Implementing Zero Trust
- Improved privileged access management using ‘Zero Trust’;
- Limiting exposure of sensitive data in light of the remote workforce and targeted attacks and new cybercrime scams;
- Essential steps for implementing ‘Zero Trust’ and stakeholder engagement
- CISO’s Journey
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Zero Trust is a security concept centered on the fact that organizations should not automatically trust anything outside and inside its perimeters and instead must verify everything trying to connect to its systems prior to granting access. This extra layer of protection has been established to prevent data breaches.
Businesses are presently functioning more differently than they did just a few years ago. We find that devices, employees, and also applications are no longer locked inside the corporate perimeter. They are all on the web and hence a unique approach is needed to provide security for a whole new type of anywhere, anytime workers and cloud-based applications. Organizations are now moving away from solutions that secure the perimeter and are instead going towards employing a zero trust model in order to protect sensitive data and resources.
Zero Trust Definition
A zero trust security solution constantly evaluates trust every time a device or user requests access to a resource. This method prevents attackers from exploiting vulnerabilities in the perimeter to gain entry and then access confidential data and applications.
Zero Trust Principles you need know
The traditional approach of access control for IT has been based on restricting access to a corporate network and then supplementing it with more controls as appropriate. This model restricts all resources to a corporate owned network connection and has become too restrictive to meet the needs of a dynamic enterprise.
Microsoft Zero Trust : https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/cloud-adoption-framework/secure/access-control#known-trusted-allowed
Organizations must embrace a zero trust approach to access control as they embrace remote work and use cloud technology to digitally transform their business model, customer engagement model, employee engagement, and empowerment model.
Zero trust principles help establish and continuously improve security assurances, while maintaining flexibility to keep pace with this new world. Most zero trust journeys start with access control and focus on identity as a preferred and primary control while they continue to embrace network security technology as a key element. Network technology and the security perimeter tactic are still present in a modern access control model, but they aren’t the dominant and preferred approach in a complete access control strategy.
CISO Insight
Cybersecurity is not a product you buy or a project you complete — it is a continuous operational discipline. Organisations achieving genuine maturity embed security thinking into every business decision, invest in people and processes alongside technology, and build resilience for when preventive controls inevitably fail.
The Evolving Cybersecurity Landscape
The threat landscape continues evolving at a pace challenging even well-resourced teams. AI-powered attacks, supply chain compromises, ransomware-as-a-service, and state-sponsored campaigns create a multi-dimensional environment no single technology addresses. Organisations defending most effectively take a risk-based approach — understanding which assets are critical, which threats most likely, and where investments create greatest impact. For CISOs, translating complexity into actionable strategy requires quantifying cyber risk in business terms, prioritising based on risk reduction, and communicating in language that resonates with non-technical stakeholders.
Building a Defence-in-Depth Strategy
Effective cybersecurity requires layered defences addressing the full attack lifecycle. No single control is sufficient; every control can be bypassed by determined adversaries. The goal is creating enough layers that attackers must overcome multiple independent defences, while ensuring detection and response capabilities contain breaches before catastrophic damage. The most common mistake is treating security as a technology problem. The fundamentals — patch management, access control, security awareness, incident response planning — prevent more breaches than advanced technology.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the biggest cybersecurity mistake organisations make?
Buying tools without coherent strategy, skipping basic hygiene for advanced solutions, and failing to invest in people and processes. Fundamentals prevent more breaches than advanced technology.
How should CISOs prioritise security investments?
Start with risk assessment identifying critical assets and likely threats. Prioritise highest-risk scenarios. Ensure basic hygiene before advanced capabilities. Use NIST CSF or CIS Controls to structure your programme.
Related reading: Visit our Cyber Resilience Hub or download the CISO Toolkit.


