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6 cybersecurity businesses that present opportunity

alphagammma 6 cybersecurity businesses that present opportunity entrepreneurship

If you’re on the lookout for a breakout growth opportunity, it’s important to look where others aren’t.

And, in that case, it’s hard to argue against the exploding potential of preventing cybercrime.

6 cybersecurity businesses that present opportunity

Although estimates differ, cybercrime is an undeniably lucrative field.

An article in Forbes reported that the overall cost of cybercrime can range from $100 billion to upwards of $400 billion a year.

Further, Juniper Research speculated that data breaches will pick businesses’ and consumers’ pockets to the tune of $2.1 trillion globally by 2019.

Happily, there’s a more legitimate upside to the pervasive spread of cybercrime—the varied business opportunities for those interested in preventing such attacks.

Fighting back: the lucrative possibilities

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If cybercrime holds the potential of a big payoff, so, too, does the field of cybersecurity.

One estimate suggests that the cybersecurity industry will top $200 billion in the United States alone by 2021.

One obvious growth area is professional services—specifically, businesses geared to helping organizations of all sorts implement and operate effective cybersecurity measures and procedures.

These could include consulting, training and education; support and maintenance; design and integration; and risk and threat assessment.

Further, these sorts of services could be focused on more specific types of security, including network, endpoint, application and cloud security.

Here are six specific types of businesses that stand to profit from the battle against cybercrime:

The human factor

With all these and other companies springing up to combat cybercrime, it raises the question of why data breaches and other intrusions continually hit the front pages.

One short answer is the role we as humans play in the process—specifically, our propensity to downplay the risks of cybercrime and, as a result, to have shoddy security habits that entice cybercriminals to keep at it.

With that in mind, it’s essential that organizations understand that they will be attacked, and it’s better to anticipate and pre-solve a predictable problem than react to it after you’re hacked.

Everyone is at risk

It’s time to take the initiative to make cybersecurity everyone’s business.

Develop a comprehensive cybersecurity strategy, and make certain everyone in your organization is on board.

And if you need further help, look to companies that specialize in assisting others with staying safe.

They’re out there, and their numbers are constantly growing.

What does the resiliency of cybercrimes mean for us? It means it’s time to anticipate better.

Learn more with the Anticipatory Organization Learning System at http://anticipatoryorganization.burrus.com. You can also pre-order The Anticipatory Organization on Amazon.com right now.

You can also get a copy of my book The Anticipatory Organization for just the price of shipping at www.TheAOBook.com


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