The Council is cited in two of the report’s six recommendations: “Publicise the success stories” and “Map out the skills and roles”
The UK Cyber Security Council – the charitable, self-regulatory body for the cyber security education and skills sector – responded to Decrypting Diversity, a report by the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) on diversity and inclusivity (D&I) in the cyber security sector.
“The sector must succeed at this. It’s vital not just to help the sector fill the tens of thousands of vacancies that exist, but for the sector and the UK to benefit from the wider range of abilities, improved creativity, different thinking and alternative contributions of a truly diverse, inclusive cyber security workforce. The Council and the NCSC are in lockstep over the D&I objectives for the sector and, to that end, we also welcome and agree with the conclusions of the report.
“Second: we’re very aware that the recommendations in the report are – as they must be in such a report – largely about what needs to be done, and we’re conscious that little may change unless the sector proceeds to address how to do what needs to be done; programmes will need to be devised and executed.
“The Council will therefore play its full role in devising, driving and supporting D&I programmes, through the Council membership which we are at the start of building. I encourage cyber-related organisations that want to lead the way in D&I, and which want to show the sector that they’re leading the way, to join us without delay. There is much to do.”
Top iTechnology AIOps News: DISH Selects Rakuten Symphony for Observability and Service Assurance Solution
The Council is cited specifically in two of the conclusions of the Decrypting Diversity report:
- Publicise the success stories: the UK Cyber Security Council should produce a series of case studies and career journeys that show the breadth of routes into cyber and the diversity of professionals in the industry today. Individuals need to understand how they can join the cyber security industry and the variety of opportunities available, including at entry level. There should be no barrier to entering the cyber job market based on demographic characteristics.
- Map out the roles and skills: the UK Cyber Security Council should produce cyber roles and the skills required in order to develop a framework to describe cyber roles and skills consistently. Job descriptions and adverts for cyber roles need to be clear and accessible, to ensure they are inclusive, and focused on aptitude and skills. The industry should support this by, providing information on the cyber roles and skills they require.
Top iTechnology Automation News: CVG Airport Works With TaskWatch and AWS Panorama to Enhance Operations With Computer Vision Automation
[To share your insights with us, please write to sghosh@martechseries.com]