Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

Lessons from Anthem: Make Every Employee Part of the Cyber Security Team Integrate prevention into your corporate culture.

By Eric Basu Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

By now, many of us in the cyber security world are combing through a litany of materials to analyze the causes, motives and methods of the Anthem data security breach that turned the health insurance conglomerate upside down and affected more than 80 million people.

Related: A Lack of Communication on Cyber Security Will Cost Your Business Big

There's a great deal of talk as to how such an instance could have occurred. Understandably, pundits are pointing to the fact that the consumer information in Anthem's database was not encrypted. Yet while data encryption is a key component of any comprehensive security plan, encryption wasn't the biggest issue in the Anthem case. In fact, it's only one tool in a chief information security officer's (CISO) arsenal to prevent such threats.

Incorporating defensive security measures

The more crucial defensive security measure, I believe, occurred in the way Anthem detected the breach, and in what that means for how organizations should leverage all resources to combat cyber threats: At Anthem, a nonsecurity employee made the discovery when he noticed that his database credentials were being used to run a query he had not originated. In retrospect, it's unclear how much longer the infiltration would have gone unnoticed had it not been for him.

Here's the point to take home. The average time for an organization to detect a breach is 209 days, but maintaining a work environment where everyone is conscious of security could significantly reduce that time and the overall losses. The National Security Agency (NSA) headquarters is a good example of a well-thought-out overall security posture (the Edward Snowden issue notwithstanding).

You can't walk more than 20 feet into the NSA's headquarters without a random worker stopping to ask where your badge is if one isn't visible. Seventy years ago, the famous World War II posters exclaiming "Loose Lips Sink Ships" were meant to enforce the idea that everyone must be concerned about operational security. That's still true today: The key is to create a corporate culture of detecting anomalies that might become real threats and to involve every employee, not just the IT department.

In other words, incorporate cyber security sensitivity into your overall corporate culture. Organizations such as the NSA, banks, etc. have, out of necessity, incorporated a sense of physical security into their corporate cultures, and today more organizations are feeling an increasing and pressing need to incorporate cyber security sensitivity into their cultures as well.

Related: 10 Questions to Ask When Creating a Cyber Security Plan for Your Business

Putting it more bluntly: Organizations are usually hacked from the inadvertent, nonmalicious, but nonetheless unsafe activities of its employees.

Four cyber-security scenarios to watch out for:

1. Employees showing their public Facebook accounts which disclose their complete name and date of birth could provide a cyber predator the tools to potentially obtain a social security number among other essential information to successfully infiltrate your company's business and personal accounts.

2. "Shadow wi-fi accounts" that show up in public places, such as a conference hall or hotel, prey on mobile devices set to connect to the nearest open network. Such seemingly reputable access points convince business travelers to unintentionally expose company information residing on their iPhone, iPad or laptop.

3. Passwords are tough to remember, so people write them down on a notebook or unencrypted file on their computer or phone. This common mistake opens their accounts to an attacker who needs to do just a minimal amount of work.

4. An employee who receives an email from a stranger or sees an ad on a legitimate website clicks on a link and instantly permeates malware throughout the company's network. This isn't a malicious act: The teammate just didn't realize how harmful that one click could be.

Four ways to incorporate cyber security into your company culture:

1. Emphasize to your entire staff safe computer practices that go well beyond lists of inappropriate websites to surf during office hours.

2. Give the same care and concern to cyber-security activities for employees as you give to safety measures surrounding use of the office building after hours.

3. Train all employees on good cyber "hygiene" (i.e., how not to click on links in emails; how not to keep passwords in an open digital or physical medium, etc.).

4. Limit the administrative reach available to regular users. This requires a not-insignificant amount of employee process modification and change management, but is key for a company to manage its cyber risk.

These moves don't mean that organizations should ignore their network architecture, security patch programs, disaster recovery policies and threat-management system deployment.

These elements remain crucial. However, implementing security measures only through the IT department and failing to address the overall need for cyber security sensitivity as a core component of the company's corporate culture is like locking the doors in your house but leaving the windows open to let the outside air in.

Related: CEOs Can No Longer Sit Idly by on Cyber Security

Eric Basu

CEO of Sentek Global

Eric Basu is the CEO of Sentek Global, a provider of government and commercial cybersecurity and information technology solutions. 

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Science & Technology

3 Major Mistakes Companies Are Making With AI That Is Limiting Their ROI

With so many competing narratives around the future of AI, it's no wonder companies are misaligned on the best approach for integrating it into their organizations.

Leadership

How a $10,000 Investment in AI Transformed My Career and Business Strategy

A bold $10,000 investment in AI and machine learning education fundamentally transformed my career and business strategy. Here's how adaption in the ever-evolving realm of AI — with the right investment in education, personal growth and business innovation — can transform your business.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Starting a Business

How to Find the Right Programmers: A Brief Guideline for Startup Founders

For startup founders under a plethora of challenges like timing, investors and changing market demand, it is extremely hard to hire programmers who can deliver.

Business News

He Picked Up a Lucky Penny In a Parking Lot. Moments Later, He Won $1 Million in the Lottery.

Tim Clougherty was in for a surprise when he scratched off his $10,000-a-month winning lottery ticket.

Business News

A University Awarded a Student $10,000 for His AI Tool — Then Suspended Him for Using It, According to a New Lawsuit

Emory University awarded the AI study aid the $10,000 grand prize in an entrepreneurial pitch competition last year.