Part of our mission at Rivial Data Security is to constantly innovate and look for better ways to add value for our clients. We use several advanced techniques in our IT Risk Assessment solution that reduce the amount of effort required of our clients, streamline the process of collecting risk information, and improve the risk assessment results.
You can learn the fundamentals of conducting an IT risk assessment in our blog, “How to do an IT Risk Assessment in 20221”. However, if you’re looking for advanced IT risk assessment techniques, keep reading!
Information Assets
Early in the risk assessment process we recommend identifying the types of information being stored and transmitted by your information systems. It is possible to use your existing data classification structure (e.g. public data, internal use only, confidential) but we recommend going a bit beyond the traditional three tiers and breaking out different types of information. For example: you can break confidential data into customer personal information and cardholder data to help your PCI scoping efforts.
Information Systems
If you use an asset-based approach, which we highly recommend, you will want to identify information systems such as major business applications and supporting infrastructure. Two criteria we use to help identify information systems are:
For example, if you outsource your core banking application, the vendor is responsible for the database backend, the web application frontend, and the infrastructure tying the two together. That is an information system. As another example, all Windows Servers in your environment could be lumped together into one information system because one team typically supports them (IT) and they are all secured similarly.
Financial Measures
We as an industry don’t measure IT risk well and we’re still in the wild west of information security decision making. Most risk gets measured and communicated using an ordinal scale, or a measurement that denotes an order. For example medium is higher than low, and high is higher than medium. Two is more than one, neutral is better than bad. As an industry we cybersecurity people typically report risk as high, medium, and low. We expect our business leaders to spend real dollars on security solutions. But we don’t give them a real explanation of the benefits. There are several techniques available for measuring IT risk in financial terms, the sooner you stop reporting risk in ordinal scales and start reporting risk in financial terms, the happier your executives will be.
We recommend the book How to Measure Anything in Cybersecurity Risk by Douglas W. Hubbard and Richard Seiersen for additional measuring techniques.
Loss Tolerance
Sometimes referred to as risk appetite or risk tolerance, the loss tolerance of the organization’s leadership is a critical part of ongoing risk management. If you are measuring IT risk in financial terms, as mentioned above, you are one step closer to defining a loss tolerance with meaning and value. By asking a handful of questions about the probability of certain loss amounts, a group of executives or Board members can quickly pinpoint their overall appetite for risk. The risk tolerance can be charted on a scale and compared to actual risk measures for better decision making.
Ongoing Updates
IT risk assessment—like any decision tool—needs to be updated regularly in order to be useful. As things change in the environment, those changes need to be reflected in the IT Risk Assessment, which can be done in a variety of ways. One trick we use is adding a line in the change management process that requires an IT risk assessment triage step. Another trick is adding a similar line to the organization’s procurement process. Any new purchases should go through the IT risk management team/person so the risk assessment can be updated. It is also useful to create automated reminders. Keep your IT risk assessment results fresh and relevant by sending reminder emails to system owners and admins monthly to provide updated information to the risk management team.
Key Performance Indicators
The next evolution beyond regular updates is gathering real-time, or near real-time, data around the risk assessment details. Particularly around the performance of security controls. In many technology environments measurements can be configured, and automated, to feed information into the risk assessment. Known as key performance indicators these telling measures can be compared to thresholds and trigger risk changes.
Compliance Integration
The name of the game in any organization is efficiency. Therefore, any time you can remove duplication of effort, the organization wins. Considering the significant overlap between IT risk management controls and IT compliance controls (note: they don’t perfectly align because security does not equal compliance and visa versa) there is ample opportunity to automatically adjust risk measures and compliance measures as control details are gathered, whether through testing or key performance indicator reporting. For example, if an antivirus metric falls below a desired threshold, both the related risk measurement and the related compliance measurement are impacted negatively. Updating both at the same time is more accurate and saves time.
IT risk assessments are incredibly useful tools to help executives and Board Members make decisions, but not all financial institutions have the robust resources to successfully execute and utilize their assessment inhouse. The experts at Rivial Data Security know how to deliver cutting-edge solutions for all budgets. If you’re looking for an easier way to accomplish your IT risk assessment, talk to one of our consultants and take advantage of our timesaving modifications and innovative reporting capabilities. Not only do we offer one-time IT risk assessments, but also Real-Time Risk, an ongoing and consistent, accounting for your ever-evolving security landscape.