Ok, so here I am – the third coffee of the day beginning to take effect, the keyboard is getting warm and I’m thinking of DLP! And no, DLP isn’t some sweet toy for Fortune 500s whose monetary firepower is larger than the GDP of entire countries. And for all of you startups and small companies out there listening – You don’t have to sell your first child, nor will you have to empty your startup fund, but you CAN have the most advanced level of data protection for enterprise with this magic box.
Starting as a network admin in ’93 (yes, when dial-up was king and I was wiring muxes for voice and data on PSTN), I’ve seen data breaches, worms like Slammer tearing through systems and how we protect secrets evolve. I own my own security company now; I just came back from DefCon buzzing over the hardware hacking village, and wrapping up zero-trust upgrades at three banks. So yeah – I get the cost squeeze, and the need for smart security. Here’s a simple intro to DLP for your startup or small business. You’ve got this.
DLP is not just for the big boys, you can even get a pretty good setup on a shoestring budget.
Believe DLP technology always costs the same as a mid-range car? Think again. Startups want security that works AND doesn’t cost the earth – and there’s a way to get the best of both worlds.
This is what you would generally need for DLP:
Component | Cost |
---|---|
Content discovery tool | $0 – $500 (free/community editions available) |
Endpoint agents | $5 – $15 per device per month |
Network monitoring appliance | $ – one-time or subscription |
Cloud-based DLP service | $30 – $80 |
For a team of 10, you’ll probably spend somewhere between $1,000 and $3,000 per year, depending on the combination you choose. And yes, at times it’s possible to mix free and paid tools to keep costs in check.
Here’s the thing. In month one, you don’t need a full-on, really expensive DLP suite. Begin with your crown jewels- your financials, your customer pII, your IPs. Focus on where the leverage is greatest.
Attempting to deploy DLP is one go? That’s akin to trying to tune a classic car engine before you learn how to change the oil.
One of my startup customers launched with sensitive data classification and endpoint scanning ONLY—it only took 6 months before they added network monitoring and user education. Result? We have had not a single data loss incident in a year.
I’m a little wary of AI-based security — it’s frequently more marketing magic than magic bullet. But open-source? Now we’re talking.
Tools worth checking out:
These options may require a little tech savviness to set up and maintain, but hey – you’re a startup CTO or savvy owner –from wherever you’re sitting, you roll up your sleeves!
Many open-source solutions lack the fancy dashboards of their commercial counterparts, but they do the thing and keep your costs hovering near zero.
Open-source isn’t a silver bullet. You have to have some in-house expertise, or know trusted service providers (more on that next).
That said, this is where most of the startups get it wrong; they try to do everything on their own. That’s similar to rebuilding a carburetor without a manual.
Suppose externalizing some aspects of your DLP journey is financialsensible:
But don’t fall into the trap: “handing over security” doesn’t mean stop caring. You remain responsible.
Here’s a shortcut for thinking about whether you should outsource:
I’ve personally helped startups that outsources endpoint DLP monitoring to my company and they’ve saved them untold amounts on training and overhead — and peace of mind.
If you’re wondering, OK, Sanjay, but how do I know what to spend? — here’s the idea I always suggest.
Sketch out a simple spreadsheet or use a budgeting app to get a sense of costs:
Update it as you proceed, so you can turn it on, and never have to avoid the bar scene. Because here’s the tough truth: Security spend is always a moving target.
Here: The hype around instant, AI-powered DLP that just “works” is mostly just that — hype. If you are promised a few clicks and everything will fall into place effortlessly, be wary. Real world cybersecurity is layered, it’s sometimes ugly, and it can be annoying. But it’s also essential.
I can still remember the horrors of managing the Slammer worm in the early 2000s — large networks nuked into uselessness because someone somewhere hadn’t patched or monitored properly. The principles remain largely the same — just the tech.
And seriously, password policies? Pfft. Do not inflict crazy rules and regulations on users only to have password123 as the result because they gave up. Train the people, use MFA, and make it usable.
You don’t have to be perfect. You only have to get it right compared to yesterday.
Get started with what you can handle, expand the DLP program gradually – incrementalism does wonders.
Need an adversary’s perspective? I have just returned from the hardware hacking village at DefCon. If you believe your glossy firewall or encryption is sufficient, you’re deluded. A single piece of open hardware or inattentive user can undo months/years of investment.
But hey – that’s what you’re here for.
Keywords: SmallBusiness StartupSecurity BudgetSecurity DLP CyberSecurityForSMB