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Building a Stronger Phishing Resilience Culture
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Stephanie Goetz : April 24, 2026
Over the years in my career, I’ve heard assumptions made by leaders that because they are a smaller institution:
While that was found to be the case in reports prior to 2013, it may no longer be true according to Verizon’s 2025 Data Breach Investigations Report (DBIR). Small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) face a threat landscape that is converging with that of large organizations—similar motives, similar attack patterns, and high incident frequency—despite significant differences in security budget and staffing. So, they may be, in fact, more likely to be targeted and impacted by an incident.
|
Organization Type |
Employee Count |
Revenue |
Security Incidents |
Confirmed Breaches |
|
SMBs |
fewer than 1,000 |
Less than $1B |
3,049 |
2,842 |
|
Large organizations |
1,000+ |
$1B+ |
982 |
751 |
For smaller institutions, the key takeaway is straightforward: we should assume that attackers will use the same playbook they use against large institutions—credential abuse, phishing/pretexting, and vulnerability exploitation—while expecting our constraints to make rapid detection and recovery more challenging.
Smaller institutions should assume they are operating in an environment where attackers can achieve “enterprise-level” outcomes with “SMB-level” effort: acquire credentials (often from reuse or infostealer ecosystems), phish or pretext employees and vendors, and exploit externally exposed systems (especially perimeter devices and remote access services). The DBIR’s SMB findings reinforce that size is not a meaningful shield; rather, it influences how attackers price extortion and how quickly a victim can detect, contain, and recover. This makes resiliency (including ransomware recovery) and identity controls (including MFA and conditional access) critical management priorities.
The 2025 DBIR SMB analysis supports a clear message: small institutions face the same attacker motives and common attack methods as large enterprises, and security strategies should assume that equivalence. The most effective risk reduction comes from concentrating on the recurring entry paths (credentials, phishing/pretexting, and vulnerability exploitation) and from ensuring operations can continue even during disruptive events such as ransomware.
If you need help with any or all of these areas, we specialize in supporting small and medium-sized institutions in affordable programs that work for them. Please use our Contact Us form to get more information.
Source: Verizon 2025 Data Breach Investigations Report, “Small- and medium-sized businesses” focused analysis section (and related organization-size comparison tables/figures). Figures quoted above are taken directly from the report’s SMB comparison content.
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