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IT Failure Costing Business Thousands

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Organisations are struggling to stay on top of costly technology risks, according to a new report by KPMG

The Technology Risk Radar, which tracks the major technology incidents faced by businesses and public sector bodies, reveals the cost of IT failures over the last 12 months. It found that, on average, employers had to pay an unplanned £410,000 for each technology-related problem they faced. The report also reveals that an average of 776,000 individuals were affected - and around 4 million bank and credit card accounts were compromised - by each IT failure.

Incidents caused by ‘avoidable’ problems such as software coding errors or failed IT changes accounted for over 50 percent of the IT incidents reported over the past year. Of these, 7.3 percent of reported events were the fault of human error - a figure which shows that basic investments in training are being ignored at the employers’ cost. Further, while data loss related incidents continued to be a major problem for all industries, a significant number of those (16 percent) were unintentional.

KPMG’s Tech Risk Radar reveals that customer-facing organisations are quickly realising the true cost of systems failures if they are left unchecked. For instance, a utility company faced a £10 million fine when technical glitches during the transfer to a new billing system meant customers did not receive bills for months and were then sent inaccurate payment demands or refused prompt refunds when errors were eventually acknowledged.

Commenting on the findings of the Technology Risk Radar report, Jon Dowie, Partner in KPMG’s Technology Risk practice said: “Technology is no longer a function within a business which operates largely in insolation. It is at the heart of everything a company does and, when it goes wrong it affects an organisation’s bottom line, its relationship with customers and its wider reputation.

“Investment in technology will continue to rise as businesses embrace digital and other opportunities, but this needs to be matched by investments in assessing, managing and monitoring the associated risks. At a time when even our regulators have shown themselves to be vulnerable to technology risk, no one can afford to be complacent.”

With financial services under enormous pressure to maintain highly secure technology infrastructure, KPMG predicts IT complexity will continue to be the single biggest risk to financial services organisations in the coming year. This is closely followed by ineffective governance, risk and non-compliance with regulations. Security risks – such as cyber-crime and unauthorised access - are rated fifth.

Jon Dowie adds: “With ever greater complexity in IT systems – not to mention the challenge of implementing IT transformational change – companies are running to stand still in managing their IT risks. The cost of failure is all too clear. It is crucial for both public and private sector organisations to understand the risks associated with IT and how they can be managed, mitigated and avoided.”