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Women in Cybersecurity

How Can Organizations Build Cybersecurity Careers for Women From the Ground Up?

MT

MSInfo Team

MSInfo Services

February 24, 20255 min read
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Hiring women into cybersecurity is only the first step. Building careers requires deliberate mentorship, sponsorship, and structural support.

Increasing representation of women in cybersecurity requires more than diverse hiring pipelines. Organizations that hire women into entry-level cybersecurity roles and then fail to invest in their development, expose them to meaningful technical challenges, connect them with sponsors who advocate for their advancement, or create an environment where they feel they belong, will find that representation at junior levels does not translate into representation in senior and leadership roles.

Mentorship is necessary but not sufficient. Mentors provide guidance, advice, and emotional support โ€” and these are genuinely valuable. But advancement in organizations depends more on sponsorship: senior leaders who advocate for individuals in promotion and assignment decisions, who create visibility for their work in leadership forums, and who use their organizational influence to open doors. Women in cybersecurity consistently receive less sponsorship than their male peers โ€” and this gap in sponsorship is a significant driver of the leadership representation gap.

Technical opportunity allocation matters enormously. Early-career cybersecurity professionals โ€” of any gender โ€” develop their skills and build their reputations through hands-on technical work: incident response, penetration testing, complex architecture reviews, leading client engagements. If less visible, lower-profile work is consistently allocated to women while high-profile technical opportunities go to men, the career trajectory divergence is predictable. Organizations need to actively monitor opportunity allocation for equity.

Structural barriers deserve specific attention. The on-call requirements of SOC roles, the travel demands of consulting engagements, and the expectation of availability outside standard hours can disproportionately disadvantage women who carry greater caregiving responsibilities. Organizations that accommodate flexible working models, provide meaningful parental leave and return-to-work support, and measure performance by outcomes rather than presence, create environments where women can build long-term careers.

MSInfo Services has built these structural supports into our operating model โ€” not as special accommodations, but as standard features of how we work. We believe that an organization that works for the people who face the most structural barriers will work better for everyone.

MT

MSInfo Team

February 24, 2025 ยท 5 min read

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