Technology & Innovation

THE MEANING OF SECURITY IN THE 21st CENTURY

January 18, 2017

Global, North America

SECURITY IN THE 21st CENTURY

January 18, 2017

Global, North America
Becca Lipman

Editor, EMEA

Becca is currently a supporting editor and writer for The Economist Intelligence Unit's thought leadership division in the Americas and EMEA. Her primary focus is on healthcare policy and financial market trends. She has also recently developed research programmes that analyse themes in infrastructure and smart cities, as well as C-suite perspectives on talent strategy, small business and IT development. 
 
Before joining the EIU in New York, and later in London, Becca worked as senior editor at Wall Street & Technology where she reported on IT advances in capital markets. She previously held posts as lead editor for a US stock brokerage. Becca earned her bachelor’s degree in both economics and environmental studies from New York University.

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Corporate leaders’ efforts to manage security risks—threats to physical assets, IT infrastructure and personnel—will be more effective when informed by a clear understanding of those risks’ societal motivators. Today, security-management programmes focus on protection of networks, data and intellectual property, as well as facilities and people. Enhancing cyber security lies at the heart of this effort, with physical security having, in significant ways, converged with digital protection efforts.

As executives and programme managers survey the spectrum of security issues that endanger their businesses, they face a complex and shifting landscape. The motivations behind these threats are even more complex.

It is standard protocol for companies to construct their best defences to protect their cyber and physical borders, employees, data and more. Security efforts are also generally characterised by their defensive, or responsive, measures; plans to better respond to threats in real time. But corporate leaders are beginning to understand that they might play a role in a third approach—a proactive or preventative, one that can reduce or eliminate the issues that give rise to threats in the first place.

This mission has its fair share of challenges, as many virulent issues like poverty and political tensions are largely beyond companies’ control. Nonetheless, businesses leaders agree they should—and can—think beyond the traditional horizons of their security efforts. They see an opportunity to work together to help address issues in the outside world, which would alleviate the threats that manifest inside their companies.

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