Delinea published a new report showing
that cyber insurance not only has become ubiquitous, but more than half of
companies that have leveraged their coverage have used it more than once. As a
result, insurers are pulling back on covering what is most needed, with only
about 30% of organizations saying their policy covers critical risks including
ransomware, ransom negotiation, and decision on ransom payment.
The survey,
conducted among 300 US-based IT decision makers by Censuswide, found that
nearly 70% of organizations have applied for cyber insurance, with 93% being
approved when they applied, and 65% claiming the process took less than three
months. While risk reduction is the main reason for applying (40%), one-third
(33%) of respondents claimed that it was also due to requirements from executive
management and Boards of Directors, and 25% cited recent ransomware incidents
as a primary decision driver. Given the pressure coming from the top, it's
therefore no surprise that 93% received the budget required to purchase their
cyber insurance policies even as 75% of respondents said premiums increased in
their last renewal.
"Executives
and Boards use cyber insurance to lower the costs associated with potential
breaches. As a result, most organizations are scrambling to buy or renew a
policy, even as the insurers pull back on what they will cover and
simultaneously raise the price of coverage," said Art Gilliland, CEO of
Delinea. "Our report shows that insurers are increasingly requiring
organizations to implement a broader set of security controls to try to reduce
the number of customers leveraging their policies. With 80% of companies
leveraging their insurance policies, it is expected that more advanced
solutions are needed."
Other main
reasons cited for applying for cyber insurance were business contract
requirements (24%) and recent data breaches (17%). The largest number of
respondents (48%) indicated that their policy covers data recovery, while
roughly a third indicated it covers incident response, regulatory fines, and
third-party damages.
To qualify for
cyber insurance, a majority of respondents (51%) confirmed that cybersecurity
awareness training was a requirement, with just under half (47%) stating they
were required to have malware protection, antivirus software, multi-factor
authentication (MFA), and backup data. When asked how they met insurers'
Privileged Access Management requirements, a similar percentage said they had
suitable existing solutions (43%) as those who had to acquire additional
solutions (42%).
"Privileged
Access Management solutions can help limit the organization's exposure to risks
such as ransomware, and simultaneously keep the potential payout to a minimum
if covered by cyber insurance," Gilliland continued.
Delinea's report, titled "
Cyber Insurance - If You Get It, Be Ready to Use It," is now available as a free
download.