India’s digital economy is one of the fastest-growing in the world, but with that growth comes complexity. Global cybersecurity trends—ranging from zero trust to data sovereignty—are now deeply influencing how Indian companies approach IT governance. But this isn’t just a case of copying the West. Indian organisations are actively localising and operationalising global best practices, sometimes setting new benchmarks themselves.
1. Zero Trust Enters the Indian Boardroom
What started as a U.S. federal mandate is now a hot topic in Indian enterprises. Leading BFSI institutions like HDFC Bank, Axis Bank, and ICICI Prudential have begun rolling out Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) principles to prevent lateral movement in the event of a breach.
Indian IT governance frameworks are being adapted to include strict identity verification, least privilege access, and network segmentation—practices shaped by global cybersecurity norms but fine-tuned for Indian infrastructure.
2. The DPDP Act: India’s GDPR Moment
India’s Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act, 2023, has forced companies to rethink how they manage and govern personal data. While inspired by global laws like GDPR, it introduces India-specific provisions on data localisation, consent architecture, and fiduciary obligations.
Governance teams at Infosys, Reliance Jio, and Tata Communications are setting up dedicated privacy councils, updating data flow maps, and creating audit trails to comply with both Indian and international data regimes. This fusion of global frameworks + local enforcement is becoming the new normal.
3. Supply Chain Risk Becomes an Indian Priority
Following high-profile global breaches like SolarWinds, Indian regulators such as SEBI, IRDAI, and RBI have issued specific guidelines for cybersecurity risk from third-party vendors.
Companies like Wipro, TCS, and Paytm are integrating third-party risk management (TPRM) into their IT governance structures—requiring regular security assessments of SaaS providers, vendor SOC reports, and breach reporting SLAs. This reflects a shift from compliance checklists to resilience-focused governance.
4. Cybersecurity Disclosures Go Public
Global markets now expect transparency around cyber incidents—and Indian regulators are following suit. In 2024, SEBI proposed mandatory cyber incident disclosures for listed companies. Indian firms like Zerodha and Infosys have already taken proactive steps by publicly disclosing response plans, aligning governance with investor expectations.
This trend underscores a move toward accountability in cyber governance, shaped by global investor sentiment but increasingly enforced in India.
5. Indian Boards Are Asking Cyber Questions
Previously limited to CIO or IT teams, cybersecurity discussions are now appearing in the boardrooms of Indian conglomerates. Groups like Aditya Birla, Mahindra, and JSW are forming IT and risk governance committees that review cybersecurity KPIs, ransomware readiness, and regulatory compliance—echoing global governance trends in the Indian corporate landscape.
From Zero Trust to privacy-first governance, Indian IT governance isn’t being shaped in isolation. Global frameworks are becoming deeply localized, and Indian companies are rising to the challenge—not just to comply, but to lead.
Whether it's through adopting ISACA’s COBIT framework or aligning with India’s DPDP Act, Indian governance professionals are uniquely positioned at the intersection of global insight and local action.
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