A survey of 250 U.S. and UK large enterprises with more $1 billion in revenue conducted by Security Compass, a provider of a platform for automating security tasks as application are developed, finds three-quarters (75%) have implemented DevSecOps processes on current application development projects.
Rohit Sethi, CEO, Security Compass, said the State of DevSecOps Report published today makes it clear more organizations are starting to embrace security by design as they develop their applications. Nearly three-quarters of respondents (73%) said their organizations follow a “by design” approach that enables them to proactively address cybersecurity and regulatory compliance.
The primary reasons respondents cited for embracing DevSecOps best practices were to improve security, quality and/or resilience (54%), followed by the ability to bring applications to market faster (30%). One of the misconceptions about DevSecOps is that it slows down application development and deployment. However, Sethi said, in practice, DevSecOps enables organizations to address security and compliance issues that would otherwise result in an application not being promoted into a production environment. Almost three-quarters of respondents (73%) noted that manual security and compliance processes slow down code releases. A full 96% said their organization would benefit from the automation of security and compliance processes.
The biggest DevSecOps obstacles cited by survey respondents included technical challenges (60%), followed by cost (40%), insufficient time (39%), lack of education (38%), lack of skills (36%) and organizational inertia (35%).
In terms of deploying applications, the biggest reasons cited by the 51 C-suite executives that participated in the survey were insufficient automation and lack of tooling, at 51% each. Organizational barriers came in a close third (50%).
In the longer term, Sethi said it’s clear most organizations are shifting toward zero-trust architectures to make their application environments more secure. However, achieving that goal across a broad application portfolio will require more investment in both automation and, eventually, various forms of artificial intelligence (AI), said Sethi.
It’s not clear to what degree smaller organizations will have the tools and resources required to fund adoption of the automation platforms needed to advance DevSecOps more broadly. There’s more awareness of DevSecOps than ever. The challenge is the tools and processes required to achieve it are not uniformly being pushed into the hands of the individual developer. In some cases, organizational leaders are encouraging developers to embrace DevSecOps without any practical guidance.
Eventually, of course, every organization will embrace DevSecOps best practices, but the real question is, at what rate? The number of applications organizations are rolling out continues to accelerate, but reliance on DevSecOps best practices to ensure security and compliance remains uneven, at best. Larger organizations that have the resources required to fund these initiatives tend to be further along in their adoption journey. However, there is no correlation between organizational size and the ability to build and deploy secure applications. After all, a smaller organization may make up for what they lack in resources with a greater commitment to DevSecOps best practices.