Cyberattacks are increasing across North America, and small businesses are no longer being overlooked. In many cases, they are being targeted precisely because they are smaller, have fewer internal resources, and often lack the security structure that larger organizations take for granted. Attackers know that a small company can still hold valuable client data, financial information, login credentials, and access to other connected systems. That makes them attractive targets.

At the same time, large enterprises are still under constant pressure because of their size, complexity, and visibility. They have broader attack surfaces, more users, more devices, more vendors, and more systems that can be exploited. The reality is that cyber risk now affects every organization, regardless of size. The difference is not whether a business can be targeted, but how prepared it is when it is.

This is why cybersecurity investment matters for both small businesses and large enterprises. For smaller organizations, it can mean the difference between staying operational and facing serious disruption, financial loss, or reputational damage. For larger organizations, it is essential for managing risk at scale, maintaining trust, and protecting business continuity. Cybersecurity is no longer something businesses can treat as optional. It has become a basic requirement for protecting operations, supporting growth, and staying resilient in a threat landscape that keeps getting more aggressive.