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5 Reasons Why Your Company Needs Web Security

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SIEM as a Service

Any company operator or owner knows that people conduct much of their business online these days. For instance, some companies use a completely eCommerce business model, and they have no brick-and-mortar locations other than manufacturing centers. Others use a work-from-home model since remote work has proven much safer during the pandemic.

Regardless of how much of your business you conduct online, though, one thing is certain: you need to utilize robust security measures if you’re going to succeed. Without them, you’ll likely run into all kinds of problems very quickly.

Let’s discuss a few of the more critical reasons why your company needs all the latest web security measures.  

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You Need to Protect Your Proprietary Secrets

Internet security can take all kinds of forms. That is because intruders might try to breach your network in several different ways. You might need backup for Salesforce data recovery options, as well as a number of other commonsense measures.

Protecting your business’s proprietary secrets is one reason why you’ll need excellent security measures. Regardless of what your company produces, you likely have trade secrets that you’d never want to give away. You might have an R & D team that’s working on new products and services, and you don’t want anyone to know about them yet.

Your security measures will keep your proprietary data from public view. This way, no one can try to blackmail you so they won’t mass-distribute them, and no competing companies will learn your most closely guarded secrets.

You Have to Keep Out Malicious Hackers

You might have hackers who would try to steal your information for blackmail purposes, but others may do it without profit as an obvious motive. Some hackers try to get into a company’s network and cause havoc for no other reason than that they are anarchists.

These individuals have top-of-the-line computer skills, but they’re not ethical at all. They conduct themselves like outlaws or nihilists, trying to bring down companies because they are anti-capitalist or have some private grudge against your industry. Your security measures can keep them out.  

You Must Protect Your Worker Data

You might have many employees working for you, either from one centralized location, many remote workstations, or both. They all trust you when they sign on with the company to take care of their personal information. That will probably include their full names, social security numbers, physical addresses, phone numbers, and all of their salary information.

You’ll probably even have their bank account routing numbers if you offer them direct deposit. You have to keep a close eye on all of that data to ensure that no hacker can steal it. They might do so because they want to perpetrate identity theft.

Your security measures protect your employees and allow them to trust you. If you do not have those measures in place, and there’s a data breach or a leak, no one will want to work for your business in the future.

You Must Allow Your Remote Workers to Log in Safely

You also need security measures because if you do have a remote workforce or at least a few of your employees work from home, you need to be sure they can do so safely. They might use a laptop, desktop, or tablet, and you have to be positive that no hacker can intercept any communications that are taking place between a remote worker and your main server, if you have one.

This is part of why many companies are going to a cloud-based proprietary software suite. Security measures are much easier to implement if you know that your company’s data is going to the cloud for safe storage.

You Have to Allow Your Workers and Customers to Trust You

Earlier, we mentioned that if a hacker breaches your network’s defenses, it is hard for either current or future employees to trust you. You’ll get a poor reputation within your industry.

If hackers keep getting past your network defenses, then customers won’t want to do business with your company either. They won’t want to give you their credit card numbers or PayPal information, for example, because they’ll feel like a hacker can easily get all of that.

This sometimes happens with large companies like Target or Walmart, but it can happen with smaller businesses too. Don’t assume that because you have a small company, that hackers won’t want to blackmail you or shut you down for no immediately discernable reason.

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