Revealed – the percentage of businesses hit by a cyber incident since 2019
Data exfiltration went up from 37% to 46%, ransomware from 30% to 40%, hacktivism from 32% to 39%, denial of service from 28% to 39%, fraud from 29% to 38% and cryptojacking from 27% to 33%.
US businesses were slightly more likely to experience a serious cyber attack at 77% compared to the UK at 73%. However, UK businesses end up losing more in cost. These incidents have cost senior IT respondents an average direct loss of £1.3 million, which isn’t inclusive of the long-term effects that cyber attacks can bring.
The true cost of a security breach lies in the indirect losses, which have become more costly than the cyber attack itself. Reputation damage and paid ransom averaged £1.5 million in 2022.
Nearly half of these businesses also went into operational downtime, increased insurance premiums, experienced reputational damage, and paid legal costs following the cyber attack.
“Our latest report shows the sheer scale of serious cyber-attacks on businesses in the UK and the US. This is a growing problem and one with serious ramifications for affected organizations,” said Jamie Smith, board director at S-RM.
“Often businesses will focus on the direct financial impact of a cyber incident, but the indirect impact can be even higher and far more difficult for them to accurately quantify,” Smith said. “This is part of the reason why an effective incident response plan and relevant training is so important. The right plan can minimize the secondary impact of attacks, help to limit reputational damage, aid recovery, and minimize costly downtime.”