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Information Asset Protection

This Guideline specifies steps that an organization can take to develop and implement and effective risk-based information asset protection program.

To protect its information assets, organizations should establish a formal IAP program appropriate to its size and type. To be effective, the program should be tailored to the organization’s strategy, mission, and operating environment. Additional factors such as the organization’s scope, risk tolerance, decision making protocols, business practices, regulatory environment, public image, interrelationships, and culture play an important role in how the IAP program is designed and implemented.

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About the Guideline

pubcover-2447-sa.jpgThis Guideline specifies steps that an organization can take to develop and implement an effective risk-based information asset protection program. It provides guidance on program development and maintenance, and outlines management, legal, and security strategies organizations can employ to safeguard their information assets. This Guideline is applicable to organizations of all sizes and types.

All organizations possess information assets which are necessary in achieving organizational strategic goals and objectives. An organization’s competitive edge often is the result of information derived from creativity and innovation. Consequently, the loss of information would negatively impact the organization’s investment in personnel, time, finances, product, and/or property.

Information assets, like physical assets, need to be identified and measured (regardless of form) in terms of financial value or relation to organizational strategy. For that reason, organizations should consider the financial and strategic impact of information loss or security breach as part of its risk management approach. Documenting assets is a basic step that organizations should consider to fully understand their unique information environment.

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