5 Security Questions Every Board Should Ask Quarterly

Cybersecurity is no longer just an IT issue. For boards and investors, it’s a matter of business continuity, valuation, and trust. The boardroom cannot delegate security blindly — it must ask the right questions and demand clear answers.

Here are five essential questions every board should ask management at least once a quarter:

1. What is our current risk level — and how has it changed?

Not just a list of vulnerabilities. The board needs a business-level view:

  • Overall risk score or trend.
  • Key incidents or near-misses.
  • Whether risk is rising or declining.

2. What are our top three critical assets — and how are they protected?

Boards should know:

  • Which systems or data are mission-critical.
  • How these assets are monitored and defended.
  • Whether contingency plans exist in case they fail.

3. How exposed are we to third-party risks?

Supply chain and vendor breaches are among the fastest-growing threats.
The board should ask:

  • Which external partners have access to our systems or data.
  • How those risks are being managed and reviewed.

4. How prepared are we for an incident in the next 24 hours?

Boards must test reality:

  • Has the company run incident response simulations?
  • Do we know who makes decisions under pressure?
  • How fast can we restore operations after an attack?

5. Are we investing enough — and in the right areas?

Spending on cybersecurity isn’t about “how much,” but how smart:

  • Are funds going to prevention, detection, or recovery?
  • How does our investment compare to peers?
  • Do we have measurable returns in reduced risk?

Final thought

Boards don’t need to understand every technical detail. But they must ask the right questions and insist on clear, business-focused answers. Because when a cyber incident hits, accountability doesn’t stop at the server room — it reaches the boardroom.