Understanding cyber risk from the enterprise level on down

Here’s how you and your clients can become more 'cyber' smart.

Appropriate attention to both understanding and mitigating cyber risk is valuable at the enterprise level because it increases the entire organization’s readiness to deal with the risk at all levels. (National Underwriter P&C magazine)

It’s impossible to escape the barrage of news about cyber attacks. At the enterprise level, we also observe varying degrees of insight into how to understand and manage it.

Boards of directors are turning attention from understanding the risk to understanding management’s readiness to deal with the risk. That translates into questions such as, “Do we understand the risk well enough to prevent, mitigate and recover from a large-scale cyber event?”

Common sense risk analysis

Risk analysis starts with awareness of the risks an organization faces. The better an organization understands the risks it’s dealing with, the more robust its risk analysis and risk-based decision making will be.

Some common suggestions for improving risk awareness include the following:

  1. Harvest the risk information you already have. Whether it’s through formal risk assessment activities already underway, through your enterprise risk management program, or through review of insightful information within business units.
  2. Address gaps in risk information and insight. Find ways to engage in risk conversations with colleagues who “see” and understand the risk; follow up with stakeholders who either influence or pay for the results of a risk event.
  3. Get help from external advisors. This is especially true  for a dynamic risk like cyber, where both the profile of the risk and the range of potential risk mitigation options continues to evolve.

Qualitative, quantitative assessment

Risk analysis should incorporate both qualitative and quantitative assessment of risk by applying appropriate tools in each situation. In the cyber risk space, analysis should incorporate technical assessment of the organization’s existing cyber security posture, thereby identifying major gaps and areas for improvement.

By applying risk science to the age-old questions of “how likely” and “how big” enterprise risk managers gain further insight into the organization’s areas of vulnerability. And while risk quantification is often seen as the “Holy Grail” of risk assessment, it’s important to consider qualitative aspects:

The outcome of risk analysis should include a keener understanding of the organization’s risk resilience — how ready are we to prevent, uncover, mitigate and recover from a cyber risk event?

Enterprise-level understanding

Although insurance plays a critical role in protecting an organization’s balance sheet from a cyber event, appropriate attention to both understanding and mitigating cyber risk is valuable at the enterprise level because it increases the entire organization’s readiness to deal with the risk at all levels. As with any other risk, the time and effort spent to analyze vulnerabilities and prioritize resources helps organizations maximize the value of their risk management investment. And as an added benefit, this work will help the insurance buyer determine appropriate limits, retentions and coverage options, and it will enhance the insurance broker’s ability to get the job done in the market.

Common sense risk mitigation

The process of understanding areas of cyber-related vulnerability across the enterprise, determining the best risk mitigation options, and executing the risk mitigation plan is the same for cyber risk as for any other risk. Benchmarking “best practices” in cyber mitigation, getting external advice and clean sheet exercises can help. The following are some areas for additional consideration:

By building capability in cyber risk analysis, mitigation planning and execution, and risk monitoring you will help improve resiliency for today while enabling your organization for future success.

Laurie Champion is managing director and strategic account manager for Aon Risk Solutions. She can be reached at laurie.champion@Aon.com.

The opinions expressed here are the writer’s own.

See also:

15 states most at risk from cybercrime in 2018

Cut through the confusion: 5 steps to the right cyber insurance coverage

6 ways cybersecurity changed in 2017