What if the current handwringing around a cyber skills shortage was overdone? What if the problem facing cybersecurity isn’t the lack of the right training or the correct academic degree, but the failure to apply the best lens through which to assess those entering the field?
This question urgently matters for business and our country because last month the federal government launched a $26.5 million grant scheme to support the cybersecurity workforce. Companies are scrambling to understand what skills they need to bolster their cybersecurity capacity.
Hats off to the government for recognising the importance of Australia’s cybersecurity workforce and actively working to strengthen it.
But who exactly is this workforce?
Almost every company in Australia needs to know the answer to this question because it will influence whether we have the right workforce in place to handle our cybersecurity future.
And here’s the answer: it’s probably not who you think it is.
If the first image you have in your mind is a hoodie-clad basement dwelling hacker with a sticker bedecked laptop, pizza in hand, you’re thinking of only a small part of the actual cybersecurity workforce.
Sure, these people exist, but after three decades in the industry, I’d argue that very few of today’s cybersecurity luminaries took anything that remotely resembles what most people would consider a normal cookie cutter path into this industry today.
Here’s the reason cookie cutter doesn’t cut it: cybersecurity is an ever-changing landscape of threats, challenges and opportunities that requires adaptable, fluid and creative thinkers and doers. It also requires a mix of people who are good with other people, diplomats and those calm headed in a crisis.
Well-rounded humans have thrived in cybersecurity from the beginning because while coding is literally binary, cybersecurity is not. In the face of a cyber degree explosion, we’re still hiring humanities grads, lawyers and those told they must learn to code but never did, because the optimal cybersecurity team is a truly diverse one.
As the old adage goes, “science can tell you how to bring dinosaurs back to life, humanities can tell you why not to”.
I’m writing this now so that we don’t have a deficit of these kinds of people later because we fall into the trap of being too afraid to hire outside the box. What we’re seeing is too many organisations looking to close the cybersecurity resource gap the wrong way. Instead of diversifying their hiring set, they are narrowing it.
Ultimately, it’s a diversity of thought and perspective that gives the balance, depth and insights to crack the problem.
Here are some tips for building this diversity in a cybersecurity staff.
The future of cybersecurity talent concerns all of us and we need to get it right.
Cybersecurity is broad and we need our approach to cybersecurity talent to be broad too.
This article originally appeared in SmartCompany.