Richard Brinson and Rachel Briggs OBE
There are five trends driving board prioritisation of cyber security:
Cyber security is now a boardroom priority; almost three-quarters of board directors rank it as a top priority. As a leading recruitment consultant working on non-executive board recruitment commented, “When you think about the things that keep them up at night, it’s cyber, because the impact can be unquantifiable. When it comes to data breaches, cyber hacks, the impact on your business can be exponential and potentially existential.” But our research shows us that boards continue to perform their governance role on cyber security because they struggle to define their role, lack the right level of cyber awareness, and CISOs are not adequately bridging the gap.
The Savanti model for cyber-engaged boards revolves around four key board actions:
1. Understand your unique role as a board
Boards have four roles in relation to cyber security:
2. Be appropriately informed about technology, data and cyber security
As technology, digital transformation, data-led decision-making and effective cyber security become ever more critical to business, this should be reflected at board level. Calls for CISOs to be elevated to board level are too broad; board skills should be needs-driven. There are also currently few CISOs with the breadth of skills, experience and business acumen necessary for board positions, although this is growing over time. As one CISO commented, “I can only count on two hands the sort of person that we're talking about.”
Boards need well-rounded directors capable of contributing across all board discussions. As one board recruiter told us, “The challenge for boards and chairs is you have finite number of seats. Boards are like orchestras and everybody plays a slightly different instrument and they all to play harmoniously. You need people who can speak to their area of expertise, but they need also to lean into other conversations; otherwise, it’s less of a holistic discussion.” Boards should have at least one NED with experience in and capable of speaking at board level to technology, digital, data, cyber security or other forms of security, such as physical or supply chain.
As well as recruiting board members with specific expert knowledge, all board members should have sufficient knowledge to play an active role in cyber security discussions to avoid ‘board room cyber rubber necking’. As one global CISO put it, “I think they need to be GCSE French level fluent in cyber security.” Chairs should encourage directors to educate themselves, invite experts in to brief the board, allow and encourage NEDs to be in contact with CISOs between board meetings and ensure directors have access to independent board advisors.
3. Put cyber security on the board’s agendaBoards should make cyber security a regular discussion at their meetings, featuring at least quarterly and more frequently when there is something critical ongoing. As a global CISO with a financial institution commented, “The beginning of good looks like boards at least showing an appetite to get this, to ask the right questions, to make sure that cyber is a regular board level topic and not just discussed when there's a problem.” The board report should be delivered by the CISO to ensure cyber security discussions are not filtered through the lens of competing concerns, such as reliability and uptime, and also to ensure all questions can be addressed head on, rather than deferred and forgotten.
Companies with elevated technology, data and cyber risks should consider establishing a technology committee of the board, something that a small but growing number of companies are doing. Less formal than the audit committee, they bring focus and oversight and allow for open discussions that will help mature cyber security governance.
4. Board and executive access to independent cyber security advisorsBoards can accelerate their cyber knowledge and enhance cyber governance through the use of independent cyber security advisors. A number of interviewees commented on their value. One NED told us, “Independent board advisors are invaluable. Any time I have served on the board that has had one, it's been fantastic because you can also have those conversations offline with them, call them up to ask them the question you didn’t want to ask in front of everybody.” Nicola Horlick reflected, “The normal audit is all about the figures, it's not necessarily about processes and making sure that you've got the best things in place for things like cybersecurity. So I think it’s important for boards to get someone to perform that independent assessment and advisory role.”
Independent board advisors can contribute to three aspects of cyber security governance:
Read our full paper, 'Effective Cyber Security Board Governance – A source of competitive advantage'
For more information on Savanti’s board advisory service or contact Richard Brinson (CEO of Savanti, part of FSP) or Rachel Briggs OBE (Executive Advisor to Savanti) or add your details below