Cybersecurity Best Practices for Your Organization

Cybersecurity Best Practices for Your Organization

According to a study by N-able, managed service providers (MSPs) report that 82% of their customers have seen an increase in attempted cyberattacks since the pandemic. Even MSPs themselves are a target for cybercriminals, which can have wide-reaching impacts on their customers and network of resources if breached. As threats become more prevalent, it’s imperative organizations not only implement cybersecurity best practices but also work with strategic advisors who value the same practices.

The Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency released a report detailing how MSPs and their customers should be protected against cyber threats.
 

Here Are 10 Cybersecurity Best Practices That Should Be Top of Mind for Your Organization.

1. Take Preventive Measures to Mitigate Cyberattacks

First and foremost, your organization should take every preventive measure possible to prevent cyberattacks. Mitigation tools and resources can help you prevent initial compromise, thus making it less likely an attacker will disrupt business operations or pose a significant threat to your business.

If you’re unsure of your current level of cyber maturity, then cyber assessments are a great place to start. An assessment can help you understand what your biggest risks are, where you should focus your efforts and investments, and how to help improve your maturity and strengthen your defenses.


2. Be Diligent and Thorough with Your Logging and Monitoring Process

Logging and monitoring are critical components of a cybersecurity program. The reality is it can be months before an incident is detected within an environment, and with so many threats and an abundance of data to continuously comb through to identify an incident, it’s critical for organizations to implement and maintain a logging and monitoring solution.

It is recommended the logging solution retain your most relevant and important logs for at least six months. Logging and monitoring provide additional visibility into incidents, aid in threat hunting, and reduce the time needed to triage and investigate a potential incident.

If you are working with an MSP to deliver a logging and monitoring solution, make sure they can deliver on necessary contractual obligations to help ensure success. For example, a vendor should be able to do the following:

  • Implement a comprehensive security information and event management (SIEM) solution that enables logging and monitoring.

  • Deliver visibility and communication as it relates to the providers’ access, presence, activities and connections to the customer environment (are the MSPs’ accounts properly monitored and audited?).

  • Notify the customer when a confirmed or suspicious event/incident occurs on the provider’s infrastructure and administrative networks. The provider should conduct a thorough analysis and investigation.

 

3. Deploy Multifactor Authentication (MFA) and Pay Attention to Account Privileges

As more entities shift to a hybrid or fully remote work environment, the need for MFA is more apparent than ever. Deploying MFA adds that extra foundational layer of security when you have employees accessing organization networks from varying locations and devices. It’s important that any business advisor you work with not only mandates the use of MFA, but also requires MFA within their own business.

To touch on a previous point, you should also make sure you’re reviewing logs for unexplained failed authentication attempts. In some cases, this may indicate that an account within the organization has been compromised. Additionally, be thoughtful about who has permission to certain accounts and disable accounts when they are not actively being used. Audit this regularly.

Lastly, use the principle of least privilege to restrict unnecessary privileges. This requires that you identify the most high-risk devices across your organization and minimize the access people have to them. When working with a vendor, make sure they apply this principle to your network environments.


4. Segregate and Control Internal Data and Networks

As an organization, it’s important that you understand your environment and segregate your networks. By doing this, you’ll be able to isolate critical business systems and apply network security controls to reduce risk across the organization.

It is recommended that organizations verify their connections between internal systems, their MSPs’ systems, and other strategic advisors and supplier networks they communicate with. Virtual private networks (VPNs) or alternative secure access solutions should be used when connecting to MSP infrastructure, and all traffic should be limited to that one dedicated, secure connection.

Your organization should also ask and validate that any third-party vendor you are working with uses different admin credentials for each customer (i.e., they won’t use the same credentials they use to log in to your organization that they use for other customers). If any of those vendors’ customers are breached, those same credentials could be used to compromise other organizations, including yours.

