| > For cybersecurity this is operations and/or development -> cybersecurity w/ focus on either dev or operations. Fwiw, I haven't heard or worked at any company implementing this pipeline formally. And, cyber teams (or more appropriately, the industry career thought leaders) expecting it to work this way is a large part of the existing issue. Fundamentally, under this logic one industry (cyber) is relying on another (SWE/IT) to train its entry level candidates. Logical enough. In practice, some of the issues: - there are very few roles that are entry in cyber that aren't a large pay decrease for the SWE for a year or two to take. So, many don't take this jump unless there is a clean pivot into appsec or infrasec. Companies needing both of those are small, you largely only see this pivot in tech. - IT teams don't particularly want to lose their headcount, so outside of excellent manager or very self-steering IT eng, nothing in IT is helping the aspiring sec eng make the jump over. The end result, to solve this problem > Does a person develop or approve security policies, devices...How are you determining if something is an incident... is it's not really solved in a clean way. There's a massive talent gap and favorable mid+ sec eng employment market because of it. Cybersec is already experiencing it, LLMs will make it worse, and I think it'll get worse for devs as well ("How are you determining a performant app if you've never built an unperformant one and fixed it?") //
which is a long way of discussing > You will start to see this turn around as companies realize... it hasn't turned around in cyber fwiw and it's been growing for probably 2 decades, 1 decade in earnest. Perhaps b/c SWEs are a profit center vs. the security cost center, there'll be motivations though. IMO the only thing driving sec eng hiring isn't companies realizing career pipelines are messed up, it's regulations or getting hacked in profit-damaging ways, and there aren't a ton of companies in those buckets |
While the hacks are a driver of the cybersecurity field the biggest driver as with all things is insurance companies and cyber coverage. Insurance companies requiring people to be dedicated on keeping up with vulnerabilities, secure default implementations, data restrictions is what is driving the need and companies just want to fill it to keep their coverage or keep their rates lower. Its the typical idea that if you add more software developers or people to a project it gets done faster, when in reality it doesn't work that way. This is why I think we will see a shift back to a more graduated source of cybersecurity professionals. There wasn't a formal path to being a systems administrator or network administrator compared to Computer Science degree -> developer.
Thanks for the astute discussion. Its much better than the "one" line bot responses that you typically see now.
[1] For all the young kids these jobs were renamed DevOPS, NetOPS, SRE, etc. Previously these responsibilities were just part of operating a network.