New Delhi, Feb 6: Over one-third of organisations globally that experienced a cyber attack in 2016 registered a revenue loss of more than 20 percent, a new report has revealed.
Operations and finance systems were the most affected, followed by brand reputation and customer retention, the report said.
Twenty-two percent of breached organisations lost customers, 29 percent lost revenue and 23 percent lost business opportunities.
"In 2017, cyber is business and business is cyber -- that requires a different conversation and very different outcomes. Relentless improvement is required and that should be measured through efficacy, cost and well managed risk," said John N. Stewart, Senior Vice President Cisco.
The report is based on a survey spanning over 13 countries and including 3,000 chief security officers (CSOs).
Cyber attacks in 2016 became more "corporate" with digitisation creating more opportunities for cyber criminals.
Seventy-five percent of the organisations investigated were infected by old-fashioned adware software that downloads advertising without user permission.
"One of our key metrics is the `time to detection`. Cisco brought that number down to as low as six hours. A new metric -- the `time to evolve` -- looked at how quickly threat actors changed their attacks to mask their identity," said David Ulevitch, Vice President (Security Business) Cisco.
The study suggested that security should be made a business priority and executive leadership must own and evangelise security and fund it as a priority.
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