Categories: Infographics

Why Businesses are Turning to Cyber Insurance for Protection

Storing data electronically is convenient for businesses across industries.  While the storage abilities of the Internet benefit many, the drawback is that online data is always at some level of risk for cybercrime.  As internet access expands worldwide, so too does the volume of business taking place online.  Sharing data across multiple apps and clouds, among other acts, increases the opportunity cyber criminals have to exploit company weaknesses.

 

Cyber crime is one of the most lucrative criminal ventures. In 2016, ransomware caused $209 million in damages.  By 2020, that figure exploded to $170 billion.  Even large corporations are not safe from hackers.  The recent attack on Colonial Pipeline represents the largest attack ever on a US energy system.  When JBS paid $11 million in ransom to their cyberattackers, it was the largest reported ransom payment on record.

 

Related Post

While these major incidents make the headlines, the real tragedy is when cybercrime targets small to midsize businesses (SMBs).  In the last year alone, 2 in 3 SMBs were victimized by at least one cyber attack.  3 in 5 of the victimized SMBs went out of business within 6 months after a data breach or hack.  The damage these fallen companies suffered went beyond a ransom payment.  Businesses also lost money from recovery efforts, halted operations, and their sullied reputation as a result of the cyber attack.

Cyber insurance can’t prevent an attack, but it can curb the fallout from one.  SMBs’ cyber insurance policies usually cover up to $1 million in damages.  Coverage includes loss of profit, liabilities than arise from the cyber attack, and lawsuits filed as a result of the cyber attack.  Gaps in coverage include loss of damaged devices and intellectual property the company loses in a data leak.  Many see the investment as worth it despite these imperfections.

 

Brian Wallace

Brian Wallace is the Founder and President of NowSourcing, an industry leading infographic design agency based in Louisville, KY and Cincinnati, OH which works with companies that range from startups to Fortune 500s. Brian also runs #LinkedInLocal events nationwide, hosts the Next Action Podcast, and has been named a Google Small Business Advisor for 2016-present.

Share
Published by
Brian Wallace

Recent Posts

Brian Armstrong Sets Course for AI-Driven Transformation As Coinbase Cuts 14% of Workforce

Coinbase is about to undergo one of its largest structural reorganisations in some time, with…

10 hours ago

$150M Crypto Ponzi Scheme Crumbles, Forming Global Fraud Network As Investigators Freeze $41.5M

The suspicious DSJ Exchange (DSJEX) and BG Wealth Sharing scheme, now confirmed a Ponzi operation,…

10 hours ago

BlackRock And Fidelity Lead $532 Million In Institutional Bitcoin ETF Inflows As Demand Soars Following Ceasefire

Demand from institutions is heating up again, with U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs logging a tally…

1 day ago

Western Union Launches USDPT Stablecoin on Solana to Transform Global Payments Infrastructure

Western Union expands its participation in the digital asset ecosystem with USDPT, a Solana native…

2 days ago

ZachXBT Exposes Alleged Illicit Flows And Market Manipulation Across Tokenlon And Influencer Networks

The cryptocurrency sector is in the spotlight again as ZachXBT has accused decentralized exchange Tokenlon…

2 days ago

Mantle Crossing $1 Billion In Aave Growth With ZK upgrade And Institutional DeFi Strategy

Mantle kicked off 2026 with a milestone event: it reached more than $1 billion in…

2 days ago