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Post: CIISec Members Say Budgets Are Falling Behind Threats - Against Invaders - Notícias de CyberSecurity para humanos.


<div> <div> <div> <div data-edit-folder-name="text" data-index="0" data-layout-id="2" id="layout-51c37dcc-8368-4a8d-b302-1d1092df625f"> <p>Cybersecurity budgets in the UK are stagnating, even as job prospects and industry growth improves, a new poll of industry professionals has revealed.</p> <p>The Chartered Institute of Information Security (CIISec) published the latest findings from its upcoming <em>State of the Security Profession</em> report, which is based on interviews with its members.</p> <p>Just 5% agreed that budgets are in line with or ahead of threats, while 84% claimed the opposite. However, over three-quarters (78%) claimed their job prospects are good or excellent, and a similar share (73%) expect the security market to grow over the next three years.</p> <p>The good news continued in that more than half (57%) of respondents agreed that the profession is getting better at responding to incidents, although only 49% said it is improving at preventative measures.</p> <p><a href="https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/uk-organizations-boosting/" target="_blank"><em>Read more on budgets: UK Organizations Boost Cybersecurity Budgets.</em></a></p> <p>People (75%) remain cited as the biggest challenge facing the industry, rather than processes (15%) and technology (10%).</p> <p>Given that industry professionals will need to do &ldquo;more with less&rdquo; over the coming year, they should focus first on the people problem, CIISec claimed in a blog post published this morning.</p> <p>&ldquo;The good news is that developing or even attracting these skills generally costs less than shiny new tooling. And it&rsquo;s easier to justify spending when board members who are well aware of the current spate of attacks want someone to communicate the risks to them,&rdquo; it added.</p> <p>&ldquo;Becoming this communicator requires a new mindset. One where cyber security professionals see themselves as business partners and advisers, rather than being perceived as unapproachable technicians.&rdquo;</p> <p>In fact, communication skills (27%) are the second most valued after analytical/problem solving (48%), according to the study.</p> <p>&ldquo;Without addressing all three issues &ndash; people, processes and tech &ndash; cybersecurity cannot be wholly effective,&rdquo; CIISec concluded.</p> <p>&ldquo;But with technology investment hamstrung by budgets and the correct processes in place, addressing the cyber security profession&rsquo;s people problem will have the greatest impact, which must start with improving communication.&rdquo;</p> <p>Less than half (47%) of CISOs polled for a recent<a href="https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/cybersecurity-teams-lowest-budget/" target="_blank">IANS and Artico study</a>said they experienced any increase in budget this year, down from 62% in 2024. Additionally, 39% had stagnant budgets, compared to 26% last year.</p> </div> </div> </div></div>