Cybercrime is on the rise as organizations face the tough
realities of a poor economy putting the squeeze on their security
spending. But don't panic — some creative ways to defend your
data on a tight budget do exist.
The discrepancy between security priorities and the money to
fund them is becoming painfully obvious. According to a recent
survey of Forrester Research enterprise clients, 68 percent of IT
security decision-makers consider the security of their data to be
the most important issue, ahead of compliance and mobile security.
The catch: Their security budgets are basically flat for this year
(12.6 percent of their overall IT budgets) over last year (11.7
percent), according to Forrester.
"Can they afford to fund all the security they want? The answer is,
'no,'" says Andrew Jaquith, Senior Analyst with Forrester. Those
days of having the money to throw at the newest threat are long
gone. "Now that times are not so good, they still have to face
expanding threats, but their budgets must stay flat and, in some
cases, decline," he adds.
Mike Rothman, Senior Vice President
of Strategy at eIQnetworks, says the gloomy economic crisis doesn't
mean spending on security will be suspended altogether — just
that budgets won't be increased. "It's about how to make the best
use of funding that's already there, with the tools, people, and
processes that are in place," Rothman says.
So how can IT security survive these tough times? Security experts
point to several ways to make do with less, everything from a
little budget-shuffling with other business groups to outsourcing
IT security functions to internal groups or the outside. And the
well-kept secret is that this is a buyer's market in which some
security vendors are willing to negotiate better deals — all
you have to do is ask for discounts. Really.
Here are six ways to do security with less:
1. Get out of the deployment business.
IT security should definitely be involved in selecting data
protection tools, but shouldn't be dealing with provisioning tools
that require heavy customization, Forrester's Jaquith says. That
can drain already-limited resources.
"We think the best approach is for IT security to primarily be
involved in provisioning tools that don't require a lot of
customization and involvement like full-disk encryption," he says.
"Share the workload and make sure the business units are
involved."
2. Spread the cost of security with other
groups.
Not only should full-disk encryption (FDE) not be the security
staff's rollout project, but it also doesn't have to be a security
expense. FDE could be funded with your organization's laptops under
the IT group, Jaquith says.
And that Web application firewall (WAF) purchase doesn't have to be
funded under security, either — it can just as easily be a
network expense.
"A great many organizations are considering [WAFs], but the
commercial ones can be pricey. So some of our savvy customers have
found they can get them budgeted [under] IT infrastructure instead
of IT security, the former being much larger," says Jeremiah
Grossman, CTO of WhiteHat Security. Some are getting their WAF
purchases paid by IT by bundling them as part of a larger
load-balancer procurement, he says.
3. Get more out of your existing security tools and
systems.
Look at your organization's existing Citrix or other terminal
servers, for instance. "You might [realize] you've got this
wonderful resource called Windows Terminal Server...where you can
put some of your sensitive assets and eliminate the need to buy a
separate product," Forrester's Jaquith says. Rather than purchasing
an expensive data protection suite for your endpoints, you can use
a Citrix box to help with data protection, he says.
"If the business requires users to be able to process bulk
quantities of sensitive information on endpoints, you will still
need either encryption tools or [data leakage prevention]," he
says.
Consider reorienting the more labor-intensive tools, such as those
for data leakage prevention (DLP), he says. Forrester recommends
using DLP products mainly for monitoring activity rather than for
blocking the leakage of data. And enlist the help of your business
units to get the big picture on where data is flowing in the
organization. "If you are looking at DLP to stop a data leak,
you're probably a little too late. You need to understand how users
are using the information they have, what they are downloading,
[etc.]," he says.
Meanwhile, some security purchases are definitely non-negotiable.
You can't skimp on purchases tied to compliance, regulation, or any
auditor red-flagged issues, experts say. "For the most part, your
compliance budget is not negotiable," Jaquith says.
4. Tie a security purchase to your compliance
mandates.
Speaking of compliance, it can come in handy
for helping fund security. Many organizations already employ this
tactic, and it's an effective way to get a security purchase
through. "The key is finding an angle that clearly ties it to a
compliance mandate. That means getting specific," Jaquith says. If
you handle payment data, for example, use PCI.
"A Web application firewall is a good example here because PCI DSS
specifically calls out for code audits, code review, or WAF as a
way to mitigate risks in application security," he adds.
5. Outsource or automate some security
functions.
Security doesn't have to do it all
in-house. Automating or outsourcing things like data provisioning
or data entitlement can save big bucks. Johnnie Konstantas, Vice
President of Marketing for Varonis, which sells automated data
entitlement tools, points to the high cost of manpower in data
governance tasks.
"A lot of where the money is being spent is in people, and it's
being done inefficiently," says Konstantas, citing organizations
that have people manually mapping users to data on file shares as
an example. "That's a huge pool of data, and they're spending tons
of money on IT people manually assigning permissions for who can
get to what."
WhiteHat's Grossman says it makes sense to divvy up labor. And that
can include farming out some security tasks if doing so is cheaper.
"Often, outsourcing particular security functions, such as
vulnerability assessment or intrusion detection, can lower the
total cost of ownership of a particular action," he says.
6. Take advantage of a security buyer's
market.
Enterprises aren't the only ones feeling the pinch of the economy.
Security vendors are, too.
"Reasonable security vendors will be flexible on pricing and
payment terms, especially when they know you are well-informed
about competing solutions," WhiteHat's Grossman says. "Ask for
additional discounts if purchasing decisions are made quickly, or
by committing to multiyear contracts. Then once you've selected a
solution you really love, forge close relationships and help the
vendor evangelize by serving as or reference or case study."
That can pay off in the long term, too. You can get speedier
support, influence on their product road maps, access to their more
"seasoned" engineers, and more discounts down the line, Grossman
says.
So far, few enterprises are taking advantage of this buyer's
market, however, because they don't realize some vendors are
willing to wheel and deal. "People are crossing off solutions they
'can't afford' without first investigating and trying to
negotiate," Grossman says.