
Small Business, Big Targets: Strengthening Your Cyber Defenses This May
We are in the heart of National Small Business Week (May 3–9, 2026). While this week is about celebrating growth and community, it’s also a time for a “reality check” on the digital front. Many small business owners believe they are “too small to be hacked.” In reality, the opposite is true. Hackers often target small businesses precisely because they tend to have weaker defenses than major corporations.
In 2026, a single data breach costs a small business an average of $$150,000$. For many, that isn’t just a setback—it’s a “business-ending” event. This is where Cyber Liability Insurance becomes your most valuable employee.
Why General Liability Isn’t Enough
A common misconception is that your “Business Owners Policy” (BOP) or General Liability covers data breaches. It does not. General Liability covers physical damage (like someone tripping in your store). If a hacker steals your customers’ credit card info or locks your files with “Ransomware,” you need a specific Cyber policy to cover:
- Notification Costs: The legal requirement to tell every affected customer.
- Ransomware Payments: Negotiating with and paying “digital kidnappers” to get your data back.
- Business Interruption: Replacing the income you lost while your systems were down.
Small Business “Cyber Hygiene” Checklist:
This week, as you celebrate your business, take these three steps to lower your risk (and potentially your premiums):
- Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA): Ensure every login requires a second code. This alone stops $90%$ of common attacks.
- Employee Training: Most breaches start with a simple “phishing” email. Spend 30 minutes training your staff on how to spot a fake link.
- Encrypted Backups: Keep your data in a secure, off-site cloud. If you are hacked, you can “wipe and restore” rather than paying a ransom.
Small businesses are the soul of our community. Protecting your digital assets ensures that your soul—and your shop—stays open for years to come.
