With the publication of the Ponemon Institute’s 2016 Cost of Data Breach study, sponsored by IBM, security leaders at large and small companies can arm themselves with the latest evidence that cost is a significant factor in nearly any security investment decision. Complete with a global analysis and 12 country reports, the studies illuminate some interesting findings and implications that are worth a closer look — and may spur a serious cost conversation in the C-suite.

Take Advantage of a Leading Data Breach Analysis

While any decision or analysis on the cost of a data breach can be highly subjective, the Ponemon methodology and approach is among the best and most reviewed reports every year. It is widely used as a cost estimator for annual cybersecurity assessments and evaluations at many organizations.

This year’s study includes many key talking points for a C-suite conversation: What does the overall threat landscape look like? What is the total overall cost? What about cost per record, by industry, by country, year over year or by threat vector?

Also interesting are the top factors that were found to reduce or mitigate the high costs of a breach. These include measures such as having incident response capabilities, using data security strategies like encryption, adopting threat sharing and even having a CISO in place. You should also take a look at the key megatrends based on a decade of Ponemon study results. These takeaways offer some predictions for how important cost trends will be shaking out.

It’s Time for the Cost Conversation

As a security leader or CISO, the Ponemon report helps you have a fact-based conversation about security with your C-suite or board. This is critical for their understanding of how much a data breach will cost an organization, where to consider investing and how much you might save if you implemented a security best practice.

Whether it leads you to enacting incident response services, optimizing a security operations center (SOC), encrypting critical data, advancing threat protection and security intelligence or assessing your overall strategy and approach, the Cost of Data Breach report — and the resulting cost conversation you have with your C-suite — can make a major difference in your bottom line should you ever encounter this security issue.

Download the Ponemon Institute 2016 Global Cost of a Data Breach Study

More from Data Protection

Defense in depth: Layering your security coverage

2 min read - The more valuable a possession, the more steps you take to protect it. A home, for example, is protected by the lock systems on doors and windows, but the valuable or sensitive items that a criminal might steal are stored with even more security — in a locked filing cabinet or a safe. This provides layers of protection for the things you really don’t want a thief to get their hands on. You tailor each item’s protection accordingly, depending on…

What is data security posture management?

3 min read - Do you know where all your organization’s data resides across your hybrid cloud environment? Is it appropriately protected? How sure are you? 30%? 50%? It may not be enough. The Cost of a Data Breach Report 2023 revealed that 82% of breaches involved data in the cloud, and 39% of breached data was stored across multiple types of environments. If you have any doubt, your enterprise should consider acquiring a data security posture management (DSPM) solution. With the global average…

Cost of a data breach: The evolving role of law enforcement

4 min read - If someone broke into your company’s office to steal your valuable assets, your first step would be to contact law enforcement. But would your reaction be the same if someone broke into your company’s network and accessed your most valuable assets through a data breach? A decade ago, when smartphones were still relatively new and most people were still coming to understand the value of data both corporate-wide and personally, there was little incentive to report cyber crime. It was…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today