spot_img

Date:

Share:

Cybersecurity Awareness Month: How SA businesses can safeguard themselves

Cybercriminal activity in South Africa surged by 14% between July 2024 and July 2025, according to Check Point Research’s Global Threat Intelligence Report. This rising threat affects businesses of all sizes, with recent cyberattacks on state-owned airline South African Airways (SAA) and JSE-listed mining company Eastern Platinum (Eastplats) demonstrating that even well-resourced organisations are not immune to risks.

For smaller businesses, the stakes are even higher. As Ryno de Kock, Head of Distribution at PSG Insure, explains, the ability to withstand the financial and operational fallout of a cyberattack depends largely on scale. “Larger businesses may have the reserves to recover quite quickly from an incident, whereas smaller businesses often cannot.”

Against this backdrop, Cybersecurity Awareness Month serves as a timely reminder for South African SMEs to prioritise digital resilience and risk mitigation. Here are five practical steps that de Kock says small business owners can take to protect their operations from cybercrime:

  1. Implement strong access controls

Protecting sensitive data requires limiting who can see and use it. Restrict access on a need-to-know basis, use multi-factor authentication (MFA) for critical systems, and insist on strong, unique passwords. These measures significantly reduce the risk of unauthorised entry into your systems.

  1. Keep systems and software up to date

Outdated systems are a gift to cybercriminals, who often exploit known vulnerabilities. Staying current with updates to operating systems, antivirus programs, and business-critical applications is one of the simplest yet most effective ways to strengthen your defences.

  1. Educate and train employees

Technology alone is not enough. Human error remains a leading cause of data breaches, with nearly three out of four incidents involving an avoidable mistake made by a human. “Regular training empowers employees to recognise phishing emails, suspicious links, and unsafe downloads,” says de Kock. “Clear policies around password management and the handling of sensitive data further reduce the likelihood of accidental breaches,” he adds.

  1. Invest in cyber liability insurance

Cyber liability insurance helps businesses cover costs associated with cyberattacks, such as ransomware payments, data recovery, legal fees, and reputational management. “For South African SMEs, cyber insurance is a critical risk mitigation tool,” says de Kock. “It ensures that if the worst happens, your business can recover quickly without devastating financial loss.”

  1. Develop a cyber incident response plan

No defence is foolproof. Having a clear incident response plan ensures your business can act quickly to contain a breach, communicate effectively with stakeholders, and restore operations. Cyber liability insurance often complements these plans, covering recovery costs and expert support when needed.

“By taking these steps, small businesses can significantly reduce their exposure to cyber risks while safeguarding their employees, clients, and reputation,” de Kock says.

“The key is a proactive approach that ensures prevention, preparation, and protection through both best practices and insurance coverage, and this is much easier to achieve with the help of a short-term insurance adviser, who can help spot any gaps in cyber protection,” he concludes.

spot_img
spot_img

━ More like this

Default BitLocker Configuration Isn’t Enough: Defending Endpoints Against Physical Attacks

Walk into any café, airport lounge, or hotel lobby and you’ll see the modern workplace in action. Laptops open, meetings happening over video, documents...

Seconds save lives: why data held at the edge is critical for faster patient diagnosis

When it comes to diagnosing and treating patients, every second counts, and being able to access the right information in real-time is critical. According to...

International Anti-Ransomware Day-2026: Kaspersky shares insights into ransomware trends and tactics

On International Anti-Ransomware Day, May 12, Kaspersky shares a report with an overview of ransomware trends that marked 2025 and insights into what the threat landscape...

Prevention alone won’t suffice for South African businesses; cyber resilience is the real defence

South Africa is no longer a bystander in the global cybercrime landscape but a primary target. A major ransomware attack earlier this year, in which a...

The AI arms race is changing cybersecurity economics

The cost of attacks is lowering faster than the cost of defence, and this is forcing a structural reset in how cyber-risk is priced,...
spot_img