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Addressing cyber risk may be a challenge for nearly any company and its board. While boards are more engaged in overseeing cyber today, it’s still a complex, technical area with emerging threats occurring almost weekly. Most board members are not cyber experts, yet boards have an obligation to understand and oversee this significant risk. They need active engagement with leadership, access to expertise, and robust information and reporting from management.
Our latest report outlines four key areas in which boards should take action to support their companies in establishing effective cybersecurity risk management programs.
Many strategic decisions have a cyber risk component. For example, adopting new technologies to innovate or better enable and connect a remote workforce changes the company’s cyber risk profile.
Next steps:
…read more in the report.
Boards want to know whether management is focusing on the right cyber risks, how management is addressing those risks and whether it’s enough. This starts with understanding the company’s cyber risk management program and cyber risk appetite.
Next steps:
…read more in the report.
Even with a robust risk management program, there still can be a successful breach and boards should focus their attention on resilience plans.
Next steps:
…read more in the report.
By now, all boards have allocated cyber risk oversight somewhere — either to a committee or the full board. But boards periodically should reassess their allocation to determine that it is effective.
Next steps:
…read more in the report.
Cybersecurity may be an intimidating area for the board to oversee. However, a well-thought-out approach to oversight, robust reporting and a strong relationship with the CISO can pave the way for greater understanding and collaboration between the board and management on this critical topic.
Global Cybersecurity & Privacy Leader, PwC US; Cyber, Risk & Regulatory Leader, PwC US
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