The latest PwC Digital Trust Insights Survey reveals that local business and technology leaders are prioritising cyber resilience like never before; yet, critical capability gaps reveal the urgent need for integrated, future-ready strategies.
As global uncertainty intensifies and cyber threats grow more sophisticated, South African organisations are doubling down on cybersecurity as a strategic imperative.
The report draws on responses from 71 South African executives as part of PwC’s global survey, offering valuable insights into local cybersecurity priorities and challenges.
Resilience gaps persist
Geopolitical instability is pushing cyber risks higher on the executive agenda: 63% of South African leaders now place cyber risk investment among their top three strategic priorities. While core controls are maturing, supply chain exposure is a weak point, with just 6% feeling very capable in this area, far below global benchmarks.
Although organisations are spending more, only 28% report significantly greater investment in proactive measures, suggesting many are still splitting budgets between reacting to incidents and preventing them.
Emerging technologies add risk
Agentic AI has emerged as a top priority for cyber defence globally, particularly in areas like cloud security and data protection. Despite this, quantum computing remains a largely under-addressed threat. Only a quarter of South African organisations are implementing quantum-resistant measures, suggesting a need for greater awareness and preparedness as these technologies evolve.
Closing the cyber talent gap
Persistent skill shortages are reshaping operating models. 72% of organisations are turning to AI and machine learning to augment teams and scale capability. Managed services (particularly in cloud security) are gaining momentum as organisations seek specialised expertise, speed, and resilience without relying solely on traditional recruitment.
Cyber risk must be embedded
Executive engagement with cybersecurity is intensifying: 80% of organisations report weekly or monthly touchpoints with their CISO, enabling faster, more integrated decision-making. However, collaboration with CFOs and CEOs remains inconsistent, pointing to an opportunity to embed cyber risk more fully into enterprise strategy, investment, and transformation agendas.
A call for future-ready cybersecurity strategies
“The survey findings underscore a pivotal moment for South African organisations. As cyber threats grow in sophistication and frequency, the ability to align cybersecurity with business objectives will be critical,” says PwC’s Cybersecurity and Forensics Technology Solutions Leader Junaid Amra. “Leaders are encouraged to move beyond fragmented efforts and adopt integrated, proactive strategies that not only protect but also enable growth and innovation.”
Republished with permission from IT News Africa