Lucid IT Solutions

Who’s Responsible for Protecting Your Data?

IT security engineer working on laptop

Teacher: “Okay, James. Can you please write your name on the board?”

James: “Certainly, Miss. However, before I do, may I please ask how you intend to utilise that data?”

That might have sounded ridiculous twenty years ago, but today, everyone is concerned about the safety of their data, both individuals and businesses.

With data breaches happening more often and cyber-attacks becoming more sophisticated, data protection has become a critical priority for companies of all sizes – and someone needs take charge of it.

What data do businesses use?

Relevant information is essential to successfully running a business. Such data may include:

Customer Data
names, contact information, demographics, transactions, online behaviour data
Sales
sales by customer, sales by location, revenue, sales volume, products/services, individual purchases/subscriptions, average order value, conversion rates
Marketing
customer demographics, website analytics, social media analytics, advertising analytics, market research data
Operations
data about production, inventory, quality control, supply chain, employees
Processes
process cycle times, costs, efficiency, quality (defect rates, error rates, customer satisfaction), degrees of compliance (to regulatory requirements, industry standards, company policies), automation data
Finances
revenue, expenses, profit and loss statements, cash flow statement, balance sheets, KPIs, credit card and bank details.

When collecting and using such data, a business has the responsibility to protect them. Businesses must also ensure they are PCI compliant and adhere to the Privacy Act 1988.

How does an organisation use data?

Data protection is just one aspect of data management, so it’s good to briefly look at this general lifecycle of data:

  1. Creation/Collection
  2. Storage & Organisation
  3. Access & Retrieval
  4. Processing & Analysis
  5. Transmission
  6. Retention or Destruction

Data creation involves obtaining information from your customers, employees, and vendors. After data is collected, you need to organise and store it. For this purpose, databases and data architectures can make it easier to access and retrieve data.

Once data is stored, it can be accessed for processing and/or transmission. With cloud computing and remote work setups, data is often stored in and accessed from multiple locations and devices. This makes it more vulnerable to cyber-attacks and data breaches.

After the data is organised, it needs to be processed and analysed, finding patterns and trends in the data using data analytics tools and techniques. Business decisions can then be made based on the insights gained from this analysis.

In the entire data management process, data protection is crucial to ensuring data security and integrity. An organisation needs to implement measures to protect data from unauthorised access, theft, or loss. Who should handle this?

Who is responsible for data security in your business?

Who is responsible for data security in your business?

The responsibility for protecting business data falls on everyone in the organisation, from the top management to the employees.

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