The issues I have above apply to everyone who wants their IT infrastructure secured whether they are private businesses, public corporations, or a even government agency. The Government however has a few more hurdles to jump through:
These last requirements are proving to a real problem both for the government and the private sector. there is a massive labor shortage in the IT security area and it won't be going away soon.
While labor alone didn't cause the Air Force Cybercommand freeze it has certainly contributed to it. At one point this effort was attempting to recruit Network Security Team Leads with TS/SCI clearance with a Lifestyle Polygraph addendum in the Washington D.C. area (not New York expensive but also not Sierra Vista cheap) for ~$65K/year. My response to the recruiter was: "Good luck with that, maybe you should just try hanging out in front of ITT tech to see if you can get takers."
The core of the issue is that the demand for cleared, qualified, and available security personnel is vastly outrunning the supply. This drives wages up for those few that exist into areas that the government simply can't pay.
A quick rundown of orgs looking to hire:
The private sector will also be competing for the same people who are qualified to hold these jobs. The labor pool to fill all of these position simply doesn't exist. As a quick example here is a listing of all the folks holding the GISF certification: All 758 of them. How many of those have clearances or can't/won't work for the government?
We can't just wave a magic wand and get enough skilled, experienced, and willing security folks. Bottom line is : Get your security certs and your livelihood is essentially guaranteed.
Yeah, but I will give the 758 the benefit of the doubt that most if not all could requalify on demand.
hee hee!
I agree, ITT is a more likely possibility. Anyone worth their salt as a "network security team lead" (necessary experience, certifications etc) probably won't take a dump for anything less than 100K!
In D.C. a team member should probably be pulling down 90k minimum and a lead with those quals is easily worth over 130K. The lifestyle poly requirement is the real deal killer for a lot of folks though.
That does bring up the rather unfortunate fact that the accredidation industry is now predicated on businesses picking up the cost of the test. This puts a pretty high barrier on entry level certs like Security+.
If a test requires 85% to pass and costs $200+ to attempt it is hard for folks looking to break into the field to convince themselves that it is worth it.
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