How to build up your information security management system in accordance with ISO 27001

Maintaining security is an ongoing process which requires coordinated effort by the whole organization. Without backing from the top management levels and buy-in through the ranks there is little chance of building up resilience against cyber attacks. As organization complexity increases and value creation becomes distributed it will be necessary to have an integrated approach to security; your company needs an information security management system. ISO 27001 is an international standard that sets requirements to such as system based on what has been internationally recognized as best practice.

ISO 27001 [external link] is a management system standard that follows many of the same principles as other ISO standards such as ISO 9001 for quality management. Assuming that the client has a ISO 9001 compliant system in place, the information security management system should be built on the existing processes and workflows. This means that existing auditing systems and reporting requirements should be appended, rather than building everything from scratch.

The following are key elements of information security management system establishment. First we look at the activities that need to be performed in the order of appearance of requirements in ISO 27001. Afterwards, we summarize the bare minimum that you will have to do in a table.

Main requirements and activity descriptions

Context mapping

(Ref. ISO 27001 Section 4)

The context mapping consists of creating an overview of the value chain as well as the internal requirements to security (you can read more about that in What are the things that need to be considered when doing a risk assessment?), and how this affects the information security risk. Key activities:

  • External stakeholder definitions
    • Who are the main customers
    • Who are the main suppliers
    • Under which regulatory regimes does the organization operate?
    • Who are the main threat actors based on the external context? (Script kiddies, hacktivists, cyber criminals, nation states, etc.)
  • Internal stakeholder definitions
    • Who are the system owners?
    • Who are the system users?
    • Which process owners depend the most on the information assets?
    • Who are responsible for maintaining security?
    • Identify main information assets
    • What are the critical information objects?
    • Why are they critical in the context of operations?
    • Are there assets that require security due to external stakeholder situations (legal or commercial requirements, or due to risk drivers)

The most efficient approach for this type of context development is a working meeting with the organization’s top management where these key issues are identified.

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Building a management system requires the involvement from the whole organization. Focusing on business strategy, key stakeholders and the value chain in terms of core competence, contracts with the supply chain and how to drive compliance (e.g. through auditing) is key to securing the organizations’ assets in the long run.

Policy development and leadership

(ISO 27001 Section 5)

  • Top management must be involved in policy development, and promote its integration in the overall management system of the organization
  • A policy should be developed and be sanctioned and signed by top management. The policy shall include the following:
    • Policy objectives
    • Should commit the organization to compliance with infosec requirements, and to continuous improvement. It should therefore refer to the organizations existing systems for compliance measurement and continuous improvement processes, as well as to internal information security standards with more practical requirements.
    • The policy shall be documented and made available and communicated to all users
  • Top management shall assign responsibility and authority for follow-up of information security, and for reporting to top management. In most organizations a single role is recommended for this, and a person competent in both the organization’s core activity and in information security principles should take this role. In most commercial organizations this role is designated as CISO.

Policy objectives should conform to the requirements of Clause 6.3 of ISO 27001. In order to identify these goals when building a new system it is recommended to write the policy after an initial risk and vulnerability assessment has been performed.

Recommended practice is to develop the policy in cooperation with the assigned CISO (if existing at this point). A policy document should be written and discussed with top management before it is updated. The policy should be dated, and an expiry date should be set in order to guarantee regular reviews (this is not an ISO 27001 requirement but is considered good practice for security critical process documents).

Information security risk management planning

(ISO 27001 Section 6)

  • Define a process for information security risk assessment. The recommended elements of this process:
    • Requirements to documentation of [USERS, HARDWARE, SOFTWARE, NETWORKS]
    • Requirements to performing risk assessments
    • Risk acceptance criteria. It is recommended to keep this at a coarse level and use qualitative descriptors
    • HAZID-type risk identification (use of guidewords)
    • Control planning methodology (ref. to Annex A of ISO 27001)
  • Perform a risk assessment for all applicable systems (Scope definition à HAZID à Risk ranking à Risk treatment planning)
  • Produce a statement of applicability for the controls in Annex A of ISO 27001
  • Formulate infosec objectives (ref policy development). These objectives should be measurable, or at least possible to evaluate with respect to performance. The objectives should align well with the overall criticality of the information assets (ref. risk context). Annex A of ISO 27001 is a good guidance point for developing objectives. Also, the organization should not choose objectives that are inconsistent with the maturity and capabilities of the organization.

