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Cybersecurity strategy guides how organizations prioritize risks, protect critical systems, and prepare for incidents, recovery, and resilience.

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Security strategy is the long-term direction an organization uses to manage information-security risk and support its business objectives. It sets priorities for protecting systems and data, assigns decision-making authority, defines acceptable risk, and guides investment in controls, skills, architecture, and suppliers. A sound strategy turns risk assessments and threat intelligence into measurable security outcomes rather than a disconnected list of tools.

For practitioners, strategy determines which assets and attack paths receive priority in vulnerability management, how privacy and regulatory obligations shape data handling, and what capabilities must exist for detection, containment, recovery, and testing. It should account for dependencies such as cloud services, software providers, identities, and legacy systems, while establishing review points as technology, threats, and business operations change. Effective governance links these choices to owners, budgets, metrics, and documented exceptions.

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Beyond the direct impact of cyberattacks, enterprises suffer from a secondary but potentially even more costly risk: operational downtime, any amount of which translates into very real damage. That’s why for CISOs, it’s key to prioritize decisions that reduce dwell time and protect their company from risk.  Three strategic steps you can take this year for better results: 1. Focus on today's

If there’s a constant in cybersecurity, it’s that adversaries are always innovating. The rise of offensive AI is transforming attack strategies and making them harder to detect. Google’s Threat Intelligence Group, recently reported on adversaries using Large Language Models (LLMs) to both conceal code and generate malicious scripts on the fly, letting malware shape-shift in real-time to evade