![]() Now that businesses can no longer pretend that WFH is going away, they know they must put the security infrastructure in place. They can no longer play catch up. Several major businesses now want to turn back the clock, but efforts to convince employees to return to the way things were, pre-pandemic, are proving to be challenging. There was no time.Ĭut to today: employees have spent nearly two years working from home (WFH), and a lot of them like the arrangement and don’t want to return full-time to a physical office. But for many organizations, a modern security infrastructure was never put in place to support hundreds of thousands of employees accessing a business infrastructure from home. In this case, it was an immediate need for many employees to work from home. Conditions change and infrastructure is often put together at warp speed to meet the immediate business need. That said, working from home is no different than a lot of other circumstances in business. There was little time to consider and mitigate against all the new security implications. The pandemic sent the workforce home and technology services followed them out the office door. It is difficult to overestimate the impact Covid had on the future of work and IT technology. Stay tuned for future blogs that dive into the technology behind these trends from more of Broadcom’s industry-leading experts. This is a continuation of Broadcom’s blog series: 2023 Tech Trends That Transform IT. By Eric Chien, Director of Security Response, Symantec Enterprise Division, Broadcom ![]()
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