Executive Travel Security and Spyware Risk
This TNCR Executive Research project was shaped by input from TNCR Research Contributor Lonnie Garris, who raised the issue of executive travel security in an era of increasingly sophisticated spyware, zero-click exploits, and targeted device compromise. As executives and other key personnel travel to higher-risk regions, organizations must balance the need to stay connected with the responsibility to protect sensitive communications, credentials, devices, and corporate information.
This poll seeks practical input from CIOs, CISOs, and senior technology leaders on how organizations are managing secure connectivity, device protection, and travel-related cyber risk for executives and other high-value travelers.
Research Questions
- 1. How mature is your organization’s approach to protecting executives and other high-value travelers from device compromise, spyware, or targeted cyber threats during travel?
- 2. What precautions does your organization take for executives or other personnel traveling to higher-risk regions?
- 3. What are your top concerns about executive connectivity during travel?
- 4. How does your organization typically handle access to corporate systems during higher-risk travel?
- 5. What is the biggest challenge in getting executives or senior personnel to follow travel security precautions?
- 6. What practical advice would you give another technology or security leader trying to reduce spyware, device compromise, or connectivity risk for executives during travel?
- 7. May we attribute your response to you when sharing these insights in an article or research summary?
Participate in this research →
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