• About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • Offers
  • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Podcasts
  • Digital Magazine
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • Offers
  • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Podcasts
  • Digital Magazine
NZBusiness Magazine

Type and hit Enter to search

Linkedin Facebook Instagram Youtube
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
NZBusiness Magazine
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
Technology

Good password habits everyone can adopt

Even the most secure application or network is unprotected against a weak or reused password. Despite this, 21 percent of people use passwords that are over 10 years’ old1 and 54 […]

Glenn Baker
Glenn Baker
September 4, 2016 2 Mins Read
613

Even the most secure application or network is unprotected against a weak or reused password. Despite this, 21 percent of people use passwords that are over 10 years’ old1 and 54 percent of people use five or fewer passwords across their entire life2.  
Jason Landry, senior product marketing manager, Ixia, says, “To keep our networks secure, and to prevent hackers getting their hands on valuable personal, company or government data, good password habits are crucial.” 
To manage passwords today, most people need an excellent memory. Electronic devices and websites have password and security rules that make it difficult, not only for other people to guess your password, but also for the user to remember. 
Many people write their passwords down, use a password manager, or when all else fails, click the ‘forgot password’ link. All of this creates password friction, security risks, and wastes time when accessing accounts. 
“Good password habits are not difficult to adopt however and creating strong passwords is something that everyone can do.” 
To create strong passwords that are easier to remember Ixia suggests using random phrases rather than strings containing symbols, characters, numbers, and letters. 

Three good password habits to keep your information safe: 

  1.  Build your password phrase from a proper noun
    Because passwords for most websites require a capital letter, choose a proper noun you can remember, such as the name of a pet, and then add a couple of memorable words that describe their looks, habits or personality. For example, the password “Milo scratch furry” would take hackers 266.8 trillion years to crack. 
     
  2. Add $1 to the end of your password phras
    To ensure you have a numeral and a character in your random keyword phrase, a simple trick is to add $1 to the end of your random phrase. “Milo scratch furry $1” would take hackers 43,052 quadrillion years to crack. 
     
  3. Add the website’s name to your password phrase
    This advice may sound counter-intuitive, but it lets people give each online account a unique password. For example, “Milo Facebook scratch furry $1” would take hackers 39.37 decillion years to crack. If your password is now excessively long, simply remove one of the words. With the password “Milo Facebook furry $1”, hackers would still require 20.57 sextillion years to access your account. 

“Using strong passwords is a crucial counter-measure to prevent hackers accessing valuable personal, company or government data. By adopting good password habits, we will make our networks and devices and our reputations safer” says Landry 

1 https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/246902  
2 https://assets.entrepreneur.com/static/1433198293-password-info.jpg?_ga=1.8425525.1253720500.1466615873  

Share Article

Glenn Baker
Follow Me Written By

Glenn Baker

Glenn is a professional writer/editor with 50-plus years’ experience across radio, television and magazine publishing.

Other Articles

Wendy-Thompson-low-res-web-version
Previous

#WendysWorld

one-off-pinot-2 (1)
Next

Rod McDonald wines scoop international design award

Next
one-off-pinot-2 (1)
September 7, 2016

Rod McDonald wines scoop international design award

Previous
September 2, 2016

#WendysWorld

Wendy-Thompson-low-res-web-version

Subscribe to our newsletter

NZBusiness Digital Issue – September 2025

READ MORE

The Latest

Turning AI’s potential into marketing results

October 22, 2025

Reinventing finance at one of New Zealand’s oldest real estate firms

October 21, 2025

What fifty years in business has taught Sir Ray Avery about survival

October 20, 2025

Embedding AI where it matters most

October 20, 2025

Spacebar Design crowned Supreme Winner at The David Awards 2025

October 17, 2025

Evan Goldberg: “AI is about putting power back in people’s hands”

October 16, 2025

Most Popular

Understanding AI
Economy, AI, and exports dominate 2025 business outlook
Cecilia Robinson’s mission to revolutionise healthcare
Confessions of a serial investor
NZBusiness Digital Issue – June 2025

Related Posts

Reinventing finance at one of New Zealand’s oldest real estate firms

October 21, 2025
Marc Wilson on Agentic AI

Embedding AI where it matters most

October 20, 2025

Evan Goldberg: “AI is about putting power back in people’s hands”

October 16, 2025

AI comes to the back office as NetSuite Next brings enterprise intelligence within reach

October 8, 2025
NZBusiness Magazine

New Zealand’s leading source for business news, training guides and opinion from small businesses to multi-national corporations.

© Pure 360 Limited.
All Rights Reserved.

Quick Links

  • Advertise with us
  • Magazine issues
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Sitemap

Categories

  • News
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Education & Development
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability

Follow Us

LinkedIn
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability