Six Steps to A Vibrant Remote Workforce [Part 1]

Posted by Tim Femister on Jun 4, 2020 10:00:00 AM

Operating a remote workforce is no longer just a remote possibility. A work-from-home war is being quietly waged across many organizations throughout the country, as workers who were forced to quickly establish home office environments now wish to remain in their home rather than return to commuting to an office. This tipping point has deep and wide ramifications for organizations attempting to return to pre-COVID-19 productivity levels. 

The next normal will be led by organizations that embrace a vibrant remote workforce culture and establish a productive, hybrid workplace. Organizations will begin to leverage their remote workforce capabilities as an integral component to recruiting top talent, similar to how Silicon Valley start-ups promote their expansive food and beverage benefits.

When employees were first sent to work from home, organizations scrambled to provide work-from-home software, devices, and infrastructure and accomplished the herculean task of supporting a mass remote workforce in six to nine days when it would normally take six to nine months. As we transition to a new normal, it’s now important to reevaluate the initial infrastructure laid to support remote workers against a lasting, best-practice architecture.

Remote Workforce Pillars

1. Secure Workspace

Millions of computing devices – ranging from laptops, Chromebooks, tablets, and more – were purchased to support work from home environments. Due to supply constraints, many workers leveraged devices they already had at home or purchased and expensed a new device from a local retailer. However, with millions of workers now connecting their home to headquarters via fresh-out-of-the-box devices, security risk becomes an exponential concern. Couple the increased risk with the well-cited increase in targeted attacks and a perfect storm begins to brew, challenging organizations to defend against a much broader attack surface.

Organizations seeking to secure their remote workforce can focus on a few key elements to assist in their journey. It’s important to remember that the traditional tools of past, such as a traditional firewall and anti-virus, are no longer effective means of stopping modern-day malware. Advancements in “next-generation” platforms have come a long way to match wits against leading threats. A next-generation endpoint solution, paired with a secure method for remote access to corporate resources, is a strong starting point to securing the user experience.  Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) is another integral component to the remote workforce security fabric. Credential compromise, especially across cloud applications, is a very real issue, and without a secondary method of authentication, attackers can often gain relatively simple access to corporate assets by applying stolen credentials.

Of course, the list does not stop here – Robust email filtering, patching, cyber awareness training, and more are important elements to a secure remote workforce strategy.

2. Resilient Connectivity

Reliably connecting home to headquarters is a challenge that should not be underestimated.  Internet service providers continue to face a rising demand to support streaming video traffic, whether it be a corporate video meeting, a remote learning classroom, or the latest blockbuster. Localized outages impacting a primary hub can result in a global workforce twiddling thumbs waiting to be reconnected. These outages apply beyond just internet service, as an organization’s core IT infrastructure was often never designed to support a fully remote workforce. Firewalls are overloaded by VPN usage, core routers become saturated, and connectivity to clouds reach capacity.

Software-defined WAN (SD-WAN) has taken off in recent years—and for good reason. A benefit of a remote workforce includes limited need for expensive MPLS circuits, which can be converted to multiple, high-throughput internet circuits.  A strong SD-WAN solution will also enable the infrastructure to make automated decisions for traffic routing to best utilize and preserve the available capacity. For organizations that require an immediate infrastructure upgrade or desire elasticity, hosting remote access infrastructure virtually in a public cloud will enable organizations to increase (and decrease) capacity on-demand.

3. Data Protection

We’ve entered a time where data has both never been more valuable nor under greater attack.  The data economy is rivaled only by the extortion economy, with cybersecurity in the center of a global battle. Organizations are finding it crucial to uphold the ability to not only protect their data, but also recover it. The recent evolution of ransomware has resulted in attackers encrypting as a last act—rather than the first—with data backups being targeted for deletion or encryption prior to launching the broader ransomware attack. As such, we saw the average ransomware payment skyrocket to over $84,000 toward the end of 2019.

A robust remote workforce data protection program incorporates a few key elements. First, remote workspace (user) and workload (server) data needs to be consistently and automatically backed up to a secure, central repository following a set, structured schedule. It’s important to remember that these backups are a lynchpin to payment for many attackers, which is why we’re seeing an industry shift toward the notion of cyber recovery vs. disaster recovery. It’s far more likely an organization will suffer from a ransomware attack than a data center burning down. Cyber recovery introduces the concept of immutability and focuses on rapid recovery from a sophisticated cyber-attack.

Check back for the second part of this blog series to learn more about Remote Workforce Pillars 4-6. Don’t want to wait? Download the full guide.



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Topics: Unified Communications, Data Center, Cyber Security, Video, Remote Working, COVID-19


 

Tim Femister
Tim Femister  -- Tim Femister is the senior leader for ConvergeOne’s award-winning Cloud, Cybersecurity, and Infrastructure Solutions. Tim is fiercely passionate about helping organizations connect, protect and leverage their digital assets in a manner that drives transformational value. He is a keynote speaker and presenter on topics related to digital, cloud and security transformation as well as an active member of the Forbes Technology Council, contributor to Forbes.com and featured in local and national media and entertainment coverage.