The survey, released on Thursday, Oct. 3, was conducted by nonpartisan research firm Clarus Research Group, and consisted of responses gathered from 400 federal, state and local government decision-makers through online and telephone interviews, according to Cisco.
According to Cisco executives, this is their most comprehensive survey to date pertaining to public-sector IT. Questions covered an array of topics including broadband, software defined networking and law enforcement technologies.
But results showed a heavy focus on cybersecurity matters in government. Although 35 percent of respondents said budget constraints were the biggest threat to their IT infrastructure, 17 percent said that cyberattacks were the biggest threat, and 22 percent of respondents volunteered that all options offered on the survey (budget constraints, cyberattacks, limited bandwidth, increased demand for constituent services and employee personal devices) are collectively considered the greatest threat to IT organization.
|
Dan Lohrmann, Michigan’s chief security officer, agreed that the percentages sounded accurate for the government space and that his IT organization plans to make cybersecurity investment one of its top priorities.
“The ever-changing landscape of cyberthreats means that further upgrades are imperative,” Lohrmann said. “In Michigan, we will be making investments in all three [cybersecurity, cloud and networking].”
Efforts to combat cyberattacks are being led at the federal level, although more state and local governments are making cybersecurity a bigger priority, said Kim Majerus, vice president of state and local government and education for Cisco. Majerus added that CIOs that run state networks, in particular, are putting more energy into cybersecurity, looking to the federal government for best practices.
And ramping up these efforts will mean more investment. To strengthen cybersecurity efforts, the federal government intends to spend more than $13 billion in cybersecurity, $1 billion more than what it currently spends, according to the fiscal 2014 budget.
Larry Payne, vice president of the federal organization for Cisco, said survey results showed that IT leaders find the issue of cybersecurity to be bigger than just the technology, but that enforcement and training around cybersecurity is equally important.
“I think [IT officials] do see cyber as much broader than a technology problem. It’s also about policy, it’s about your process,” Payne said. “I think that’s the key that we found is there is no single answer to the cybersecurity issue; it’s really about a holistic view."