Summer IT Security: Protecting Your Business During Vacation Season
July 7, 2025
Summer IT Security: Protecting Your Business During Vacation Season

As summer vacation season kicks into high gear, Central Florida businesses face unique cybersecurity challenges that can leave their networks vulnerable. With employees traveling, working remotely, and maintaining reduced office schedules, your IT security protocols need extra attention to prevent costly data breaches and system compromises.
Remote Work Security Risks
Summer's flexible schedules often mean more employees working from home or remote locations. Unsecured Wi-Fi networks at coffee shops, hotels, and vacation rentals create prime opportunities for cybercriminals to intercept sensitive business data. Implementing robust VPN solutions and establishing clear remote access policies are essential for maintaining network security during peak vacation months.
Vacation-Related Vulnerabilities
Reduced staffing levels during summer vacations can delay critical security updates and patch installations. Cybercriminals often target businesses during holiday periods when IT support teams are operating with skeleton crews. Automated security monitoring and managed IT services become crucial for maintaining 24/7 protection when your internal team is enjoying well-deserved time off.
Mobile Device Management
Employees accessing company emails and files from personal devices while traveling creates additional security risks. Without proper mobile device management protocols, sensitive business information can be compromised through unsecured smartphones and tablets. Establishing clear BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) policies and requiring multi-factor authentication helps protect against unauthorized access.
Phishing and Social Engineering Attacks
Summer months see increased phishing attempts targeting vacation-themed emails and travel-related scams. Employees checking emails sporadically while on vacation may be less vigilant about suspicious messages. Regular cybersecurity training and email filtering solutions help prevent these attacks from reaching your team's inboxes.
Proactive Security Measures
Successful summer IT security requires proactive planning. Regular security assessments, updated firewall configurations, and comprehensive backup solutions ensure business continuity regardless of staffing levels. Cloud-based security solutions provide consistent protection that doesn't depend on physical office presence.
Don't let summer vacation season become an invitation for cyber threats. Contact Atlantic Communication Team today to discuss comprehensive IT security solutions that keep your Central Florida business protected year-round, whether your team is in the office or enjoying Florida's beautiful beaches.

Before you spend more on marketing, make sure customers can actually reach you 📞 By May, most businesses have a clear sense of what’s working—and what’s quietly creating friction. One of the most common (and most expensive) issues we see is simple: customers try to call, and the experience breaks down. Missed calls, confusing menus, poor call quality, and outdated routing don’t just frustrate customers—they impact revenue, reviews, and your team’s productivity. A mid-year communications checkup is a fast, practical way to tighten up your phone and communication systems so your business sounds professional, responds faster, and stays secure. Below are six high-impact fixes Atlantic Communication Team recommends reviewing right now. 1) Fix the #1 problem: calls going to the wrong place Most phone systems are set up once and left alone. But businesses change—new employees, new departments, new services, new hours. If your call flow doesn’t match your current operations, customers get bounced around or sent to voicemail unnecessarily. What to review: Auto-attendant menu options (Are they still accurate and simple?) Ring groups (Do the right phones ring at the right time?) After-hours routing (Does it go to the right voicemail or on-call person?) Holiday/closure messaging (Is it ready before you need it?) Quick win: Keep your main menu short. If callers have to “guess” which option to press, they’ll hang up. 2) Make sure your outbound caller ID builds trust (and gets answered) If your outbound calls show up as Unknown, the wrong number, or a generic line, you’re less likely to get answers—especially with spam calls at an all-time high. What to review: Does your business name display properly on outbound calls? Are different departments showing the right main number (or location number)? Are sales calls coming from a recognizable number customers can call back? Quick win: Standardize outbound caller ID so customers see a consistent, trustworthy identity—especially for billing, scheduling, and service calls. 3) Turn on voicemail-to-email + transcription to speed up response times Customers don’t leave voicemails because they want to—they do it because they couldn’t reach someone. The faster you respond, the more likely you are to win the job, keep the customer, or prevent an issue from escalating. What to review: Is voicemail-to-email enabled for key mailboxes? Are voicemails going to the right people (not a shared inbox no one checks)? Do you have transcription enabled so messages can be triaged quickly? Quick win: Set up shared departmental voicemail boxes (Sales, Service, Scheduling) that route to multiple recipients—so messages don’t get stuck with one person. 4) Use call reporting to spot missed opportunities (and staffing gaps) You don’t need complicated analytics to learn a lot. Even basic call reporting can reveal: Peak call times Abandoned calls (hang-ups) Missed calls Average hold time Which departments get the most volume What to review: When are calls spiking—and do you have coverage? Are you missing calls during lunch, mornings, or late afternoons? Are customers waiting too long before reaching a person? Quick win: If you consistently see missed calls at predictable times, adjust routing or add a call queue so customers aren’t forced into voicemail. 5) Clean up users, extensions, and admin access (security + simplicity) Over time, phone systems collect clutter: old extensions, former employees, vendor logins, and admin permissions that were never removed. That’s not just messy—it’s a security risk. What to review: Remove old users and unused extensions Reset voicemail PINs (especially shared mailboxes) Confirm who has admin access—and limit it Ensure passwords meet current security standards Quick win: Create a simple “who owns what” list: system admin, billing contact, support contact, and where credentials are stored. 6) Confirm your system can scale with your business (without a rebuild) If you’re planning growth in the second half of the year—new hires, new locations, expanded services—your communication system should support that without duct tape. What to review: Can you add users quickly without new hardware? Can remote/hybrid staff answer calls professionally? Can you support multiple locations under one system? Do you have call continuity options if the office loses internet/power? Quick win: A scalable system isn’t just “nice to have.” It prevents expensive emergency fixes later. The Bottom Line If your phones are creating friction, you’ll feel it everywhere—lost leads, slower service, frustrated staff, and customers who don’t call back. A mid-year communications checkup helps you: Capture more calls Respond faster Improve customer experience Reduce security risk Prepare for growth Atlantic Communication Team has helped businesses stay connected for over 40 years. If you’d like a complimentary mid-year communications assessment, we’ll review your current setup and recommend the highest-impact improvements. 📍 Daytona: 386-677-4040 📍 Orlando: 407-830-5993