The risk assessment procedure should be written in a practical way, such that the organization can apply it with the available resources. It should include examples of format for reporting, and also the recommended guidewords/threat descriptors.

A key difficulty for infosec risk assessments is the risk ranking. There are several ways this has been approached, varying from using “complexity of attack vector” as an proxy for probability and generic ratings for impact, to context related impact assessments in operationally relevant categories such as revenue loss, legal and litigation consequences, or reputation loss. The probability dimension can also be treated using aggressor profiling techniques, which is recommended for sophisticated organizations with a good understanding of the threat landscape. You can read more about that technique in this blog post from 2015: https://safecontrols.blog/2015/09/08/profiling-of-hackers-presented-at-esrel-2015/

Support

(ISO 27001 Section 7)

  • The organization must perform a competence requirements mapping with respect to infosec for the various roles in the organization. This work should be performed in cooperation with the organization’s HR department, and set verifiable requirements for groups of employees. Responsibility for following up this type of competence should be given, preferably to the HR director or similar. Typical employee groups would be:
    • Senior leadership
    • HR and middle management
    • Information system users
    • IT personnel
    • Specific roles (CISO, internal auditor, etc.)
  • The organization must develop an awareness program. The awareness program should as a minimum include:
    • Making employees aware of the policy
    • Why complying with the policy and the procedures is necessary and beneficial
    • Implications of non-compliance (up to and including employee termination and criminal charges in serious circumstances, depending on local legislation)
  • Information security aspects should be included in the communication plans for both internal and external communication.

For document control and similar processes, it is assumed that the organization has an appropriate system. If not, see ISO 27001 Section 7, Clause 7.5.3, as well as ISO 9001 requirements).

The awareness program should be made the responsibility of either the CISO or the training manager /HR. These departments must cooperate on this issue.

The communication plan for information security can be integrated in other communication plans but shall be approved by the CISO. It is recommended to develop a specific plan for information security that other communication plans can refer to. This is especially relevant for communications during incident handling, which may require tight stakeholder cooperation and maintaining good public relations and media contacts.

Operations and Performance Monitoring

(ISO 27001 Section 8-9)

  • The organization must implement and document the performance of the risk mitigating controls. A lot of the proof can be extracted from data from technological barrier functions, whereas other measures may be necessary to document organizational controls.
  • Information security aspects should be included in the organizations change management procedures (ref. ISO 9001 requirements)
  • Information security monitoring should be implemented based on control and objectives
  • Information security auditing should be included in the internal auditing program. It is recommended to build up on the existing system, and to include requirements to competence for the subject matter expert assisting the head auditor (ref. back to competence management and HR processes). Some extra reading about auditing and what it is good for can be found here, but for the context of reliability engineering. It should be equally applicable in the context of cybersecurity: Why functional safety audits are useful
  • Include infosec in management review. In particular ensure efficient reporting on infosec objectives. It is recommended to create a simple and standardized reporting format (e.g. a dashboard) for this use.

Continuous Improvement

(ISO 27001 Section 10)

  • Include infosec into the existing non-conformance system
  • Assign CISO as owner of infosec related deviations

Activity summary and sequence

Building a management system requires multiple activities that have interdependencies, as well as dependencies on other management system artifacts. The following sequence is a suggested path to developing an information security management system from scratch in a robust organization.

Note that it should be expected that some iterations will be needed, especially on:

  • Policy and objectives
  • Risk assessment procedure and risk and vulnerability study (the procedure is updated based on experience with the method)
  • Objectives and measurements will need to be reviewed and updated based on experience

Note also that a consultant has been included in the “People” category. For organizations that do not have sufficient in-house competence in management system development it can be beneficial to contract a knowledgeable consultant to help with the project. For organizations with sufficient in-house capacity this is not necessary, and it is not a requirement for compliance with ISO 27001.

Main activity Sub activities Inputs Outputs People
Context development Stakeholder mapping Customers/users, organization charts, suppliers, partner lists, etc. Information in technical note on Context: stakeholders. Should include who, why, what and how with respect to the information security risk. Top management

Consultant

Context development Inventory mapping Network topologies, asset lists, document systems Prioritized inventory description as section in technical note on Context. CISO

IT department

Archiving department

Consultant

Context development Threat actor assessment Outputs from previous activities.

