Only 2% of businesses have implemented firm-wide cyber resilience, even as cyber security concerns are top-of-mind and the average data breach exceeds

Only 2% of businesses have implemented firm-wide cyber resilience, even as cyber security concerns are top-of-mind and the average data breach exceeds

  • Almost four-fifths (77%) expect their cyber budget to increase over the coming year as only 2% say their company has implemented cyber resilience across their organisation

  • Cyber risks are top-of-mind: two-thirds (66%) of tech leaders rank cyber as their top risk for mitigation in 2024, compared to 48% of business leaders
  • Estimated cost of the average data breach is US$3.3M while cloud-related threats (42%), hack-and-leak operations (38%), and third-party data breaches (35%) rank as the highest cyber threats according to leaders
  • Four-fifths (78%) have increased their investment in GenAI over the last 12-months and two-thirds (67%) of security leaders state that GenAI has increased their attack surface over the last year

Almost four-fifths (77%) of organisations expect their cyber budget to increase over the coming year as organisations cite unpreparedness to an ever-expanding surface of cyber vulnerabilities, according to PwC’s 2025 Global Digital Trust Insights survey, released today.

Sean Joyce, Global Cyber & Privacy Leader, PwC US

The survey, which surveyed 4,042 business and tech executives from across 77 countries and territories, finds that only 2% of companies surveyed have implemented cyber resilience across their organisation, even as more than three-fifths (66%) of tech leaders rank cyber as the top risk their organisation is prioritising for mitigation over the next 12 months. This comes as the average cost of a data breach across all respondents is US$3.3M.1

As organisations increasingly operate across digital platforms, two-thirds (67%) note GenAI has increased their attack surface over the last year.

This year’s survey findings highlight that what worries organisations most is what they’re least prepared for. The top four cyber threats found most concerning — cloud-related threats (42%), hack-and-leak operations (38%), third-party breaches (35%) and attacks on connected products (33%) — are the same one's security executives feel least prepared to address. Sean Joyce, Global Cyber & Privacy Leader, PwC US, said:

“Cyber resilience is everyone’s responsibility, from the boardroom to the employee. We must hold each other accountable and ensure we address emerging risks by leveraging new technology, practicing foundational cybersecurity principles, and investing in resources that will secure the future of the organisation.”

Companies look to GenAI to bolster cyber resilience

As companies contend with cyber security concerns, almost four-fifths (78%) of leaders surveyed have ramped up their investment in GenAI over the last 12 months, with 72% increasing their risk management investment in AI governance. This comes as two-thirds (67%) of security leaders note GenAI has expanded the cyber-attack surface over the last year, ahead of other technologies such as cloud technology (66%), connected products (58%), operational technology (54%) and quantum computing (42%). But while leveraging GenAI remains key to cyber resilience strategies, organisations face several challenges when incorporating the technology, notably with existing systems/processes (39%) and a lack of standardised internal policies governing its use (37%).

The cyber security resilience imperative

Despite the clear threats and a lack of preparedness, the survey findings highlight organisations are nevertheless taking action. More than three-quarters (77%) expect their cyber budget to increase over the coming year, with nearly half (48%) of business leaders prioritising data protection and data trust as the top cyber investment over the next year. Tech leaders, on the other hand, note cloud security (34%) remains their top-priority. Almost one-third (30%) of organisations expect cyber budgets to increase by 6-10% next year, while one-fifth (20%) expect budgets to increase by 11% or more.

There is also a clear cyber security imperative. Organisations cite investment in cybersecurity as a key differentiator for competitive advantage, with 57% citing customer trust and 49% citing brand integrity and loyalty as primary drivers for such investment. In the backdrop, cyber regulations are also driving investment – with 96% reporting such regulations to have increased their cyber investment in the last 12 months.

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Andrew David

Company Owner @ Data Guards | Data Security, Compliance Tools

1 周

Interesting that only 66% of techs v.s. 48% of c-suite want to move on security. 66% to me is low the way I was trained. Is it possible that techs are discouraged or have just given up trying to move to the c-suite with solutions of compliance and cyber readiness because they assume the answer will be NO? Or is it something else? Possibly unmovable annual budget restraints?

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Gordon Cowan

CEO CyBrilliance | Transformative Cyber Resilience Solutions | Remain Resilient in the face of Cyber Threats & Reputation Damage | Trusted Strategist in Operational Resilience, Business Continuity & Data Protection

1 周

Lane Cooper great article with very relevant stats! "In a time where disruption reigns supreme, true resilience transcends mere survival; it embodies the transformative power of leveraging uncertainty to forge new opportunities." Sean Joyce

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