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What Gender Gap? Female and Male Cybersecurity Pros Have More in Common than Not

May 04, 2018

JobSeaker-WebBanner-1200x630-v1 By and large, female and male cybersecurity professionals share the same workplace values, priorities and aspirations. Both place about the same level of importance on matters such as salary and working close to home – and both apply roughly the same skills to their work and view protecting people and data as their primary function, according to recent (ISC)2 research .

In a survey of 250 cybersecurity professionals, (ISC)2 also discovered the number of men and women looking for new employment is exactly the same: 85 percent of cybersecurity workers are open to new employment opportunities, including 14 percent who are actively looking for a new job. Despite these mirror-image figures, women expressed a higher degree of satisfaction with their current employment.

Women also are happier than men with their current salaries. This finding is especially noteworthy considering separate (ISC)2 research has revealed female cybersecurity professionals earn 3 percent less than their male counterparts, despite having higher levels of education. That’s a pay disparity averaging about $5,000.

Women are substantially underrepresented in the cybersecurity workforce, accounting for only 11 percent of the profession. Gender participation in our poll of 250 professionals was two thirds men and one third women. While the study found some disparities in outlook between men and women, the gaps are never too wide. The clear overall theme is both genders have far more in common than not.

With this in mind, employers looking to recruit cybersecurity workers needn’t have a separate message for men and women since both want the same things. However, considering the underrepresentation of female workers in the field, employers and recruiters should put more effort into hiring women.

Much in Common

As noted, similarities between men and women in cybersecurity far outweigh differences. Among the similarities is outlook on salary. Getting the best pay when searching for new employment is deemed very important by 50 percent of males and 48 percent of females, and 38 percent of both genders rate it as “somewhat important.” Surprisingly, women – who on average are paid less than their male counterparts – are more satisfied than men with their current pay, with 50 percent of women saying they were very satisfied vs. 33 percent of men.

Female and male cybersecurity workers also share similar views in areas such as proximity between home and the workplace. When seeking a new job, 78 percent of men and 73 percent of women consider having the workplace near home and family as somewhat or very important.

The results also are identical when respondents are asked to rate “protecting people and data” as a priority when looking for employment. A seven-point difference – 67 percent of women vs. 60 percent of men – tilted to female respondents.

Both genders have a nearly identical outlook on how employers should evaluate them, with one exception regarding the maturity of an organization’s cybersecurity program. Among male respondents, 34 percent deemed it important vs. 22 percent of women.

As for how they feel they are currently judged and evaluated, both genders rank speed of response to a breach as the highest criterion – 46 percent for females and 37 percent for males. Men place a higher premium on influencing their organization’s leadership – 22 percent vs. 16 percent for women. Women give slightly higher importance to whether a breach is stopped – 30 percent vs. 25 percent by men.

When asked about the value cybersecurity professionals bring to employees, some slight differences emerge. For instance, men are more interested in overall strategy then women, and the reverse is true regarding cybersecurity training for both executives and rank-and-file users.

When it comes to evaluating potential employers, women are more cautious about choosing their bosses. For instance, they pay more attention to the job description and want more assurances that security is being handled properly. Men, on the other hand, are more likely to seek information about current security vulnerabilities at the prospective place of employment, although security issues don’t deter them from taking a job.

Where Women Want More

Despite all the similarities between male and female cybersecurity professionals, the research unearthed some visible differences. But even where men and women diverge, the widest gap is 22 percentage points. That gap reveals itself in answers to a question about the importance of working for a company with a strong mission that benefits society: 62 percent of women cited it as important, compared to 44 percent of men.

Women also edged out men (66 percent vs. 73 percent) on the importance they place on having their opinions taken seriously by management. This comes as no surprise, considering women are far outnumbered in the cybersecurity field and face greater obstacles in career advancement and equitable pay.

Women Are Happier

Despite the well-documented barriers to advancement and pay equity for women in cybersecurity – and the workforce overall – the (ISC)2 study revealed that female cybersecurity professionals are happier than their male colleagues. When asked about satisfaction levels at their current jobs, women outscored men in most metrics.

In addition to salary, female cybersecurity professionals expressed higher levels of satisfaction in the following areas:

  • Strong mission to benefit society
  • Current field or industry
  • Working near home and family
  • Flexible working arrangements
  • Protecting people and their data
  • Having their opinions taken seriously
  • Adherence to a code of ethics
  • Working with a cool product or service

It’s noteworthy that women expressed higher satisfaction with having their opinions heard, considering the obstacles female workers historically have faced in IT, cybersecurity and the workplace in general. Reports of sexism in cybersecurity are common, as noted in a recent Govtech article relating accounts such as being asked to take notes in a meeting because they are the only woman present, being held back from promotions, and the overall stereotypes that cybersecurity is for men.

Unbiased Recruitment

Despite the troubling issues that hold women back in the cybersecurity field, the (ISC)2 study did not reveal obvious recruitment biases. Based on the responses, recruiters contact men and women for employment at similar rates. These numbers suggest the substantial underrepresentation of women in cybersecurity isn’t for lack of recruiter interest.

Conclusion

Our findings show that despite biases in advancement and pay uncovered by other research, the differences in professional values between men and women are minimal. This is good for employers and recruiters because it means they can appeal to both genders with the same message. However, it doesn’t let them off the hook in making an extra effort to hire female cybersecurity professionals since they account for only 11 percent of the profession.

The same is true of equitable pay. Since female and male cybersecurity workers perform the same tasks and understand their responsibilities equally, there is no justifiable reason for the 3 percent pay gap between men and women, especially since women generally are more educated. If the (ISC)2 study on hiring and retaining cybersecurity talent shows anything, it’s that giving women the same opportunities as men is long overdue.