News and general media. Experience from previous incidents.

Open security assessments from police and intelligence communities.

List of threat actor categories with descriptions of motivations and capabilities. CISO

Consultant

Risk procedure development Risk assessment procedure document CISO

Consultant

Risk assessment Scope definition for risk assessment Context note with inventory.

Topology drawings. Organization charts. Use cases.

Scope presentations Consultant

System owners

CISO

Risk assessment Risk identification Use of guidewords for each scope node, ref risk assessment procedure. Risk identification table (HAZID table) Consultant

System owners

CISO

Risk assessment Risk evaluation HAZID table. Risk ranking. Consultant

System owners

CISO

Risk assessment Mitigation planning (including ISO 27001 Annex A review) HAZID table with risk ranking. List of actions and controls to be evaluated or implemented. Consultant

System owners

CISO

Risk assessment Reporting HAZID table and risk mitigation results. Risk and vulnerability report. Consultant
Statement of applicability Review each control in Annex A Context note. Risk and vulnarbility report. Statement of applicability (report) Consultant

CISO

Objectives development Suggest objectives based on previous activities and maturity of the organization Risk assessment, context, statement of applicability Information security objectives, including measurement and review requirements in technical note or procedure. Consultants
Objectives development Review of objectives with key stakeholders Objective note. Revised objective note. CISO

Top management

Consultant

Policy development Develop draft policy for information security. Objectives, statement of applicability, risk and vulnerability report, context, policy templates. Draft policy. Consultant

CISO

Policy development Review draft policy in meeting with top management. Top leadership needs to be involved and take ownership, headed by the CISO. Draft document Revised policy Top management

CISO

Consultant

HR Integration: competence management Develop competence requirements for roles Role descriptions Updated competence requirements in role descriptions HR

CISO

Consultant

Awareness program Develop awareness program, tailored to competence requirements of groups. Updated role descriptions Awareness program plan HR/Training responsible

CISO

Consultant

Internal auditing requirements Update internal auditing requirements Infosec policy and procedures, objectives Updated audit plans and competence requirements for subject matter expert CISO

Internal auditor

Consultant

Other integrations Update change management system and management’s annual review reporting requirements Infosec policy and objectives Updated change management procedure

Updated reporting format to top management.

CISO (recommend that this is done internally unless consultant’s assistance is needed)

After the management system has been established, it is recommended to perform an internal requirements audit to identify gaps.

After the system has been in operation for 6 months an internal security audit with focus on evidence of use is recommended.

Summing up what you just read

You have determined your company needs a security management system. This blog post gives you a blueprint for building one from scratch. Keep in mind that the system with its processes, governing documents and role descriptions only provide a framework to work within. Key to getting value from this process is starting to use the system.

Building a management system from scratch is a big undertaking, and for many companies it makes more sense to do it piece by piece. Start with a minimum solution, start using it, and improve on the processes and documents based on your experience. That is much better than trying to build the system to be fully compliant from day 1 – and you will start to see real benefits much sooner.

7 thoughts on “How to build up your information security management system in accordance with ISO 27001

  1. […] This means that you should implement reasonable controls for ensuring the confidentiality, integrity and availability of these data and the processing facilities (software, networks, hardware, and also the people involved in processing the data). It would be a very good idea to implement at least a reasonable information security management system, following good practices such as described in ISO 27001. If you want a roadmap to an ISO 27001 compliance management system, see this post summarizing the key aspects there: https://safecontrols.blog/2017/02/12/getting-started-with-information-management-systems-based-on-is…. […]

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  2. […] Cybersecurity has come a long way, and several standards and practice documents exist, ranging from detailed technical requirements, to management processes. Building an information security management system is no easy undertaking, but using a risk based approach and following the same principles as for other governance structures help. Making ISO 27001 (an international standard) your basis for information security mangement will put you off to a good start. To get a practical how-to on building up such a system, see this post: How to build up your information security management system in accordance with ISO 27001 […]

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  3. […] Cybersecurity has come a long way, and several standards and practice documents exist, ranging from detailed technical requirements to management processes. Building an information security management system is no easy undertaking, but using a risk-based approach and following the same principles that are used for other governance structures help. Making ISO 27001 (an international standard) your basis for information security mangement will put you off to a good start. To get a practical how-to on building up such a system, see this post: How to build up your information security management system in accordance with ISO 27001 […]

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