• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Cybersecurity Market

Cybersecurity Technologies & Markets

  • Cybersecurity Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Market Reports
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

European Businesses Anticipate More Cybersecurity Attacks, But Feel Unprepared for Them

June 18, 2024 By admin Leave a Comment

New Cloudflare study reveals that 64% of business leaders expect a cybersecurity incident in the next 12 months, but only 29% feel highly prepared to defend against them

LONDON, June 18, 2024 – Cloudflare, Inc. (NYSE: NET), the leading connectivity cloud company, today released a new study focused on cybersecurity in Europe. The report, called “Shielding the Future: Europe’s Cyber Threat Landscape Report,” shares the latest data on how organisations are coping with rising volumes of cybersecurity incidents, their levels of preparedness, and top challenges.

These new findings reveal an ongoing concern around growing cybersecurity threats and a feeling of unpreparedness among European businesses.

Cybersecurity attacks are increasing in volume and frequency

The survey, which was conducted with more than 4,000 business and technology leaders across 13 European markets (Benelux, CEER, DACH, Nordics, Southern Europe, UK), found that 40% of organisations experienced a cybersecurity incident in the last 12 months.

Of those that suffered such an event, 84% report that the frequency of these events has increased over the same period, with almost one in five (16%) suffering a cybersecurity attack every 6-11 days. Meanwhile, 62% say that attacker dwell time has also increased in the same time period.

Looking ahead, two-thirds (66%) of respondents believe that they will see even more attacks within the next year and a significant 64% say that they expect to suffer a cybersecurity incident within the next 12 months.

Majority of organisations unprepared for cybersecurity threats

Concerningly, despite the increasing volume and frequency of these attacks, only 29% of respondents say they are highly prepared for cybersecurity incidents in the future.

Additionally, industries that had experienced fewer attacks were also among those least prepared. Just 28% of those working in healthcare and 31% of those working in education claimed to have suffered an attack in the last 12 months. For those same industries, the perceived level of preparedness for an incident in the future was low – just 18% and 19%, respectively.

The reverse is true for those in the IT & technology industry. With almost half (49%) being attacked in the last year, however, organisations in this field are seemingly on their guard. Over a third (35%) of respondents from this sector say they are highly prepared for an attack, making it the industry most confident in its ability to deal with an incident, followed by companies in financial services and retail (32% and 31%, respectively).

When looking at organisational size, the lack of preparation by smaller businesses is a particular concern, with only a quarter (25%) claiming to be highly prepared. Medium-sized and large businesses do not fare much better though, with only 27% and 32%, respectively, claiming high levels of preparedness.

The cost of a breach is more than financial

For those businesses impacted by a cybersecurity breach, more than a third of respondents (39%) say that the most significant effect remains financial. More than one in five (22%) claim to have lost revenue following an incident. In addition, 23% have suffered increased insurance premiums, 22% have paid fines, and another 23% have experienced legal action. A further one in five (19%) have been forced to lay off members of the team due to the financial losses experienced in the aftermath of an incident.

Looking at the numbers more closely, almost two-fifths (38%) of respondents say that the financial impact of the incidents they suffered cost between GBP 788,000 ($1M) and GBP 1.576 million ($2M), while a quarter (25%) estimated the loss to be GBP 1.576 million ($2M) or more.

A further 17% said that reputational damage was the most significant effect. Additionally, 31% put growth plans on hold in the aftermath of an incident, while over a quarter (28%) have temporarily suspended business operations.

Businesses aim to simplify and modernise solutions in the face of diverse threats

It’s unsurprising that financial gain was at the heart of many attacks (48%) across the European countries surveyed. However, survey respondents also believe that the threats they have experienced have a much wider range of objectives.

The majority (53%) of those impacted by an incident in the last 12 months say that the main purpose was to plant spyware. And almost half (48%) of those surveyed say that ransomware plants were the main purpose for the attack.

