The biggest issue with sending attachments with your emails is that you lose all control
once you hit send. One way to ensure some slight control is the use of a password with
your document which is basically the go-to option for many of us.
Why do you need to protect a PDF document with a password?
Most companies send out some seriously personal or top-secret information such as a
company’s financial statements via a PDF attachment. In most cases a PDF document needs
a password to try and give it a higher difficulty to see what is in the document to
outsiders. Take, for example, healthcare information or financial statements of a
publicly traded company. All of which share and send documents that are highly
confidential and regulated in the respective industries. There is a requirement that
documents are secured.
Password protection is by all means not perfect and it should be considered the most
basic of protective measure you could take to protect your PDF document. Bear in mind
that when most PDF documents are password protected, the actual password itself will be
sent right inside the same email as the attachment. Now, that seems incredibly
counterintuitive when the point of it is to ensure that there is high security measures
in place.
Even if you password protect your PDF document, you cannot see what is happening with
it. For all you know the document and password are now floating around a forum somewhere
being copied and shared over and over again. When you start to use additional security
features such as IP locking, expiration dates, and disabling downloads alongside
password protection you inevitably decrease the chances of losing the documents or it
getting into the wrong hands.
How to encrypt and secure a PDF document with a password
There are multiple ways of adding a password to your PDF documents, but
consider the huge limitations, which have been mentioned above, that are in place with
just basic password protection of your PDF document.
Password protect a PDF document with Word
Most PDF files begin their life as a Word document so knowing how to encrypt the
document at the source is pretty helpful.
1. Create your document or open an existing PDF document using Microsoft Word.
2. Click the File menu and then select the Save As tab. Browse to a location where you
would like to save the PDF file.
3. In the Save As dialog box that appears, select PDF (*.pdf) from the Save as type:
drop-down box.
4. Click the Options button at the bottom.
5. At the bottom of the Options window, check the box next to “Encrypt the document with a
password” and then click OK.
6. Enter the password you want to encrypt the PDF file twice and then click OK.
When you’re back to the Save As dialog box, enter a name for the PDF file and click the
Save button.
Encrypt a PDF document with a Mac
In the Preview app on your Mac, open the PDF you want to password-protect.
Choose File > Export, then select Encrypt.
Type a password, then retype it to verify the password.
Is password protection the best solution to protect your PDF
documents?
It is the most simple solution that you can have for your PDF documents. But as
mentioned in the paragraphs above, there are plenty of reasons why passwords are not the
best if you really want to maintain document security.
A key problem is the lack of identification between the document and who is using
actually viewing it. You could set a unique password for each person that you send the
file to but that would take a pretty long time to do a simple task. Also, how will you
share the password? Sending the PDF via email and then texted the password might work
but its still not the best solution for securing your documents.
Try a dedicated secure document management platform such as HelpRange
Sending heavy attachments should be avoided as not only do you risk the chance of
getting dropped into the spam box you also lose control of your document. Using a
platform like HelpRange helps you manage your PDFs in a far more secure and efficient
way.
Using a passcode is just one security feature. You can also:
1. Set an expiration date
2. Lock to a single IP
3. Enable one viewer at a time
4. Disable document downloads and printing.
Plus you get user data so you knows who, when and where someone is viewing your
document.
There’s also the analytics side of the platform that provides fantastic insight into the
number of page views, time spent on a page, downloads and an engagement score. All of
this makes it incredibly easy to see how someone is using your document.
Check out HelpRange
HelpRange is "Next-Gen Data Room For Documents Protection & Analytics".
HelpRange represents the cutting-edge platform for document access controls and in-depth
analytics, ensuring superior management and usage insights for your documents.