With vendors and other trusted advisors having access to an organization’s network, it becomes increasingly important to limit network access. Limiting access of advisors to only the solutions or applications they require helps improve security hygiene. Over the past few years, ransomware actors have increasingly started to target business advisors to gain access to other organizations by abusing trusted access and a lack of segregation controls. Threat actors continue to have success by leveraging a lack of controls limiting user privileges and access to data.


5. Apply the Principle of Least Privilege

The use of tiering models is recommended for administrative accounts to provide layered permissions that don’t create unnecessary access or privileges. Full privileged accounts should only be used when absolutely necessary and should be time-based to further restrict risk. Identifying high-risk devices, applications and users can help minimize access and associated risks.

As an organization, you should require that the vendors you work with apply this least privilege principle across your environment as well as their own. Additionally, they should only have access to the services and resources needed to deliver the agreed-upon scope of work.

Building on the least privilege is the zero-trust model. While not quite interchangeable but tightly coupled, zero trust means every organization, by default, should put zero trust in every user, endpoint, device, etc. From internal to external users, mobile devices to laptops, and network components to network connections, every endpoint should be considered untrusted until authenticated and authorized.


6. Apply Updates Regularly and Adhere to All Recommendations

To be fully secure and compliant, don’t just apply routine updates. Go the extra mile and address that all aspects of patches are adhered to. When working with a vendor, use their recommendations and experiences to help ensure you're getting the most out of updates. For example, organizations should prioritize patching vulnerabilities included in CISA’s catalog of known exploited vulnerabilities (KEV) versus only those with high Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) scores that have not been exploited (and may never be exploited).


7. Back-Up All Systems and Data Routinely

Equally as important as routine updates are routine backups. Regularly backing up your critical data and systems is an important cybersecurity best practice. Data from business-critical systems should be backed up, with the frequency of backups being informed by the type of data and business requirements. Backups should be stored remotely, encrypted, and ideally, have different retention spans as a best practice.

Further, keep backups separate and isolate them from network connections that could promote the spread of ransomware. Most ransomware variants attempt to find and encrypt/delete accessible backups. Isolating them will allow for the restoration of systems/data to their previous state.

Another important aspect of disaster recovery is frequent backup and restoration process testing. You must confirm that your process works; the time of a disaster is not the appropriate time for these tests! They should be planned, scheduled, and tested at a regular cadence. Then, process and procedure documentation should be updated based on the results.


8. Create and Implement an Incident Response and Recovery Plan

Often the best way to shore up a security program is to improve internal operational procedures. Make sure your computer emergency response team and crisis plans are tuned to the digital age. Don’t be caught flat-footed in terms of privacy, reputation, or other impacts.

The incident response and recovery plan should outline the roles and responsibilities of all stakeholders in the organization in the event of a disaster. Make sure you keep updated, hard copies of this plan on hand to help ensure the plan is accessible even if networks are inaccessible. Additionally, to be extra prepared, you should test your plan often.


9. Understand Supply Chain Risk and Manage It

Vendors bring a certain level of expertise and valuable experiences to the table; however, with those connections comes increased risk. Integration of the digital supply chain creates massive conveniences but provides an increasing number of new opportunities for threat actors. Even within the secure and trusted connection of your most important digital vendors, threats can thrive with persistence and cause widespread damage.

Organizations should validate that their contractual agreements with third parties meet specific security requirements and that their contract specifies whether the third party or the customer owns specific responsibilities, such as hardening, detection and incident response.

Your organization must understand the risk of working with third-party vendors and subcontractors. When working with third-party vendors, make your security expectations very clear from the get-go and make sure that you understand and audit the level of access they have.


10. Partner With Those Who Believe in Transparency

Last but certainly not least, remember that more transparency leads to enhanced security. When working with external vendors, make sure you clearly understand what security services are being provided. Address anything you feel your business needs but that may fall outside of the scope of the contract.

Check to make sure your vendor clearly outlines how they will notify you in the case of an incident affecting your environment. As their customer, a vendor should want you to have as much information about your cybersecurity program as possible. Being transparent will only benefit both of you in the long run, as it can enable better results and a more secure business environment.

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