With criminals devising more sophisticated methods of breaching company networks, a cyber security playbook has become an essential tool in ensuring that every person in your organisation—from interns to top officers—understands what to do in the event of a breach. A good playbook should outline the steps a team must take before, during, and after a cyber breach to protect company assets. Think of it as a standardised checklist that team members are to follow depending on the kind of incident that occurs.
Building cyber-defences like a playbook is critical because the increasing rampancy of cyber attacks has made the possibility of one a question of “when” and not “if.” And its consequences are hefty.
IBM reports that in 2023, the average financial cost of a data breach is USD 4.45 million—15% more than what it cost the previous three years.1 Despite their drastic effects, however, 40% of chief security officers believe their organisations are ill-equipped for rapidly evolving cyber security risks.2
A strong cyber security response begins with understanding the threats your business faces. A cyber security playbook should detail those your organisation will most likely face. Here are a few common security breaches encountered by enterprises:
1. Phishing
Technology has provided hackers with better tools to develop attacks against organisations, but the leading cause for cyber security issues remains surprisingly simple: employee mistakes. Human error accounts for 88% of cyber breaches today.3
Phishing takes advantage of this reality with emails, chats, and websites that seem legitimate at a glance, but serve to swipe private information from victims. Enterprises must also be watchful of a targeted form of phishing called spear phishing, which focuses on stealing information from specific individuals through concentrated efforts.
2. Malware
Malware is a malicious code or program that attacks or damages data, networks, and devices.
Ransomware in particular is a growing concern as, despite expectations of such crimes to dwindle, big game hunters have already earned USD 449.1 million through June of this year.4 Singapore is similarly facing an alarming increase in ransomware crimes, causing the government to deploy an inter-agency task force to curb its steep rise.5
3. Distributed denial of services (DDoS)
A DDoS attack disrupts a system by bombarding an IP address with requests until a server crashes. Hackers accomplish this using botnets, or a network of devices controlled via malware.