In the last decade, energy and utility companies have rapidly accelerated their digital transformation projects to simplify and modernize their existing processes to drive efficiency and streamline operations. Enterprises undergoing this transformation have migrated ERP applications from their premises to cloud and third-party hosted platforms. This increased interconnectivity between internal and third-party systems, in addition to on-premises and cloud environments, has exponentially expanded organizations’ attack surfaces and business risk profiles, leaving them vulnerable to exploitation. As threat actors evolve their tactics and directly target applications critical to running the business, utilities executives need to understand these greater risks and how to protect their enterprises.
Many utilities organizations are currently either planning or executing a transformation to SAP’s next generation ERP, S/4HANA. Organizations must upgrade to SAP S/4HANA before the 2027 deadline to avoid the risk of their most business-critical operations running on outdated and unpatched software. Moving the business to the cloud can be a long and tedious process, which is why SAP has introduced the SAP RISE Business Transformation Program. This program transforms every element of an organization, eliminating complexity.
Organizations that run their business on SAP systems utilize SAP developers to write code and develop custom applications suited to their needs. To ensure confidence in running the applications in the cloud, organizations need to check their custom code and remediate these issues before taking them into the new environment. Including security at the beginning of a code development process, also known as shifting left, brings in security validation at the moment when code is created instead of at the moment when code is deployed or tested. This means enterprises can identify those risks or prevent those risks from leaving the development environment, so they don’t create issues in the cloud environment.