[ This article was originally published here ]
The latest (ISC)² research report, , found that despite looming recession concerns, cybersecurity teams will be least impacted by staffing cuts in 2023.
To assess the impact of a potential economic downturn on cybersecurity teams, (ISC)² polled 1,000 C-suite executives in December 2022 across five countries: Germany, Japan, Singapore, the U.K. and U.S. The research highlights how C-suite executives view cybersecurity as an essential, valuable asset that is a strategic priority.
While 85% of respondents expect layoffs will be necessary at their organizations, cybersecurity roles are expected to be the least affected by staff reductions. Only 10% of organizations are likely to cut jobs in cybersecurity compared to other business areas, such as human resources (30%), finance (24%), operations (24%), marketing (22%) and sales (22%). This is because 87% of respondents believe that a reduced cybersecurity team can lead to greater risks and they recognize the challenges associated with building cybersecurity teams when skilled workers are in short supply. Half of the participating executives said cybersecurity staff would be prioritized for hiring or rehiring if layoffs were necessary. IT is another priority (49%), with research and development (R&D) not far behind (41%). Lower on the rehiring priority list are marketing (35%), finance (34%), operations (31%), sales (30%) and HR (29%).
“The importance placed on cybersecurity professionals, even during uncertain economic times, suggests that top executives understand the critical need for a strong cybersecurity team now more than ever,” said Clar Rosso, CEO, (ISC)². “This is not surprising given the upward trend in recent years where a weakening economy combined with political tensions has led to increased cyber threats. A key test for executives in 2023 will be their ability to sustain their commitment toward strengthening their organizations’ resilience against evolving cyberthreats amid emerging budgetary pressures.”
Key report findings include:
- 80% of participants believe a weakening economy will increase cyber threats
- 87% of participants say reductions in their cybersecurity teams would increase risk for their organizations
- 31% of respondents cited cybersecurity as the least likely to be impacted in a first round of layoffs
- 74% of respondents are open to recruiting cybersecurity talent laid off elsewhere to bolster their own teams
- 90% of participants said they increased cybersecurity hiring in the last two to three years
- Salary was the least important factor when determining which staff would be impacted by layoffs compared to other factors such as performance and expertise/skill set
- Cybersecurity professionals may face increased automation adoption, longer hours, more junior staff hiring and salary freezes due to economic conditions
To learn more, read the full report here: .
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