When IT Isn’t Enough for Cybersecurity

Generalists Are No Longer Enough

By: Marc Schwartz, President of Ozone IT Services

In nearly every professional setting—whether at an industry conference, client dinner, or casual networking event—conversations inevitably turn to a familiar question: “What do you do?”

It’s a natural progression. These exchanges help build a trusted network—the modern version of “I know someone who can help with that.” Over time, most professionals develop a reliable roster: legal counsel, financial advisors, contractors, and specialized trades. After years managing complex projects, many can easily call on experts ranging from electricians to structural engineers.

Yet in today’s business environment, one role is consistently underrepresented in that network: a dedicated cybersecurity expert.

The Expanding Threat Landscape

Cybersecurity is no longer a niche IT concern—it is a core business risk. According to Cybersecurity Ventures, global cybercrime damages are projected to reach $10.5 trillion annually, while IBM reports the average cost of a data breach is approximately $4.4–$4.5 million. The estimated costs and impacts of global cybercrime make it one of the largest economic threats worldwide.  

The scale is equally staggering. Research from Check Point Software Technologies indicates that organizations face thousands of attempted attacks per week, many of them automated, opportunistic, and increasingly powered by AI. These attacks are not hypothetical—they are constant, persistent, and indiscriminate. 

Most are unsuccessful, but cybersecurity is not about reacting to the majority that fail; it is about preventing the one that succeeds.

The “Set It and Forget It” Risk

Many organizations believe they are protected because they have implemented foundational tools: firewalls, antivirus software, and backup systems. While these are essential, they are not sufficient on their own. 

A firewall, for example, is only as effective as its configuration and maintenance. Threat actors continuously evolve tactics, and security vendors release frequent updates to address new vulnerabilities. Without consistent monitoring, patching, and tuning, even the most advanced firewall becomes outdated—sometimes within weeks. 

This “set it and forget it” approach remains one of the most common—and most dangerous—gaps in business security posture. 

Cybersecurity Is a Discipline, Not a Task

Effective cybersecurity requires continuous attention across multiple layers, including: 

  • Network security (firewalls, intrusion detection)  
  • Endpoint protection and anti-malware  
  • Identity and access management, including multi-factor authentication  
  • Ongoing vulnerability management and patching 

These are not one-time implementations. They are ongoing disciplines that demand specialized expertise, current threat intelligence, and operational rigor. 

Relying on a generalist IT resource—no matter how capable—often means cybersecurity becomes one responsibility among many. In today’s environment, that is a material risk.

The Case for a Dedicated Cybersecurity Partner

Just as businesses rely on specialized advisors for legal, financial, or operational matters, cybersecurity requires focused expertise. A dedicated cybersecurity professional or partner brings: 

  • Proactive threat monitoring and response  
  • Continuous system updates and hardening  
  • Alignment with evolving compliance and regulatory standards  
  • Strategic guidance on risk management and resilience  

Most importantly, they bring accountability, ensuring that security is not assumed, but actively managed. 

A Simple Question for Every Business Leader

If a cybersecurity incident occurred today, who is responsible for preventing it—and responding to it? 

If the answer is unclear, incomplete, or based on assumption, it may be time to reassess. 

Because in a world where cyber threats are constant, sophisticated, and increasingly automated, knowing “a guy” is no longer enough. 

You need a team.

Take Action

Start with an assessment. Ask your team and your MSP: when was your last successful restore of ERP/OT? Who validated it independently?

If you can’t answer confidently, schedule an independent recovery readiness assessment now—test one workload this quarter and quantify your real recovery time and data loss exposure.

Contact Us 

Chris Mackin is Vice President of Sales at Ozone IT Services with more than 25 years of experience designing and delivering cybersecurity and IT solutions that help organizations reduce risk, protect revenue, and operate with confidence. He is a trusted advisor to business and technology leaders, known for aligning Backup as a Service (BaaS), Patching as a Service (PaaS), and security infrastructure strategies to real-world operational and financial goals. 

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