Enterprise
We've curated 391 cybersecurity statistics about Enterprise to help you understand how large organizations are strengthening their defenses against complex threats and adopting advanced technologies to secure their vast networks in 2025.
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40.57% of respondents said email looking legitimate was a factor in fraudsters successfully bypassing enterprise systems.
29.19% of enterprises that experienced losses lost between $500K–$1M.
Only 27% of finance and cybersecurity leaders at enterprises said fraud prevention ownership is shared between finance and security teams.
Email and messaging security (44.6%) was among the controls with the highest failure rates in enterprise fraud attacks.
Bank account validation tools (26.5%) was among the controls with the highest failure rates in enterprise fraud attacks.
The top factor cited for attackers successfully bypassing systems was human error at 46.10%.
Employee security awareness training (32.2%) was among the controls with the highest failure rates in enterprise fraud attacks.
Nearly half (46%) of IT and security decision-makers report reducing their planned security investments for 2025 due to ongoing federal funding instability.
41% of IT and security decision-makers say budget or resource cuts have led to reduced capacity for detection and monitoring.
79% of U.K. IT and security decision-makers say growing U.S. cybersecurity instability has made them more cautious with U.S.-based vendors.
91% of organisations have taken new steps to protect operational resilience due to waning federal support.
29% of U.K. IT and security decision-makers have delayed or cancelled contracts due to growing U.S. cybersecurity instability.
85% of security teams have experienced budget or resource-related changes in the past six months.
48% of IT and security decision-makers say budget or resource cuts have led to team restructuring.
79% of IT and security decision-makers say federal defunding has increased overall cyber risk.
52% of IT and security decision-makers say budget or resource cuts have led to increased workloads without added support.
Over half (54%) of organisations have developed internal cybersecurity frameworks independent of government guidance.
81% of IT and security decision-makers believe that eroding confidence in public-private coordination will hinder threat intelligence sharing.
86% of IT and security decision-makers warn that the disbanding of the Cyber Safety Review Board will disrupt post-incident coordination.
As a result of U.S. cybersecurity instability, 43% of U.K. IT and security decision-makers have reassessed existing partnerships.