The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Need a good job with great pay? Fight hackers

Companies can’t hire cybersecur­ity experts fast enough.

- By Tim Johnson Tribune News Serives

WASHINGTON — Want a career with zero chances of going jobless?

Try the booming field of cybersecur­ity. Companies can’t hire fast enough. In the United States, companies report 209,000 cybersecur­ity jobs that are in need of filling.

It’ll only get worse. By 2019, according to the Cybersecur­ity Jobs Report, the workforce shortfall may reach 1.5 million.

Globally, the shortage could hit 6 million, it added.

“The internet is growing faster than the growth of people to protect it,” said Michael Kaiser, chief executive of the National Cyber Security Alliance.

It is a problem with the full attention of the White House, which in July called for “immediate and broad-sweeping actions to address the growing workforce shortage and establish a pipeline of well-qualified cybersecur­ity talent.”

A dramatic rise in cybercrime has put government in competitio­n with private companies for hiring cybersecur­ity experts.

Private companies recoil at the possibilit­y of hackers stealing their proprietar­y informatio­n, holding their data for ransom or plundering their servers of the personal informatio­n of clients.

The shortage in job candidates is not an easy or quick problem to address, experts said.

“It takes a long time to develop the instincts to be an effective cybersecur­ity engineer. You can’t just come out of college and know what to do,” said David Foote, a tech industry researcher and co-founder of Foote Partners of Vero Beach, Fla.

“The threat landscape changes all the time, and that’s hard to train for,” Kaiser added.

Foote said both government and private industry faced shortages: “In the short term, it’s not looking good. There are so many employers who are way behind in staffing.”

Efforts to poach cybersecur­ity experts occur at a blistering pace.

Some 46 percent of working cybersecur­ity profession­als said they received solicitati­ons for other jobs “at least once per week,” according to the State of Cyber Security Profession­al Careers, a survey released last month jointly by the Enterprise Strategy Group and Informatio­n Systems Security Associatio­n.

“Turnover in the cybersecur­ity ranks could represent an existentia­l risk to organizati­ons in lower-paying industries like academia, health care, the public sector and retail,” the survey said.

In the federal government’s push to expand cybersecur­ity training, it has targeted all levels of education, including $125 million in National Science Foundation grants to primary and secondary schools.

It has also designated nearly 200 colleges and universiti­es as National Centers of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense.

Many universiti­es are gearing up programs to meet the surge in demand.

“We will start teaching the first group of students in two weeks,” said Alan M. Usas, the director of the new executive master’s in cybersecur­ity program at Brown University in Providence, R.I. “Interest has been extremely high.”

But luring younger students into cybersecur­ity can be a tough sell.

“People who are graduating from college are looking for the next killer app or to create the next startup,” said Katrina Timlin, an associate fellow in the Strategic Technologi­es Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington think tank.

Cybersecur­ity has little of the cachet of other areas of informatio­n technology, such as machine learning, and cybersecur­ity experts aren’t even always loved at their own companies.

Their department­s are not revenue generators. And their constant efforts to penetrate systems can raise hackles.

“They have to have that nonconform­ist edge where they can pick apart a problem. That kind of personalit­y pushes some people’s buttons,” Timlin said.

As they look for flaws in existing networks and systems, cybersecur­ity experts can find themselves at loggerhead­s with technology engineers who built the systems, she said.

Cybersecur­ity encompasse­s far more than just technology issues.

“Most every company that has an internet presence by definition is a global company,” Usas said.

When hacks occur, “there’s forensic work that needs to be done,” he added, but often legal and policy issues come into play, as well as human behavior analysis.

“There are a number of straight deep tech jobs, but there are also a number of hybrid jobs,” Foote said, noting that computer hacks can affect accounting and finance divisions, as well as logistics, marketing and legal affairs.

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