Assess the cybersecurity maturity of your industrial systems amid growing regulatory requirements.
Try for freeManufacturing long considered its production systems isolated from typical cyber risks. Growing convergence between IT management systems and connected industrial systems has erased that isolation, exposing equipment historically under-secured.
The NIS2 directive also widens the scope of companies subject to strengthened cybersecurity obligations, now affecting many industrial players previously outside the regulatory scope.
A production halt caused by a cyber incident has a direct, immediate cost, unlike other sectors where impact can stay deferred. This particular exposure justifies an approach to cybersecurity centered on business continuity as much as data protection.
Many industrial companies belatedly discover they fall within NIS2's scope, with risk management, incident notification and governance obligations that require structured preparation rather than a last-minute reaction.
A relevant diagnostic for manufacturing covers both classic information systems and challenges specific to industrial environments: network segmentation between IT and OT, management of remote access to production equipment.
Scope depends on industry sector and company size; many industrial subcontractors fall within scope through their membership in a critical supply chain.
It covers governance and segmentation challenges linked to industrial systems, complementing a specialized technical audit for the most critical OT equipment.
Production halts caused by ransomware or an intrusion rank among the costliest risks, often far exceeding the direct cost of a data leak.
No, an initial diagnostic helps prioritize the highest-impact actions before committing to larger investments.
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