IT Induction and Information Security Awareness

IT Induction and Information Security Awareness
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Artikel-Nr:
9781849280334
Veröffentl:
2010
Einband:
Paperback
Erscheinungsdatum:
09.02.2010
Seiten:
54
Autor:
Valerie Maddock
Gewicht:
54 g
Format:
178x111x4 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Valerie Maddock holds a degree in Computer Science from the Open University and has over 35 years' experience in IT. Since 1996 she has been employed in the IT department of the Salvation Army UK. She created the department's IT Learning and User Support Unit, and also developed an online IT Induction programme for the needs of the Salvation Army's staff.
Where your information security is concerned, prevention is better than cure.If you want to tackle the problem of information security, you cannot rely on the help of technology alone. Information security breaches tend to occur as a result of human, as well as technological, failings. However, the human factor usually receives far less attention.


Training
Computer systems are complex, so people who work with them often need to be trained in how to use them correctly. This applies especially to your company's information security. The loss of a memory stick by a careless employee, or the downloading of a file that contains a virus, may be all it takes to cause a security breach.

Practical advice

This book offers you practical advice on how to develop an IT Induction programme for your staff that can help safeguard your business information. By providing your employees with simple instruction in good IT working practices, and by making sure they know what is expected of them, you can strengthen your company's information security and reduce the risk that your data will be stolen or lost.

A sense of responsibility

Encouraging good corporate working and a strong sense of responsibility are, the author argues, essential for the protection of your business information. She shows you how to strike the right balance in your approach to staff training, thereby enabling you to provide your employees with an IT Induction that is at once informative and accessible.

Benefits to business include:

¿Reduce the likelihood of a damaging security breach. Putting in place a programme of IT Induction will help ensure that your company's staff are following information security best practice. Educating employees in good IT working practices will help them to avoid the errors that might otherwise put your organisation at risk.


¿Protect the company's reputation. The damage an information security breach can do to your business goes beyond the initial cost of clearing up the mess. Without proper staff training, the danger is that theft or loss of data will damage your company's reputation. You need to provide your staff with a proper IT Induction in order to preserve good relations with your customers.


¿Avoid legal complications. IT offers business new, less formal means of communication. Employees write e-mails in a different style from the way they write letters. However, contracts can be made or broken via e-mail, and e-mail correspondence can be cited in litigation. An IT Induction programme will give your staff the appropriate guidance on e-mail communication with the clients or business partners of your company.


¿Manage employee working practices. Laptop computers and broadband mean that for many employees, the boundaries between work and home are becoming blurred. If you allow your staff to mix and match between working in the office and working from home, you need to make sure they know what they have to do to safeguard your firm's data both inside and outside the office.
As the author comments, ""Empowering and trusting employees, through good educational practices and advice specific to their needs, is the best solution to address information security risk"".

'This clearly written booklet is soundly based in practice, and I challenge anyone with responsibilities in IT or HR in an organisation not to find value in it.'


David Clayden

About the author

Valerie Maddock holds a degree in Computer Science from the Open University and has over 35 years' experience in IT. Since 1996 she has been employed in the IT department of the Salvation Army UK. She created the department's IT Learning and User Support Unit, and also developed an online IT Induction programme for the needs of the Salvation Army's staff.
Chapter 1: Putting IT Induction in Perspective Chapter 2: The Target Audience Chapter 3: Whose Responsibility is it Anyway? Chapter 4: Indicative Content System Access System Resources Connectivity E-mail Web Facilities Health & Safety IT Services Chapter 5: Delivery Options Chapter 6: Making IT Induction Part of a New User Process Case Study Chapter 7: IT Induction - a One Time Only Experience? ITG Resources

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