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The Global State of Information Security Survey 2016: Have your say

The Global State of Information Security Survey 2016: Have your say

New Zealand business executives have until 12 June to participate in this global research by CIO, CSO and PwC.

The
2016 Global State of Information Security Survey is now open until 12 June

The annual report aims to understand how executives and industry leaders view current and future challenges facing the information security industry. It is produced byCIO, CSO and PwC.

New Zealand CIOs, CISOs and members of the executive suite can share their insights through this link.

Responses to the survey are completely confidential; respondents and their organisations will not be identified. All responses will be generalised across survey parameters such as company size, industry, and gross revenues.

Last year, more than 9,700 security, IT, and business executives across the globe – including 85 from New Zealand – participated.

Read more: SAS Global Forum 2015: Bringing cyberanalytics to the frontline

The 2015 report notes New Zealand organisations lead in awareness of cybersecurity risks, and bringing these to the attention of the board.

But they need to scale up on key areas to keep constantly evolving cybersecurity threats at bay.

Across the globe, 51 per cent of respondents have an employee awareness security program but only about 37.5 per cent in New Zealand.

An area where New Zealand trails is implementing a mobile security strategy. Just over a quarter (28 per cent) of New Zealand respondents say they have implemented one, compared to 54 per cent globally.

Read more: The top cyber risks for NZ in an interconnected world

Local organisations are also lagging behind in using big data analytics to measure the risk and impact related to information security. For instance, 55 per cent of global respondents – compared to 40 per cent in New Zealand – reported increased use of data analytics for this purpose.

On the bright side, the 2015 report points out that attention on cybersecurity has catapulted all the way to the top echelons of the organisation.

“It is no longer an issue that concerns only information technology and security professionals; the impact has extended to the c-suite and boardroom,” reads the report. “It is incumbent upon the executive team to take ownership of cyber risk and ensure the board understands how the organisation will defend against and respond to cyber risks”.

Send news tips and comments to divina_paredes@idg.co.nz

Read more: Speed of technological change is top worry of New Zealand CEOs: PwC

Follow Divina Paredes on Twitter: @divinap

Follow CIO New Zealand on Twitter:@cio_nz

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