What’s Everyone Looking At? Varonis® DatAdvantage® Tells You

April 18, 2012

On your network what is everyone looking at, do they have permissions they shouldn’t and where is all your credit card data stored and who can see it? These questions and many more can be answered by C24.

For more information please contact us at http://www.c24.co.uk


Bloomberg on State of Business Analytics

April 12, 2012

 

by Ravi Kalakota

Interested in slicing, dicing, measuring, and analyzing data for customer and business insights?

According to a recent survey by Bloomberg, 97% of companies with revenues of more than $100 million are using some form of business analytics, up from 90% just two years ago.

While businesses have embraced the idea of fact-based decision-making, a steep learning curve remains. Only one in four organizations believes its use of business analytics has been “very effective” in helping to make decisions. Data is not just ignored but often discarded in many organizations as the business users can’t figure out how to extract signal from data noise.

This is a far cry from the current hype around analytics and big data, raising the questions:

  • How should an organization be structured to effectively leverage analytics?
  • What skillset, mindset, toolset adjustments are needed to “think outside of the box”?

These are questions that managers must ponder as they rampup investments. Many companies start their analytics journey by executing one or two projects of small scope.

That may be fine at the outset, but in order to address the larger performance improvement issues, companies need to move up the maturity curve from repeatable to defined and then to managed and optimized.

The following are research insights highlighted by the survey sample of 930:

  • Business analytics is still in the “emerging stage.” While analytics has gone mainstream, most organizations still rely on traditional technology. Spreadsheets are the number-one tool used for business analytics.
  • Enterprises – small, mid, large, mega — have been collecting tons of data. They are dying to get more insights from it because it’s too much of a pain to extract anything from the databases.
  • Organizations are proceeding cautiously in their adoption of analytics. Use of business analytics within companies has grown over the past year, but at a moderate rate. Analytics also tend to be used narrowly within departments or business units, not integrated across the organization.
  • Intuition based on business experience is still the driving factor in decision-making. Analytics is used as part of the decision process at varying levels, depending on the organization.
  • Companies are looking to analytics to solve big issues, with the primary focus on money: reducing costs, improving the bottom line, and managing risks.
  • Data is the number-one challenge in the adoption or use of business analytics. Companies continue to struggle with data accuracy, consistency, and even access.
  • Many organizations lack the proper analytical talent. Businesses that struggle with making good use of analytics often don’t know how to apply the results.
  • Culture plays a critical role in the effective use of business analytics. Companies that have built an “analytics culture” are reaping the benefits of their analytics investments.

Nothing earth shattering here….Like all innovation, adoption will take time and require significant organizational changes across toolsets, skillsets and mindsets. But make no mistake, companies that don’t embrace analytics in a fast paced competitive environment will be left behind. Take for instance Financial Services industry. The sector continues to undergo massive structural change due to de-risking, ongoing regulatory changes (e.g. Dodd-Frank act, Basel 3), curbs on leverage, competition to cash-cows like credit-cards and a massive shift to online banking. This is driving skyrocketing demand for predictive models and creating an unprecedented need for data agility.

What Is Your “Analytics Maturity ”?

In order to change, you have to baseline first – what is your analytics maturity. The business analytics maturity curve represents the arc of progression every company moves along. Maturity levels are measured by your level of experience, the implementation and support strategies you use, and your degree of sophistication around data.

Analytics maturity can be assigned to one of the following four groups:

  1. Reactive businesses engage in business analytics only in a reactionary mode, e.g., by complying with a customer request or in response to competitive pressure.
  2. Responsive companies are engaging in business analytics, but mostly as separate, one-off projects.
  3. Proactive organizations have established processes, infrastructure, and resources to support business analytics in a programmatic manner.
  4. Aggressive companies aggressively expand analytics capability as an important growth opportunity and encourage their customers to adopt it.

Which type of organization do you belong to? Where do you want to be?

Notes and References

Source: Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services study, conducted among 930 businesses across the globe in various industries. Focus of the study is to provide insight into the current state of business analytics in today’s organizations. Also examine the challenges companies face when using analytics, and explore tactics favored by companies who have succeeded in using analytics more effectively than their peers.


Booz Allen Reports Top Ten Cyber Security Trends for Financial Services in 2012

December 15, 2011

The following list was developed from research by Booz Allen, which has years of experience in financial services consulting for federal, nonprofit and commercial clients:

Top 10 Financial Services Cyber Security Trends for 2012:
1.The exponential growth of mobile devices drives an exponential growth in security risks. Every new smart phone, tablet or other mobile device, opens another window for a cyber attack, as each creates another vulnerable access point to networks.
2.Increased C-suite targeting. Senior executives are no longer invisible online. Firms should assume that hackers already have a complete profile of their executive suite and the junior staff members who have access to them.
3.Growing use of social media will contribute to personal cyber threats. A profile or comment on a social media platform – even by the CEO’s son or sister — can help hackers build an information portfolio that could be used for a future attack.
4.Your company is already infected, and you’ll have to learn to live with it – under control. Security should remain a priority, but today’s risks and threats are so widespread that it will become impossible to have complete protection – the focus of cyber security tactics increasingly must be to analyze, detect and expunge threats inside your system.
5.Everything physical can be digital. The written notes on a piece of paper, the report binder and even the pictures on the wall can be copied in digital format and gleaned for the tools to allow a hacktivist-type of security violation, and increasingly this will be a problem.
6.More firms will use cloud computing. The significant cost savings and efficiencies of cloud computing are compelling companies to migrate to the cloud. A well designed architecture and operational security planning will enable organizations to effectively manage the risks of cloud computing.
7.Global systemic risk will include cyber risk. As banks and investment firms continue on the path to globalization, they will become increasingly inter-connected. A security breach at one firm can create negative ripple effects that greatly impact systemic risk in financial markets.
8.Zero-day malware (malicious software) and organized attacks will continue to increase. Like a vicious, insidious virus that mutates, the tools of cyber criminals adapt and change constantly, rendering the latest defenses useless. Firms need to be prepared to adapt quickly as well to zero-day malware and the tactics of organized crime and foreign adversaries that are increasingly used today.
9.Insider threats are real. The accidental insider breach will continue to be the primary source of compromise for the Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) and other attacks. Organizations need to focus on security awareness training and internal monitoring to detect intentional and accidental insider access.
10.Increased regulatory scrutiny. Recently, the Securities and Exchange Commission introduced guidelines that require companies to report incidents that result, or could possibly result in, cyber theft or a risk of compromised data considered material.

Further information at http://www.boozallen.com/media-center/press-releases/48399320/cyber-top-ten-2012

 


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