A friend of mine runs a successful firm, and like many owners, he’s been looking for ways to trim overhead. He told me, with a bit of a proud grin, that he saved a few thousand dollars this year by simplifying his IT stack and letting go of his managed security plan in favor of a basic off-the-shelf antivirus.
He asked me if it was all essentially the same stuff anyway.
Most businesses are sitting on a mountain of data, but they’re treating it like a junk drawer. Adding a fancier drawer—like some five-figure AI-powered document management suite—doesn't help if you’re still just tossing stuff in there.
You probably don't need more software. You need a system. Before you go spending money on a solution for a headache that shouldn't exist in the first place, you need to look at how you handle the information you already have.
I was talking to a long-time colleague the other day about his firm's recent brush with a compliance audit. He’s the type of owner who prides himself on having his ducks in a row, but he sounded rattled. He’d just received a formal notice regarding how his team was handling customer data, and his first instinct was confusion. He thought that because he had an antivirus and a firewall, he was covered.
I was talking to a friend the other day who runs a successful company. He’s the type of guy who knows his inventory down to the last decimal point. Still, when we sat down for coffee, he looked exhausted.
"I’m just so tired," he said, "One day the printer is offline, the next day one of my guys can’t sync his files. Just this morning, I got a suspicious email that looked a little too much like an invoice from my own CPA. I’m spending four hours a week playing the IT guy. I don’t know what I’m doing."
For years, the cybersecurity industry has coasted on the perception that zero-day vulnerabilities (bugs in software that the developers were not yet aware of) were not easy to find… but on April 6th, 2026, this perception shifted completely as Anthropic’s Claude Mythos AI model proved it very, very wrong.
Today’s threats are no longer the bugs we know about. They’re the thousands of previously unknown vulnerabilities that AI can identify (and weaponize) in mere moments.
Imagine one of your employees receives a phone call from someone who sounds exactly like you. They have your cadence, your "ums," and even that specific way you clear your throat before getting down to business. Would they be able to tell it’s a deepfake, or would they follow the instructions to urgently reset a password or move funds?
If you can’t answer that with an emphatic "yes," you’ve got some work to do. We’ve moved far beyond the era of the Nigerian Prince emails and obvious typos. We are now in the age of highly polished, AI-driven social engineering where the "bad guys" are using your own identity against your team.
It might sound crazy, but sometimes I miss the Nigerian Prince. Back in the day, the threats were almost charming in their incompetence. You had the broken English, the bizarre formatting, and the royal promises that were so obviously fake they were almost funny. If you had even a shred of common sense, you were safe.
But those days are gone.
In 2026, technology isn't just a support department—it's the engine of your business. But as tools like AI and cloud computing become more accessible, the margin for error has narrowed. A single misstep can lead to data breaches, wasted budgets, or total operational paralysis.
Once upon a time, a small business could conceivably make it relying on amateur or semi-professional technical support. This is no longer the case.
Nowadays, business IT is so crucial that a professional touch is a hard requirement for success… for reasons you may not initially consider.
Getting hit with ransomware feels like a digital kidnapping. Your files are locked, your business is paralyzed, and some hacker is demanding a massive bag of crypto to give you the keys back.
It’s tempting to just pay up to end the nightmare, but here’s the reality: Don’t do it. Even though attacks are hitting record highs this year, fewer people are actually paying than ever before. Here is why ghosting the hackers is the only winning move.
The mobile device is deeply ingrained in modern life, society, and culture, so it will be present in the workplace. This can be a very useful thing… with the right preparations, your employees can become a lot more mobile in terms of their potential productivity.
However, mobile work isn’t without its dangers. Perhaps the most obvious risk is that a device will be lost, whether it's left behind in a rideshare or pilfered as a latte is retrieved from the barista. Either way, your business will have suffered a data breach.
Let’s talk about how this outcome can be avoided with some proactive planning, thanks to mobile device management.
Most contemporary cyberthreats originate from social engineering. Typically, this involves deceptive phishing messages designed to lure users into compromising their own safety. While these attacks can occur across various platforms, email remains the primary weapon of choice for attackers.
To stay protected, let’s examine the key red flags that suggest an email is actually a phishing attempt.
Let’s say that today was the day a cyberattack successfully infiltrated your business network. Not good, but if you have a proper data backup, you should be safe… unless the party responsible prioritizes deleting your backup files.
While we would never recommend a business skip the data backup process, it is important to recognize that traditional backups have this critical vulnerability. To remedy this, we do recommend implementing immutable backups.
With automated threats on the rise and taking over the cyberthreat landscape, you need as many ways to stay safe online as possible. Naturally, one of the most talked about topics is login security. There’s a lot of good password advice out there, but the most helpful piece isn’t repeated often enough: just make it longer.
Modern gadgets make running a business easier. From smart thermostats and lightbulbs to connected coffee machines, the Internet of Things (IoT) brings a lot of convenience to the workplace. However, because these devices are built for speed and low cost, they often skip the security features your business actually needs.
Essentially every smart device in your office is a potential digital back door for hackers. Let’s take a look at how IoT—as helpful as it can be—can also be a big problem.
We’ve all heard the old proverb: “Data doesn’t exist unless it’s in three places.” For years, the 3-2-1 backup strategy was the industry gold standard. It was simple, effective, and kept us safe from hardware failures and accidental deletions.
However, the threat landscape has shifted. With the rise of sophisticated ransomware that specifically targets backup repositories, the traditional rule has evolved. Enter the 3-2-1-1 rule, the modern blueprint for organizational resilience.
Are you unknowingly leaving important data out in plain sight? Too many businesses will implement incredibly powerful security solutions only to ignore the basics of physical security. It’s time to address the hidden vulnerabilities that patches and updates won’t solve by scrutinizing your physical infrastructure.
As we push onward into 2026, it’s helpful to remember that the “good old days” are not necessarily as good as we remember them to be. When you would call your technology provider to deploy a patch or upgrade a system, you weren’t necessarily being “proactive”; you were being reactive without realizing it. In fact, managed service providers have evolved their model to reflect major disruptions in the tech industry.
Even if you’re doing everything right, business cybersecurity is a challenge. Mistakes are common. Passwords are forgotten, and physical buttons can go missing. That said, there is one form of authentication that you can’t help but have with you: yourself.
Biometrics have been experiencing a surge in popularity as a means of authentication. Let’s explore why that is.
For literal decades, we heard that a good password required a few key traits to be secure: a capital letter, a number, and eight characters. How times have changed, right?
Now, the baseline standards are similar… just multiplied to the nth degree. Let’s discuss why this is, what modern businesses now need to do, and how we can help to maintain password security moving forward.