2nd & 3rd June 2025
Radisson Hotel & Conference Centre, London Heathrow
3rd & 4th November 2025
Radisson Blu Hotel Manchester Airport
Search
Close this search box.

Gaps in cyber crisis readiness leaving healthcare organisations at risk

A study has highlighted an ‘urgent need’ for unified cyber crisis management, as most organisations – including within the healthcare sector – are not keeping up with preparedness requirements

Semperis’ research, The State of Enterprise Cyber Crisis Readiness, highlights a ‘dangerous’ gap between perceived readiness and real-world response capabilities.

“Cyberattacks don’t check your calendar — they hit when you’re at your weakest,” said Marty Momdjian, Semperis, EVP, Ready1. “In moments of crisis, it’s not about rising to the occasion, but falling back on the strength of your preparation.”

Based on a global survey of 1,000 organisations in the US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand, the report reveals a sobering reality:

  • 96% of companies globally say they have a cyber crisis response plan.
  • Yet 71% experienced at least one high-impact cyber event that halted critical business functions last year.
  • 36% suffered multiple high-impact events.
  • 90% activated their enterprise crisis response plan at least once in the past year — some more than 25 times.
  • Only 10% report no blockers during incident response.

In the UK specifically, the report highlights that nearly half (49%) of businesses had to activate their crisis response teams up to four times in the past year due to cyber incidents. A further 37% activated their crisis response team five or more times.

Despite frequent testing, most organisations are not battle-ready due to disjointed processes, poor coordination and tool sprawl. Surprisingly, staffing shortages ranked last on the list of blockers.

Top 5 blockers to effective cyber response:

  1. Cross-team communication gaps (48%)
  2. Out-of-date response plans (45%)
  3. Unclear roles and responsibilities (41%)
  4. Too many disparate tools (40%)
  5. Staffing shortages (ranked last globally at 39%)

Staffing shortages were only listed as the biggest blocker in Italy and New Zealand. In the US, incident responders ranked outdated response plans and cross-team communications gaps as the biggest blockers. In France and Germany, tool sprawl was the biggest blocker. Cross-team communications gaps was also the top blocker in the UK, Australia, Singapore and Spain.

IT/telecom industries experienced the most high-impact cyber events, followed by energy, travel/transportation, education and healthcare.

Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *