…for
colleges and employers. With over 1.5
million open positions globally and only a handful of colleges that offer
cybersecurity careers, the gaps need to be tightened. That challenge can be exponential
considering the pace in which technology varies and skills required advances. A creative way for awareness has been through hacking contests. The
contestants can complete with others in a challenging opportunity that is sure
to lure candidates and close in on the skills gap.
But for
industries that need it now, the managed security services space has risen passed $15 billion dollars worldwide in 2014 and nothing is standing in its way over the next 5 years. Having SMEs
(subject matter experts) virtually at bay alleviates not only the resource constraints and emerging
tools/technology needed, but also the dedicated focus and integration
/ collaboration of the broader industry.
Being
challenged with cyber threat resolution and effectiveness can be daunting task
and a mission critical one. According to
the U.S. cybersecurity progress stalled report by report by PwC, priorities in cyber spending are:
·
47% new technologies
·
40% audits and assessments
·
33% new skills and capabilities
·
24% redesign in strategy
·
15% process redesign
·
15% knowledge transfer participation
Another renown
area of threat is third parties and so the financial services industry in
leading the numbers for due diligence of:
· 62% third-party
· 57% contractors
· 52% software
· 42% suppliers
· 40% procurements
Interestingly
enough, 19% of the C-suites was not worried about third-party risk and deferring it to an IT matter yet CSO/CISO typically report directly to the CIO...(but not CSOs,
CFOs or CCOs). So, perhaps a full circle in shortage and need vs. investment and ownership. How does your organization stack?
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