When it comes to the most commonly experienced attack vectors, these too are diverse. Phishing tops the list, with almost three in five (59%) respondents claiming to have seen this approach. That’s closely followed by web attacks (58%) and DDoS attacks (37%). Also prevalent were stolen credentials and business email compromise, with almost a third (32%) having experienced these.

When it comes to tackling these issues, onboarding more products seems to be the go-to response. In fact, nearly half (49%) have more than 11 different products and solutions. The vast majority (72%) believe that this complexity is having a negative impact on their effectiveness, and yet two-thirds (67%) expect the number of tools they adopt to increase in the next 12 months.

Notably, the three most pressing challenges cybersecurity decision makers and leaders face are: consolidating and simplifying cybersecurity estate (48%); modernising applications used by organisation (47%); and modernising networks operated by organisation (42%).

Further education on Zero Trust is required for maximum impact

Respondents report three clear problems in the existing architectures they work with: applications and data stored in the public cloud; limited oversight over IT supply chains; and over-reliance on VPNs to protect applications (with each factor mentioned by 34% of respondents).

Given these problems, it is unsurprising that securing a hybrid workforce is a top priority, coming in the top three for more than a third (36%) of our respondents.

Worryingly, for many organisations, deployment of countermeasures is a long way behind, and in some cases not yet started. Despite widespread recognition of its ability to protect hybrid or remote workers, when looking at deployment of Zero Trust network access, just 25% of respondents say this solution is fully deployed and over half (58%) say that Zero Trust adoption is still in its early stages.

While two-fifths (44%) say they are optimistic about the ability of Zero Trust to consolidate technology upgrades, our respondents also indicated a lack of faith in their leadership teams’ knowledge of the tool. In fact, the majority (86%) believe their leadership does not fully understand it, while nearly one in five (16%) say their leadership has either partial or no real understanding. According to 42% of those surveyed, this lack of understanding is the single biggest barrier to adoption.

Despite increased budgets, funding, talent, and training remain challenges

With business leaders anticipating more cybersecurity incidents, it’s positive to see that 54% of respondents expect their IT budget for cybersecurity to increase in the next year.

A quarter (25%) of business and IT leaders expect cybersecurity to make up at least 20% of their organisations’ IT spend in the year ahead. And of those expecting a budgetary increase, two thirds (66%) anticipate a rise of more than 10%.

For the majority, protecting their networks remains the number one investment area, with nearly 24% of the budget allocated to this pillar on average. Despite being the area where respondents see a significant lack of preparedness, devices are set to receive the second lowest allocation of budget share.

In terms of how this budget allocation is decided, the top two determinants were the number of incidents experienced (34%) and the cost of dealing with them (20%), revealing that most organisations appear to remain reactive in their funding allocation decisions.

Funding remains the top concern for 46% of our respondents. However, other concerns, such as a lack of talent (41%) as well as the evolving business requirements and user needs (30%), also keep business and tech leaders awake at night.

Interestingly, despite the increasing volume of attacks, a quarter (25%) cite a lack of buy-in from leadership as a key challenge. With less than a quarter (23%) having not undertaken leadership or general employee training, it is therefore unsurprising that 21% of business and IT leaders rate their organisations’ cybersecurity culture as weak or neutral.

“Organisations across Europe are managing an increasingly complex cybersecurity landscape, all while ensuring operational efficiency, regulatory compliance, and uninterrupted productivity. With incidents on the rise in both volume and frequency, this balancing act becomes even more challenging, leaving leaders with a sense of diminishing control over their organisations’ technological and security frameworks,” said Andy Lockhart, Head of EMEA at Cloudflare. “This significant challenge requires innovative solutions capable of integrating diverse technological components into a cohesive and agile framework. The age of siloed legacy infrastructures is giving way to a new model of ‘any-to-any’ cloud platforms, creating catalysts for innovation and growth. By concentrating on strategic integration any-to-any cloud platforms empower leaders to transform technological challenges into competitive advantages. Adopting this approach will help shape a future where connectivity and innovation are at the heart of business success, opening the door to unlimited possibilities,” adds Lockhart.

