Most days, cybersecurity sits somewhere near the bottom of the list (and for good reason) right below the grant report due Friday and the board meeting next week. Between managing programs, supporting the communities you serve, and keeping daily operations moving, it's easy for security to stay quietly in the background.
That's the reality of doing meaningful work with limited bandwidth.
But nonprofits of all sizes handle sensitive information every single day. That makes your organization a real and growing target for cyber threats. And the fallout from a security incident isn't just a technical headache, it can disrupt your operations, erode the trust you've worked hard to build with your community, and create unexpected costs at the worst possible time. A few consistent habits, adopted by your whole team, can make a meaningful difference; without requiring anyone to become a cybersecurity expert.
Use Strong Passwords and Multi-Factor Authentication
This one sounds basic (and honestly, it is) but weak or reused passwords remain one of the most common ways organizations get compromised. Every account your team uses should have a long, unique password, not a variation of the same one, or the name of your organization followed by "123."
We know that's a lot to ask of human memory, which is exactly why password managers exist. These tools generate and store strong passwords securely, so your staff doesn't have to choose between convenience and safety. Pair that with multi-factor authentication (MFA), that extra step where you confirm your identity through a code or app, and you've added a meaningful barrier against unauthorized access. It's one of the highest-impact, lowest-cost steps you can take.
Future you will thank you for making this part of your routine!
Build Security Awareness Into Daily Work
Most cyberattacks don't start with some sophisticated technical breach, they start with an email that looks totally normal. Phishing scams (deceptive messages designed to trick people into clicking a link or sharing credentials) are behind more than 90% of successful cyberattacks, according to CISA. This is why security awareness can't be a one-time training event. It needs to become part of how your team operates day-to-day. That means helping people:
Recognize suspicious emails or unexpected requests that don't quite add up
Pause before clicking unfamiliar links, even when they look legitimate
Verify requests involving sensitive data or financial transactions through a separate channel before acting
Even brief, regular reminders, a quick mention in your weekly team check-in, or a note in your staff newsletter, can help keep security thinking fresh and present.
Keep Systems Updated and Backed Up
Outdated software can expose your organization to known vulnerabilities. Keeping systems, apps, and plugins updated is one of the easiest ways to reduce risk. Equally important is maintaining secure, reliable backups. If data is lost or systems are compromised, backups allow your organization to recover more quickly and minimize disruption.
Limit Access to What’s Necessary
As organizations grow and change, access to systems and data tends to expand quietly. A new hire gets added to everything, a former employee's account sits dormant, roles shift, but permissions don't. As your organization grows and changes, it’s common for file access to go unchecked or become outdated. Before long, more people have access to more things than they actually need. It's worth doing a periodic review of who can access:
Financial systems and banking platforms
Donor databases and CRM tools
Shared drives and internal communications
The principle here is simple: people should have access to what they need to do their jobs, and not much more. Adjusting permissions based on current roles reduces the number of doors that are open — and therefore the number that could be opened by the wrong person.
Treat Cybersecurity as Part of Your Budget Strategy
Here's a reframe that might be useful: cybersecurity isn't just a technical issue. It's a strategic one. For nonprofits operating with lean budgets and in high accountability to funders and communities, every investment requires careful thought. And it can be genuinely hard to prioritize something that feels invisible, until it isn't.
But the math is worth considering: small, intentional investments in security now are almost always far less costly than responding to an incident later. A data breach, a ransomware attack, or even a prolonged period of system downtime can cost your organization in ways that ripple far beyond the immediate disruption.
How Budgeting and Cybersecurity Work Together
When resources are tight, decisions about technology, staffing, and risk don't happen in isolation. They're all connected, and cybersecurity is one piece of a larger conversation about organizational resilience. Knowing how to weigh these investments against other pressing needs is one of the more difficult challenges nonprofit leaders face. There's rarely a perfect answer, but there are better frameworks for thinking it through.
Learn More: Nonprofit Budgeting in Hard Times
If your organization is navigating these tradeoffs, we have something that might help! Our upcoming webinar, Nonprofit Budgeting in Hard Times, is designed specifically for nonprofit professionals thinking through resource allocation, financial uncertainty, and long-term resilience. You'll hear directly from an expert about how to balance competing priorities and plan strategically, including how to think about investments like cybersecurity within your broader budget picture.
👉 Register here: Nonprofit Budgeting in Hard Times
We created this resource to meet you and your organization where you’re at. If you’re ready to take the next step, join our upcoming webinar or chat with our team to get personalized guidance. We’ll help you get organized, reduce risk, and move forward feeling cyber safe.
Source link: https://www.cisa.gov/shields-guidance-families