You Aren’t Too Small to Be a Cybersecurity Target

You Aren’t Too Small to Be a Cybersecurity Target

“I don’t need to worry about cyberattacks… my business is too small to be of any interest.”

This brief rationalization is one of the most dangerous fallacies a modern business can make concerning cybersecurity, and shows a fundamental misunderstanding of how modern cyberthreats operate. If this has been your mindset, we urge you to read on so we can help set you on a more realistic path.

Did You Know that Half of Small Businesses Experienced Some Form of Cyberattack in the Last Year?

While many may not want to admit it at full volume, these organizations and their hardships are quantifiable proof that small businesses are at risk of cybercrime and criminal activities… but why is this needed?

Simple: while small businesses once weren’t so often targeted as large companies were, a combination of these small businesses being just as reliant on IT and possessing equally valuable data can easily make them a sitting duck.

This combination makes it essential that businesses, regardless of their size, take the realities of modern cybercrime seriously.

A Lot of Cybercrime is Based on Scale

It may be tempting to view cybercrime similarly to more old-fashioned forms of theft. This is a mistake.

After all, in an old-fashioned holdup, the criminals responsible were limited in their scale. They generally could only target one business at a time, only able to steal from that one location and any poor saps unlucky enough to be present.

Nowadays, cybercriminals have no such restrictions. A single scam could potentially reach hundreds or even thousands of businesses, and since some will try to take what they see as the “easy” way out, a good portion of those impacted businesses will pay up.

Recently (as of this writing), strategic consultancy firm Dark Matter partnered with Dell Technologies and McAfee to produce a fictionalized but harshly realistic film called Butterfly: A True Cybercrime Story. We recommend you take the half-hour or so to watch it, as it is very well produced and does a pretty good job of depicting the impact that a cyberattack—in this case, ransomware—can have on just one business if that business isn’t totally prepared to deal with such an event.

As you watch it, I want you to keep something in mind:

This film depicts the experience of a relatively small business dealing with a cyberattack. In reality, dozens of organizations could have almost identical experiences simultaneously, depending on how effective the cybercriminal’s ruse was. So, as you watch the fictional JPX Construction struggle to deal with their situation, pay attention to all the wasted labor, the stress, and the funds that the situation forces upon them, and keep in mind that this is just what one business could feel. Today’s threats are designed to catch as many companies in their web (or, in keeping with the Butterly analogy, their net) as possible. In the world the filmmakers have created, JPX Construction is just the one example in focus, with dozens of others potentially experiencing the same thing or worse.

You Need to Do Everything You Can to Stay Out of the Statistics

Don’t get us wrong: today’s cyberattacks are more cunning and damaging than ever, but that doesn’t mean you’re helpless and can only hope you aren’t targeted. Many things can and should be done to prepare proactively for such an event, including the likes of:

  • Keeping secure and isolated backups of all your data in case you lose your original copies in an attack.
  • Making the critical investments proper cybersecurity requires to protect your business network, from servers to endpoints.
  • Training your team members to recognize and appropriately respond to suspected cyberattack attempts and risk factors.
  • Updating your technology and its protections so they are shielded from vulnerabilities, new and old.

We Can Help

While JPX Construction was depicted to have a very dedicated IT technician on staff, we know that isn’t the reality for many businesses nowadays… and those that do often have conflicting priorities their on-staff IT team is expected to honor. As a result, many companies, including some in New Hampshire, just don’t have the resources to support the team required to keep them productive and secure.

That’s where we come in. At White Mountain IT Services, we provide outsourced IT services and support designed to bring big business solutions to small and medium-sized organizations. Naturally, this includes a litany of cybersecurity services and protections. Find out how we can help keep your business safe by calling us at (603) 889-0800.

Related Posts

Three Best Practices to Avoid Getting Hacked

Data breaches can cripple companies and can come from a lot of different directions. They can be the result of phishing attacks where your staff unwittingly gives hackers access to your business’ resources. It can come from a brute force attack where hackers use innovative tools to break into your network. It can even be the work of disgruntled employees who use their access to steal company data....

Have You Ever Considered What a Ransomware Attack Would Do to Your Customers?

It can be too easy to look at ransomware as a business problem. After all, it attacks businesses, locking down their data for ransom, often selling it or spreading it, and sometimes altering it for the business if returning it at all. It can be too easy to overlook another impacted target in all the mess. What happens to the people whose data a business has collected and uses? The Impact of Ra...

Opportunities Only Matter if You Embrace Them

Businesses need a certain degree of good fortune to continue to grow in the manner in which they project when they hang out their shingle. With so many businesses failing after a very short time, taking advantage of the opportunities you’re given is extremely important. In this month’s newsletter, we’ll go through some of the things that a business can do to take better advantage of some opportuni...

How Outsourced IT Services Defy the Project Management Triangle

There is a concept known as the iron triangle that provides a simple framework for project management by outlining the balance between your costs, your available time, and the desired quality of your outcome. Traditionally, the iron triangle helps illustrate how these factors impact each other. Instead, we wanted to take advantage of the principles of the triangle to explore how beneficial it can...