To find out more about the Europe Cyber Threat Landscape Report, please check out:

Survey download
Survey Methodology

This survey was conducted by Sandpiper Communications, on behalf of Cloudflare across a total of 4,261 leaders responsible for cybersecurity in small (150 to 999 employees), medium (1,000 to 2,499 employees), and large (more than 2,500 employees) organisations. Respondents were drawn from a wide range of industries: Business & Professional Services; Construction & Real Estate; Education; Energy, Utilities & Natural Resources; Financial Services; Gaming; Government; Healthcare; IT & Technology; Manufacturing; Media & Telecoms; Retail; Transport; Travel and Tourism & Hospitality. Respondents were based in 13 markets across Europe: Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom (n=207 to 432 per country), and were surveyed online and recruited via general business panels. The survey was aimed at building a better understanding of the threat landscape facing Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) and their teams across Europe, unearthing valuable insights and trends, and gauging responses and outcomes. The survey was conducted in March 2024.

About Cloudflare

Cloudflare, Inc. (NYSE: NET) is the leading connectivity cloud company on a mission to help build a better Internet. It empowers organizations to make their employees, applications and networks faster and more secure everywhere, while reducing complexity and cost. Cloudflare’s connectivity cloud delivers the most full-featured, unified platform of cloud-native products and developer tools, so any organization can gain the control they need to work, develop, and accelerate their business.

Powered by one of the world’s largest and most interconnected networks, Cloudflare blocks billions of threats online for its customers every day. It is trusted by millions of organizations – from the largest brands to entrepreneurs and small businesses to nonprofits, humanitarian groups, and governments across the globe.

Learn more about Cloudflare’s connectivity cloud at cloudflare.com/connectivity-cloud. Learn more about the latest Internet trends and insights at radar.cloudflare.com.

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • Black Hat Asia 2026, Singapore: Cybersecurity Event Highlights AI Threats and Data Sovereignty
  • Aptori Expands Runtime-Driven Validation Platform for the AI Coding Era
  • Rilian Raises $17.5 Million to Bring Agentic AI Into Cybersecurity and Sovereign Defense
  • ServiceNow Completes $7.75 Billion Armis Acquisition, Expands AI Security Ambitions
  • Enterprise WiFi Security: Where Convenience Stops and Control Begins
  • International Cybersecurity Challenge 2026, May 18–21, Gold Coast, Australia
  • Bitdefender Expands GravityZone With Extended Email Security to Close the Inbox Gap
  • The Security Blind Spot Inside the Arduino-Powered IoT Boom
  • Altum Strategy Group: Cybersecurity in 2026 Is No Longer a Technology Problem
  • Trent AI and the Security Layer the Agentic Stack Has Been Missing

