ISACA’s Cybersecurity Study Shows Skills Gaps, Hiring and Retention Struggles Persist

57% say they currently have unfilled cybersecurity positions on their team.

New global research from ISACA shows little progress - and in some cases, worse results - when it comes to cybersecurity hiring and retention. (Graphic: Business Wire)

SCHAUMBURG, Ill.--()--Cybersecurity teams continue to struggle with hiring and retention, and very little improvement has been achieved in these areas since last year, according to new global research from ISACA.

Part 1 of ISACA’s 2020 State of Cybersecurity report finds that enterprises are short-staffed, have difficulty identifying enough qualified talent and don’t believe their HR teams adequately understand their hiring needs. Additionally, while slight progress is reported in increasing the number of women in cybersecurity roles and in establishing diversity programs, most cybersecurity teams still indicate they have significantly more men than women, and most report that progress is minimal.

“Cybersecurity jobs are in huge demand but, as many organizations are all too aware, it continues to be a real struggle to find the right candidates with the right skills and experience to meet the demands of these roles,” says retired Brigadier General Greg Touhill, ISACA board director, and President of the AppGate Federal Group. “Better understanding these skills gaps and issues with hiring and retention can help the industry more effectively drive innovative strategies and tactics to address and overcome them.”

Some key findings include:

  1. 62% say their organization’s cybersecurity team is understaffed; 57% say they currently have unfilled cybersecurity positions on their team.
  2. 72% of cybersecurity professionals believe their HR departments do not regularly understand their needs.
  3. 58% of respondents anticipate an increase in cybersecurity budgets, an increase of three percentage points from last year, but less than the 64 % reported two years ago, signaling that spending may be leveling out.

Finding cybersecurity staff with the right skillsets continues to be difficult. Only 27% say that recent graduates in cybersecurity are well-prepared. They also noted the top five skills gaps as being soft skills (32%), IT knowledge and skills gaps (30%), insufficient business insight (16%), cybersecurity technical experience (13%) and insufficient hands-on training (10%).

Once teams achieve the difficult task of finding the right professionals, they then struggle to retain them, with 66% saying it’s difficult to retain cybersecurity talent. They cite the main reasons for staff leaving as recruitment by other companies (59%), limited promotion and development opportunities (50%), poor financial incentives (50%), high work stress levels (40%, a 10-percentage point increase from the year prior) and a lack of management support (39%).

Organizations have been making slight progress in putting diversity programs in place, with 49% of respondents indicating that they have these programs—an increase of five percentage points from last year. Sixty-four percent indicate some progress toward increasing the number of women in cybersecurity roles, though only 13% say that progress is significant.

“Diversity in this field is crucial—not only in order to bring in qualified, skilled talent, but also to ensure that different viewpoints are reflected in cybersecurity teams,” says Brennan P. Baybeck, ISACA board chair; vice president and CISO, customer services, Oracle. “Even with slight advances being made, it is clear that more significant progress is needed to increase diversity in cybersecurity, including representation of women in these roles.”

ISACA will be offering perspective on this research in its panel, “Why Your Staff Leaves, and How to Retain, Retrain and Build Leaders,” at the RSA Conference on 27 February 2020. RSA attendees can also visit the ISACA booth (#226) to learn more.

State of Cybersecurity 2020 is available as a complimentary download at www.isaca.org/go/state-of-cybersecurity-2020. The report is the latest research from ISACA’s Cybersecurity Nexus.

About ISACA

For more than 50 years, ISACA® (www.isaca.org) has advanced the best talent, expertise and learning in technology. ISACA equips individuals with knowledge, credentials, education and community to progress their careers and transform their organizations, and enables enterprises to train and build quality teams. ISACA is a global professional association and learning organization that leverages the expertise of its 145,000 members who work in information security, governance, assurance, risk and privacy to drive innovation through technology. It has a presence in 188 countries, including 223 chapters worldwide.

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Contacts

Emily Van Camp, evcamp@isaca.org, +1.847.385.7223
Kristen Kessinger, communications@isaca.org, +1.847.660.5512

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Contacts

Emily Van Camp, evcamp@isaca.org, +1.847.385.7223
Kristen Kessinger, communications@isaca.org, +1.847.660.5512