How Business Email Compromise Attacks Threaten Organizations

Email is one of the most important tools used by cybercriminals to launch attacks against organizations.

A particular tactic often used by criminals is the Business Email Compromise (BEC), where the fraudster forges a trusted contact to defraud a business.

The “The 2021 Business Email Compromise Report” by security provider GreatHorn focuses on the latest BEC campaigns. Based on an online survey of 270 IT and cybersecurity experts in the U.S. from May 2021, the report highlighted various trends, challenges and gaps in the fight against BEC attacks and related email threats.

71% of respondents pointed to BEC attacks that manipulate e-mail accounts or websites.

69% cited spear-phishing, which targets specific individuals or roles in an organization, with the most targeted department funded, followed by the CEO and then the IT group.

Other susceptible departments include HR, marketing and sales.

Another 24% cited malware, in particular, emails containing malicious files or other content.

The survey also revealed an increase in spear-phishing attacks.

65% of respondents said their organization will be affected by these types of attacks in 2021, while 39% of respondents said they now experience spear phishing attempts weeklyly.

Malicious emails remain a threat: one in four respondents said that 76% to 100% of the malware they receive is sent by email.

57% of these malicious links are used to steal internal account data, often from C-suite executives and financial employees. Such links also aim to install malware as a setup for ransomware and payment fraud.

43% of respondents said they had been affected by a security incident in the last 12 months, with many citing BEC and phishing attacks as the source.

As a result, 36% reported that accounts were compromised, 24% that malware was installed, 16% that company data was lost, and 16% reported payment fraud.

Here are some ways to avoid BEC attacks:

  • Focus on defense in depth and not one-stop “anti-phishing” solutions.
  • Identify malicious links in emails.

For more information, read the original story in TechRepublic.

Top Stories

Related Articles

May 31, 2025 A coordinated supply chain attack has compromised between 500 and 1,000 e-commerce websites by exploiting vulnerabilities in 21 more...

May 31, 2025 A widely used open-source Go library, easyjson, used in healthcare, finance and even defence has come under scrutiny more...

May 31, 2025 (EDITORIAL) A messaging tool used by Trump administration officials to archive encrypted Signal messages has been hacked — more...

April 22, 2025 Anthropic, a leading artificial intelligence company, anticipates that AI-powered virtual employees could begin operating within corporate networks as more...

Jim Love

Jim Is and author and pud cast host with over 40 years in technology.