THREE REASONS WHY YOUR COMPANY NEEDS ROBUST IDENTITY HYGIENE AND HOW TO IMPLEMENT IT

May 30, 2023 3:33:32 PM EDT | Blog Three Reasons Why Your Company Needs Robust Identity Hygiene and How to Implement It

Discover the importance of robust identity hygiene for organizations in preventing data breaches and maintaining cybersecurity. Learn how to implement effective strategies to safeguard sensitive information.

SPHERE’s CEO & Founder, Rita Gurevich, was featured in Forbes Councils newest publication “Three Reasons Why Your Company Needs Robust Identity Hygiene and How to Implement It”


With the increase in virtual work environments, online employee credentials and mismanaged identity access present a unique problem for highly regulated organizations and enterprises. According to Verizon’s 2022 Data Breach Investigations Report, “The human element continues to be a key driver of 82% of breaches.” Once a threat actor is in the door, hidden malware and compromised credentials can offer even more access to an organization’s sensitive data.

To prevent attacks that use employee credentials to gain access to highly sensitive information, organizations need robust and reliable identity hygiene to clean up their security posture. Identity hygiene covers the strategy that organizations and individuals put in place to regularly maintain data, infrastructure and application security.

The goal of identity hygiene is to ensure the right people have the right access to the right information, so no data is accessed maliciously.

Increased visibility limits how identities are created and managed.

As an organization, you can’t exactly protect yourself from threats you don’t know exist. With a majority of data breaches being attributed to open access and a lack of preventative countermeasures put in place, inherent risk is the true problem at hand. Security teams need to know exactly who has access to what data and what entitlements they hold while doing so.

Once you have full visibility into access controls, you can standardize the process to ensure that as identities are created or modified, you’ll capture the fundamentals about the identity, who owns it and what it is used for.

This offers security teams more control over an organization’s cyber risk profile, allowing them the authority they need to proactively address malicious activity, rather than having delayed reactions to threats, most likely when they’ve already had the opportunity to cause damage.

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Caroline Kinlin

Written By: Caroline Kinlin

Caroline Kinlin, Serving as SPHERE's Chief Marketing Officer has over two decades of experience in B2B marketing, specializing in go-to-market strategies and operations and leading dynamic teams. Her achievements include enhancing marketing scalability, managing budgets effectively, and significantly improving sales pipelines by 300-500% while reducing customer acquisition costs by 30-40% in the SaaS, cybersecurity, and data security industries. Caroline holds an MBA from Monmouth University and a Bachelor's from Loyola University. Beyond her professional accomplishments, she mentors emerging talent and advises professional organizations, showcasing a leadership style that values creativity, pragmatism, and empowerment.