Key findings from the 2025 DVD Networks, Cybersecurity, and Network Survey of 79 Virginia businesses
DVD Networks surveyed 79 IT decision-makers and business leaders across Virginia to find out where organizations stand today on technology adoption, cybersecurity preparedness, and network infrastructure.
We found that Virginia businesses are deeply committed to technology as a driver of success. While most have formal cybersecurity programs in place, many are still working to close critical gaps in data security, cloud protection, and user education. At the same time, IT teams are under increasing pressure to do more with less.
When asked how crucial technology is to their company's success, respondents gave it an average rating of 4.8 out of 5 — making it one of the strongest signals of tech dependency we've seen. Business and productivity tools dominate the stack, while AI adoption is already well underway.
Of the Virginia businesses surveyed:
AI adoption at nearly 60% signals that Virginia businesses aren't waiting on the sidelines. IT providers have an opportunity to support companies in expanding their AI footprint with the right infrastructure, governance, and security foundations.
Most Virginia businesses have established IT support — whether in-house, outsourced, or both. However, IT organizations are under real strain, pulled between day-to-day demands and longer-term strategic priorities.
Of the Virginia businesses surveyed:
These findings highlight a growing opportunity for managed IT service providers to step in and help organizations offload operational burden so internal teams can focus on higher-value initiatives.
As cyber threats continue to evolve, most Virginia businesses have responded with formal programs. Still, a notable minority remains exposed, and even those with programs in place acknowledge room for improvement.
Of the Virginia businesses surveyed:
When asked which areas of their cybersecurity strategy they most want to improve, respondents identified a broad range of needs — a sign that many programs still have significant gaps to address.
The top areas Virginia businesses want to improve:
With three-quarters of organizations supporting remote employees, securing access to internal applications is a top priority. Most organizations rely on MFA and VPN, while Zero Trust adoption remains low.
Of the Virginia businesses surveyed:
Of the Virginia businesses surveyed, the top challenges in the next 12 months are:
User behavior and resource constraints remain the biggest barriers to a strong security posture — regardless of how advanced the toolset. IT providers can help by offering managed security services, user awareness training, and simplified security platforms.
Virginia businesses rated their IT networks an average of 4.1 out of 5, with 78.4% scoring their network a 4 or 5. While the foundation is solid, leaders are clearly planning investments to keep up with growing demands.
When evaluating IT infrastructure and networking technology, the factors that matter most are:
Cost leads by a wide margin — but scalability cracking the top three signals that leaders are thinking beyond the immediate purchase cycle.
When asked which technologies and services they are evaluating in the next 12 months, respondents pointed to cybersecurity as the clear top priority, followed by managed services and cloud infrastructure.
Of the Virginia businesses surveyed:
These findings present a clear opportunity for IT providers to engage Virginia businesses with targeted cybersecurity, managed services, and cloud offerings heading into the next budget cycle.
Virginia businesses are technologically mature, strategically aware, and actively investing in their future. But the data surfaces two critical vulnerabilities: a meaningful minority still lacks formal cybersecurity programs, and even those with programs face mounting pressure from resource constraints, tool complexity, and the relentless pace of evolving threats.
Want to learn more about how DVD Networks can support your technology strategy? Contact DVD Networks to start the conversation.