The Hidden Business Cost of The Exception Economy
Security exceptions have an awareness problem: they get filed under “risk.” They’re tracked in compliance dashboards, owned by the security team, and reviewed during audits. The people who never see them? Business strategy, finance, and product. They don’t get tracked in the revenue spreadsheet, the deal pipeline, the product roadmap, or the M&A log.
Replica Cyber surveyed 200 U.S. cybersecurity leaders and found that the Exception Economy is carrying a business price as well as a security one. Strategic work is being delayed, opportunities are being dropped, and friction is becoming part of how organizations operate.
Walking Away from Opportunity
Opportunity is one direct measure of cost: work that simply doesn’t go ahead.
In the past 12 months, 39% of organizations delayed or canceled market expansion or entry into new regions because they could not conduct the work securely. The same share also delayed fraud or criminal prosecution efforts, and more than a third delayed vendor onboarding, product launches, and feature releases.
These numbers represent growth initiatives, revenue programs, and execution priorities that carry real business value.
Work That Never Starts
When asked what percentage of high-risk digital work their teams could be doing but are not, respondents put the mean at just under 20%. Nearly one in five potential initiatives is being left on the table because of exposure concerns, compliance gaps, or the lack of a safe environment. CISOs put that number even higher, suggesting the people closest to the operational reality are seeing more lost opportunity than leadership may realize.
One in five. Gone before it started.
Structural Friction
This pressure is not limited to one broken process or one missing control. Across every category Replica measured, including tooling, budget, staffing, compliance, environments, leadership risk appetite, and time; most organizations said these factors were always or often slowing high-risk work down. That kind of friction changes the economics of execution. Organizations are absorbing delayed growth, abandoned work, and operational drag alongside security exposure.
The Business Cost
The Exception Economy has more than one kind of cost:
- The security cost of making exceptions: weaker governance, audit trail gaps, more exposure, and vulnerabilities that linger.
- The business cost of not making them, or of lacking a safe way to proceed without one: delayed launches, abandoned projects, stalled deals, and work that never begins.
- The operational cost of the system itself: the drag of approvals, workarounds, and slow decisions in an environment where every path forward carries overhead.
Every organization in our research is absorbing all of them. Most don’t even realize the full extent, and likely fewer are measuring it.
The report breaks down where the pressure is highest, which industries are absorbing the most friction, and what separates organizations managing intentional tradeoffs from those absorbing invisible ones.
What if that cost were avoidable? Learn more about secure environments for high-stakes work.