day, across the UK around 1.5 million professionals work from home; more productive, happier in their role and measurably less stressed, perhaps. At the same time, however, they may be increasing the risk to your sensitive business data. Since the Government has recently given all employees the right to request flexible working, the number of home-workers, and the associated information risk, looks set to increase – just when the stricter EU General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) are set to come into force.

If employers get it wrong, it’s going to hurt, and the pain could be worse than ever. The GDPR will likely have the power to impose fines of up to four per cent of a company’s global turnover in the case of significant data breaches. Fines of this magnitude will dwarf the £100,000 fine imposed on a local council by the ICO for a data breach recently caused by a home-worker.

Moreover, with the GDPR’s new requirement that all organisations publically acknowledge any data breaches, reputational damage is another likely and potentially damaging consequence of lapses in information security by home-workers.

What can employers do to protect employees and their organisation’s information?

Organisations that have put a secure information management process in place that encompasses home and remote working, and have educated employees who work from home accordingly, will be able to prove that they have taken all necessary action to mitigate the risks to their information.  This will not just count in their favour should the worst happen – it will also help to protect knowledge of competitive value, such as IP and customer data.

Here at Iron Mountain, we conducted our own research[1] to understand the scale of the issue. Less than one fifth of European office workers we spoke to claim to know what information may or may not be removed from the office, or what the company’s formal home-working policy is. Worryingly, half of those surveyed use personal email accounts to send or receive work documents.  Others speak of a lack of a secure company intranet, or having to use their own IT equipment – suggesting that data vulnerability isn’t always down to employee carelessness. Many employers are failing to provide staff with the support and guidance they need to take care of company information while away from the workplace.

It remains clear that once out of the office, information management best practices tend to be forgotten. This may mean that they haven’t be properly instilled within the office environment either. The key is to normalise responsible information management as part of the organisation’s culture, so that employees treat data with care, wherever they are and whatever they’re doing.

With a clearly structured, relevant and user-friendly information management strategy, it is possible for businesses to reduce the information risks introduced by flexible and home-working, while maintaining the benefits. Here are my tips on how to implement and action a plan for successful information security:

Organisations need to understand that information management and information security starts and ends with them, not their employees. When allowing employees, the opportunity to work remotely, businesses need to implement an agile information management policy that can be adopted and adhered to by the entire organisation. Ultimately, education and responsibility are key to preventing a potentially devastating data breach.[su_box title=”About Iron Mountain” style=”noise” box_color=”#336588″][short_info id=”60461″ desc=”true” all=”false”][/su_box]

[1] Research by Opinion Matters for Iron Mountain.  The survey was carried out between 15/04/2013 and 01/05/2013.  Sample: 5021 employed adults in the UK, France, Spain Germany and the Netherlands.

About the Author

Exit mobile version