And yet, digital transformation is itself "the fabric for enterprise survival in the face of continuous disruption," in the words of a recent Deloitte study. Many organizations already know this – 90% of digital leaders "believe they must be more proactive about integrating trust, security, privacy and resilience into technology roll-outs," according to the 2023 KPMG global tech report, with cybersecurity and privacy cited "as primary factors that could slow down transformation progress." As these survey respondents affirm, digital resilience safeguards business continuity and, when there's an incident, reduces its breadth, depth, and impact to allow quicker recovery. To maintain the momentum already invested in their digital transformations, organizations must therefore consciously work to expand digital resilience by strengthening their everyday cybersecurity defenses and continuously fulfilling their regulatory compliance needs.
Secure by design
Because we can do more than ever with digital assets and data, many organizations nowadays have in-house capabilities for dealing with digital threats and events. Some have become wise to the continuous effort that must be invested into thwarting cyberattacks and either mitigating or limiting the fallout of those that slip through. But given the increased value of digital assets and data, cybercrime is booming. Criminals and their transnational syndicates have only become more professionalized, causing the tech arms race to escalate. Ransomware, in particular, has been called the "biggest cybersecurity threat facing the world today" by the National Cyber Security Centre in the United Kingdom. And thanks to the large language models (LLMs) developed by AI, cautions a Europol report on ChatGPT, "phishing and online fraud can be created faster, much more authentically, and at a significantly increased scale."
In such a precarious climate, the foundation for digital resilience is IT that is secure by design and well maintained. For Schuberg Philis, this entails planning, building, and running solutions that intimately integrate security expertise in the work of our diligent dedicated customer teams from day one. Merging the priorities and preoccupations of development, security, and operations into a single DevSecOps approach makes any digital transformation more efficient and sustainable. Another way we shorten feedback loops to Dev teams is by defining golden paths, which are secure ipso facto. From software development to systems and services configuration, golden paths enhance delivery for everything by bringing together all relevant tools to permit smoother deployment, development, and recovery. What's more, by designing, running, and managing platforms for our customers using standardized building blocks, we perpetuate standardized security solutions that are hospitable to keeping workloads secure. All these methods enable the agile deployment of more features, optimally running operations, and, crucially, organizations that can securely scale their business.