Company Data Breach Now Costs $3.5M on Average: Ponemon Study

May 8, 2014

The average cost of a corporate data breach increased 15 percent in the last year to $3.5 million, according to a study by the Ponemon Institute.

The study also found that the cost incurred for each lost or stolen record containing sensitive and confidential information increased more than 9 percent to a consolidated average of $145. However, companies that said they have a strong security posture were able to reduce the cost by as much as $14 per record, the report said.

Consistent with Ponemon’s previous studies, the most common cause of a data breach is a malicious insider or criminal attack. But the causes of data breaches vary by country and also include human error and system failures, according to the report.

The most costly data breaches were those caused by malicious and criminal attacks. Companies in the U.S. and Germany paid the most for these attacks at $246 and $215 per compromised record, respectively.

The Ponemon Institute’s ninth annual Cost of Data Breach Study: Global Analysis tallied responses from 314 companies spanning 10 countries.

“The goal of this research is to not just help companies understand the types of data breaches that could impact their business but also the potential costs and how best to allocate resources to the prevention, detection and resolution of such an incident,” said Dr. Larry Ponemon, chairman and founder of the Ponemon Institute.

This year’s Cost of Data Breach Study also provides guidance on the likelihood an organization will have a data breach. The study is sponsored by IBM.

Among the study’s other key findings:

“Clearly, malicious insiders and criminal attacks are a growing concern for businesses, especially when we consider how persistent data has become in the age of cloud and mobility,” said Kris Lovejoy, general manager of IBM’s Security Services division. “A data breach can result in enormous damage to a business that goes way beyond the financials. At stake is customer loyalty and brand reputation.”

Companies in the study said that the greatest threats are malicious code and sustained probes. Companies estimate that they will be dealing with an average of 17 malicious codes and 12 sustained probes each month.

Unauthorized access incidents have mainly stayed the same, and companies estimate they will be dealing with an average of 10 such incidents each month.

Only 38 percent of companies have a security strategy to protect their IT infrastructure. A higher percentage (45 percent) has a strategy to protect their information assets.

Source: Ponemon Institute