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Is the Skills Shortage in Cybersecurity Overblown?

Week after week, reports warn of the cybersecurity business’ talent gap. One chief information security executive argues that the problem is misunderstood.

hiring people 4009327 640While there clearly are more cybersecurity jobs than there are applicants to fill them, the industry suffers less from a lack of talent than from a lack of creativity in hiring, Fredrick “Flee” Lee writes for VentureBeat. He is CISO of small-business platform Gusto. The industry needs to ditch its “dark arts,” “cloak and dagger,” “lone wolf” mentality and make itself open and appealing to a more diverse pool of potential workers, according to Lee. That approach might include becoming more active at job fairs, developing mentorship programs or hosting intra-departmental information sessions.

Lee cites recent studies showing that the cybersecurity industry is 89% male, 93% older than 29 and less than one-third from underrepresented groups. He cautions against focusing on “unicorn” candidates with a slew of sought-after technical qualifications. “Security wins when it’s multi-disciplinary and when we hire people from varied backgrounds,” Lee writes.

Ultimately, according to Lee, if the cybersecurity industry can lose barriers to entry, look at what a candidate could become rather than what certifications they have and rethink the interviewing as well as recruitment process, the hiring squeeze can be overcome. “Cybersecurity doesn’t have a skills shortage,” he writes. “We have a culture problem that manifests in the ways we source and recruit talent.”

Whatever the solution, the hiring shortfall is real. The U.S. cybersecurity employment must increase by 62% to meet demand, according to a recent report by the nonprofit training group (ISC)². Some of those jobs are, of course, getting filled. The UK cybersecurity workforce grew by 37% over the past two years, according to a new report by the British government (PDF).

New York City, for its part, is betting a number of those employment opportunities will end up in Manhattan. The mayor’s office has trumpeted the launch of the New York Cyber Center, a 40,000-square-foot cybersecurity startup hub in SoHo, Crain’s New York Business reports. “This is where the biggest customers are,” says James Patchett, CEO of the New York City Economic Development Corp.

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