What Can You Learn From a Poor Security Rating Score?

Tina Valdez
5/16/2024
min read

By Tina Valdez, Chief Revenue Officer

This post is the second in a three-part series focused on external security ratings, why they are valuable, and what organizations can learn from them.  Refer to our first post for the background on security ratings providers and how the scores are used on your company.

How does an externally run security score help me run my business if the rating is poor?  

You may be thinking, "If it’s only one perspective, and the ratings providers have never even had a conversation with me, why should I listen to what they have to say, good or bad?" If yes, consider this angle:

You have a poor cybersecurity score.

Oooof. I am sorry. You may believe your overall cyber program is solid, but, again, where there is smoke, there is fire. If you have poor scores for patch cadence, open ports, botnet infections, et al., you likely have a diligence problem, it is probably pervasive, it is probably not something your team wants to talk to you about, and they probably cannot even quantify it.

Diligence is the constant and earnest effort to accomplish what is undertaken. The degree of care and caution required by the circumstances.

Why organizations receive a poor score

Underneath it all, your problem is likely one of the following:

1.   Your team is not executing and upholding your policies

2.  You haven’t developed effective policies and processes

3.  You lack controls that prevent or measure and report on process failures or exceptions

4.  You have management or a culture that doesn't value or hasn't prioritized cybersecurity accountability

5.  You’ve grown into a position where it finally matters, either organically or through acquisition, and you just don't know where to start

Where are the gaps in your diligence?

The external scans call-out what they can see, but back to the smoke-fire reference, if you aren’t diligent in managing your ports and web headers, then you should ask:  Do you really believe that you are diligent in identifying and classifying your assets? Segmenting environments and managing trust? Evaluating new potential threats? In monitoring and remediating even seemingly small issues like logins from unexpected locations? How about testing your recovery plans (you have no idea how many firms brush-off business continuity testing as unnecessary, only for you to find out it’s because they had gaps they wanted to obscure)?

I caution you to not poo-poo your rating.  Get it and start asking yourself the tough questions that go beyond what the scans can tell about your organization from the outside.

With more than 100 combined years in cybersecurity leadership, the Security team at Altiam Digital brings an elite level of knowledge to your shop. Explore our ability to strengthen your security stance and ability to recover from a hacking incident.

Tina Valdez
CRO

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