What I learned at FIC 2026
Summary
The author's experience at FIC 2026 emphasizes a critical shift towards a transversal vision of resilience, moving beyond specific risk coverage due to global changes like wars and political instability. Resilience is now a "crash test," as demonstrated by the Jaguar Land Rover cyberattack, which caused a 43.3% drop in wholesale sales and a 64.4% drop in North America. New accumulating risks include "Techflation," extraterritoriality of law, and transatlantic decoupling, necessitating a Chief Resiliency Officer role to manage these interconnected challenges transversally, distinct from a traditional Chief Risk Officer. This urgency is further driven by accelerating regulatory frameworks such as NIS2, DORA (January 2025), and the Cyber Resilience Act, with NIS2 alone expanding its scope to 10,000-15,000 additional organizations. The article suggests that continuous management of resilience is now mandated by these regulations and the evolving global landscape.
Key takeaway
The evolving landscape of interconnected geopolitical, cyber, and economic threats (e.g., techflation, extraterritoriality) demands a new Chief Resiliency Officer (CRO) role to manage transversal risks beyond traditional silos. This is exemplified by "crash test" events like Jaguar Land Rover's 43.3% sales drop post-cyberattack and mandated by regulations such as NIS2, which expands compliance to 10,000-15,000 additional organizations. Professionals must adopt this holistic, actionable resilience strategy to ensure continuous operational integrity and adapt organizational strategy in a world where dependence is measurable.
Topics
- InCyber Forum
- Organizational Resilience
- Chief Resiliency Officer
- Cyberattack Impact
- Digital Sovereignty
Best for: CTO, VP of Engineering/Data, Executive, Security Engineer, Policy Maker, Consultant
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Editorial summary, takeaway, and curation by AIssential. Original article published by Éditions Cybernetica.