April 19, 2018 By David Bisson 2 min read

More than half of organizations have unfilled cybersecurity positions, according to a new workforce development survey.

Fifty-nine percent of IT professionals surveyed in the Information Systems Audit and Control Association (ISACA)’s “State of Cybersecurity Report 2018” said their organizations have open positions in information security. Approximately the same proportion (54 percent) of practitioners admitted that it takes their employer three months on average to fill security-related roles, and another 3 percent confessed that their firms can’t fill those jobs.

Companies Struggle to Fill Cybersecurity Positions

For the report, the ISACA surveyed 2,366 professionals who work in information security or hold ISACA’s Certified Information Security Manager (CISM) and/or Cybersecurity Nexus Practitioner (CSXP) designations. Their responses illustrated the challenges presented by the ongoing cybersecurity skills gap.

The survey found that employees lack confidence in the qualifications of their organization’s workforce. Three in 10 participants said that less than a quarter of employees were qualified. Slightly more (31 percent) reported that 25 to 50 percent of their co-workers possess the necessary skills, while just 12 percent of respondents indicated that 75 to 100 percent of their colleages are sufficiently qualified.

At the organizational level, respondents revealed that 39 percent of most openings were for “individual contributor, technical security.” This supported the belief held by 77 percent of survey participants that hiring demand for that particular role was increasing. Security personnel also reported an increased demand for “individual contributor, nontechnical security” and “security manager,” at 46 percent and 39 percent, respectively.

Investing in Training and Retention

The ISACA survey revealed that dwindling budgets aren’t to blame for the persistent skills gap. In fact, 64 percent of respondents reported an increase in their organization’s security budget.

Matt Loeb, CEO of ISACA, said this finding supports the notion that cybersecurity staffing issues aren’t financial in nature.

“Even though enterprises have more budget than ever to hire, the available workforce lacks the skills organizations critically need,” Loeb explained, as quoted a press release. “More of those dollars will need to be invested in technical cybersecurity training, along with effective retention programs.”

To further minimize the skills gap, the authors of the report advised organizations to invest in security automation tools and make improvements to their hiring processes.

More from

Cloud Threat Landscape Report: AI-generated attacks low for the cloud

2 min read - For the last couple of years, a lot of attention has been placed on the evolutionary state of artificial intelligence (AI) technology and its impact on cybersecurity. In many industries, the risks associated with AI-generated attacks are still present and concerning, especially with the global average of data breach costs increasing by 10% from last year.However, according to the most recent Cloud Threat Landscape Report released by IBM’s X-Force team, the near-term threat of an AI-generated attack targeting cloud computing…

Testing the limits of generative AI: How red teaming exposes vulnerabilities in AI models

4 min read - With generative artificial intelligence (gen AI) on the frontlines of information security, red teams play an essential role in identifying vulnerabilities that others can overlook.With the average cost of a data breach reaching an all-time high of $4.88 million in 2024, businesses need to know exactly where their vulnerabilities lie. Given the remarkable pace at which they’re adopting gen AI, there’s a good chance that some of those vulnerabilities lie in AI models themselves — or the data used to…

FBI, CISA issue warning for cross Apple-Android texting

3 min read - CISA and the FBI recently released a joint statement that the People's Republic of China (PRC) is targeting commercial telecommunications infrastructure as part of a significant cyber espionage campaign. As a result, the agencies released a joint guide, Enhanced Visibility and Hardening Guidance for Communications Infrastructure, with best practices organizations and agencies should adopt to protect against this espionage threat. According to the statement, PRC-affiliated actors compromised networks at multiple telecommunication companies. They stole customer call records data as well…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today