Media Partners

  • Defense Market
  • Technologies.org
  • Technology Conferences
6K Energy and CRG Defense Form Seven-Year Pact to Build U.S. Defense Battery Supply Chain
Boeing MQ-25A Stingray First Operational Flight Advances U.S. Navy Carrier Aviation
L3Harris Secures $1 Billion Pentagon-Style Backing Ahead of Missile Solutions IPO
DFEN Unwinds the War Premium
The Industrial Gap Behind Europe’s Rearmament Numbers
WiFi in the Military: Convenience Meets a Very Different Kind of Reality
ATARS Meets the M-346: Why Leonardo and Red 6 May Be Rewriting the Logic of Fighter Training
Dark Eagle: The U.S. Army’s Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon, Brief Overview
The Army Just Launched a Solicitation for a Heavier ISV — Here’s What We Know
The ISV’s $308 Million Budget Request — and Why Congress Is Pushing Back
Fermeate Raises $2 Million Seed Round to Boost Precision Fermentation Efficiency
IQM Quantum Computers Expands Japan Presence with First Enterprise 20-Qubit Deployment, Delivery by End of 2026
SK hynix Wins 2026 IEEE Corporate Innovation Award as AI Memory Leadership Gains Global Recognition
Cloudsmith raises $72M Series C to scale AI-era artifact management
Tim Cook to Executive Chairman, John Ternus Named Next Apple CEO
The Global Digital Artery: Meta’s Subsea Cable Ambition, Now in Execution
Zero-Emission Propulsion: The Case for Nuclear-Hydrogen Maritime Power
No Love Lost: The U.S.-China Trade Battle Escalates with Critical Export Bans
From Inventor to Follower: How the West Ceded WiFi’s Cutting Edge to China
Creao AI and the Closed-Loop Bet on Autonomous Work
Data Center World 2027, May 24–27 2027, Music City Center, Nashville, Tennessee
Snowflake Summit 26, June 1–4, 2026, San Francisco
TSMC 2026 Technology Symposium, April 22, Santa Clara
NAB Show 2027, April 3–7, 2027, Las Vegas
NAB Show New York, October 21–22, 2026, New York
AI Summit 2026, October 6–7, Atlanta
BST Global AI Summit, November 10–12, 2026, Palm Beach, Florida
Adobe CX Enterprise Unveiled at Adobe Summit 2026, Las Vegas
COMPUTEX 2026, June 2–5, Taipei Nangang Exhibition Center & Taipei World Trade Center
ENGAGE 2026, April 27–28, New York

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Market Research Media
  • Analysis.org
The Software-Defined Camera Won. The Open OS Did Not.
Cars Are Computers Now, and Most Carmakers Aren’t
Gartner: Global IT Spending to Hit $6.31 Trillion in 2026, Driven by AI Infrastructure
The SDK Generator Benchmarks: Infrastructure vs. Convenience
Infographic: We Are Likely in the Early Stages of Another Productivity Boom
Infographic: Establishing the National Multimodal Freight Network
Global WiFi Market: Size, Segmentation, Trends, and Forecast to 2030
Synera’s $40M Series B: What the Press Release Isn’t Saying
Amazon’s Globalstar Acquisition Is a Spectrum War Dressed as a Satellite Deal
The End of Manual Audits: Why AI-Native Accounting Is Not Optional Anymore
China’s U.S. Treasury Holdings: The Great Repositioning (2021–2025)
Infographic: Why the 2025 CIPA Data Proves the APS-C Renaissance is Real
How WiFi Changed Media
Canva Acquires Simtheory and Ortto to Build End-to-End Work Platform
Netflix Price Hikes, The Economics of Dominance in a Saturated Streaming Market
America’s Brands Keep Winning Even as America Itself Slips
Kioxia’s Storage Gambit: Flash Steps Into the AI Memory Hierarchy
Mamdani Strangling New York
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Apple TV Arrives on The Roku Channel, Expanding the Streaming Platform Wars
Reading the PEG Ratio Across Nvidia, Broadcom, and AMD
Nvidia’s $5 Trillion Is Earned, Not Borrowed
Taiwan Overtakes UK as World’s 7th-Largest Stock Market
Intel Q1 2026: Recovery Signals Strengthen, but the Turnaround Is Still Unfinished
Yuan Gains Ground, But the Dollar Still Dominates
MongoDB Expands Irish Operations with €74 Million Investment in AI and Engineering Growth
ServiceNow Q1 2026: The AI Control Tower Thesis Is Holding
Adobe’s $25 Billion Buyback Is a Bet on Itself
Adobe, Unloved and Increasingly Alienated by Users and Investors
Cloudflare Shares Are Poised for a Jump — Here Is Why the Setup Is Compelling

Copyright © 2026 CybersecurityMarket.com

Media Partners: Technologies · Market Analysis · Market Research · Photography · API Coding · App Coding · Blockchaining