Declining job satisfaction means that only one in three (34%) cybersecurity professionals plan to stay with their current employer, increasing the pressure on CISOs’ talent retention strategies.
And according to a survey of 500 cybersecurity professionals by IANS and Artico Search, while salary remains important it is not the primary driver of retention.
Flexible work models correlate strongly with satisfaction and retention, however. Hybrid work arrangements, particularly those that require only one to two days onsite per week, also tend to reduce the desire for talented cybersecurity staffers to jump ship, according to IANS’s Cybersecurity Talent Report.
The researchers found that wage growth is more important in minimizing staff turnover than the absolute value of compensation packages.
“As pressure on cyber teams skyrockets, CISOs who double down on mentorship, coaching, and career development can create a sense of purpose and progression that helps their employees avoid burnout,” says Nick Kakolowski, senior research director at IANS.
Cybersecurity staff who feel their employer views security as a priority (73%) are more likely to stay than those working for enterprises who perceive little or no organizational backing for security, where the desire to stay with their current employer drops to just 19%.
“Visibility, career growth, and support from security leadership are necessary to keep high performers,” adds Steve Martano, an IANS faculty member and partner at Artico Search.
Cybersecurity training and certification body ISC2 estimates that the global cybersecurity workforce gap peaked at 4.8 million in 2024. Although budget cuts last year have reduced the number of unfilled cybersecurity roles, the employment market remains tight and highly competitive. In CIO.com’s State of the CIO survey, cybersecurity tied AI for the hardest skill to fill despite notably higher demand for AI talent (42% to 38%).
Career progression and workplace autonomy
Along with flexibility, recruitment experts polled by CSO say that cybersecurity professionals consistently look for opportunities to develop their skills, to have agency over how they work, and to have their expertise taken seriously.
“When candidates see a defined career progression, the offer of ongoing certifications and training, direct visibility into strategy, and access to modern security stacks, that’s when your role becomes desirable,” says Archie Payne, president at recruitment agency CalTek Staffing.
Employers that fail to offer some form of remote, or at least hybrid work, will miss out on a sizable portion of the talent pool.
“We regularly see candidates decline otherwise strong offers because of rigid location requirements,” Payne says. “Again, top candidates know they are in-demand and won’t settle for a role that doesn’t support their work-life balance needs.”
Skills development
Richard Demeny, founder and CTO at Canary Wharfian, an online finance career platform, says that graduates and early professionals know they are calling the shots because even at the entry level talent is scarce.
“[New entrants] are prioritizing opportunity and learnings, as pay is pretty much standard across the board, except for maybe high-finance areas like hedge funds,” Demeny says.
“These professionals know that staying at the same employer for long will greatly limit their professional development: Often times, the best way to supercharge their knowledge, skills, and network is to simply change workplaces,” he adds, regarding rising employee turnover rates.
David Berwick, director at Adria Solutions, argues that CISOs need to be more consistent in their attempts to retain cybersecurity workers.
“Clear progression, realistic workloads, visible support from leadership, and flexibility where it makes sense,” says Berwick. “The organizations that get those fundamentals right tend to attract and retain people far more effectively than those relying on compensation alone.”
Avoiding burnout
Oliver Legg, co-founder of cybersecurity recruiter Aspiron Search, says that employee burnout is a growing problem for CISOs managing security teams.
“What we’re seeing in the market is that retention goes beyond pay and depends heavily on the environment you create, the support you show, and how you evolve alongside an increasingly complex threat landscape,” says Legg.
Security teams need to stay up to date with modern tooling to both defend against adversaries and keep teams engaged and effective.
“Cyber pros working with outdated tools or purely reactive processes are far more likely to disengage and look elsewhere,” Legg warns.
Growth and elevation
Offering cybersecurity staff learning opportunities can be a powerful driver of engagement and retention.
“Providing opportunities to attend or speak at industry conferences, along with support for new or refreshed certifications, helps teams stay motivated and continue developing,” Legg advises.
CalTek Staffing’s Payne notes that cybersecurity professionals are both “highly specialized and in high demand.” This means workers are “constantly being approached by companies eager for their talents and are well aware that their skills are in short supply,” he says.
Job candidates increasingly ask sharper questions about what their growth path would look like and whether they’ll have a voice in security strategy rather than focusing on compensation alone, according to Payne.
Earning employee engagement
Retention has become less about preventing dissatisfaction and more about continuously earning engagement.
“One of the biggest drivers of turnover we see is a disconnect between what the candidate was promised during the hiring process and what’s actually supported internally,” Payne says. “Many companies talk about security being ‘mission-critical’ but operate with chronically understaffed security teams, or don’t give the CISO budget authority.”
Payne concludes: “Strong candidates can spot this kind of problem very quickly, and they’ll leave just as fast.”