The Good Tech Companies - The Talent Imperative: Rethinking Who Builds the Future of Cybersecurity
Episode Date: May 14, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/the-talent-imperative-rethinking-who-builds-the-future-of-cybersecurity. The cybersecurity i...ndustry is reaching a tipping point not in terms of attack sophistication or regulatory scrutiny, but in the way innovation happens. Check more stories related to cybersecurity at: https://hackernoon.com/c/cybersecurity. You can also check exclusive content about #cybersecurity, #talon-cyber-security, #cybersecurity-venture-trends, #unit-8200-founded-startups, #ec-council-funding-program, #sans-cyberstart-initiative, #cmu-cylab-venture-network, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @missinvestigate. Learn more about this writer by checking @missinvestigate's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. The cybersecurity industry is reaching a tipping point not in terms of attack sophistication or regulatory scrutiny, but in the way innovation itself is being conceived.
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The Talent Imperative. Rethinking Who Builds the Future of Cybersecurity.
By Misinvestigate, photo-credit Gerald Matteo The cybersecurity industry is reaching a tipping
point not in terms of attack sophistication or regulatory scrutiny, but in the way innovation
itself is being conceived. For years, new technologies in the space were developed primarily
by engineers working in siloed R&D departments or product labs. Today, that model is rapidly
evolving. Cyber defense is no longer just a technology race, it's a human one. Across
startups, research institutions, and venture portfolios, the most promising innovations
are increasingly being developed not by theorists,
but by former incident responders, red teamers, SOC leads, and threat analysts. In short,
by practitioners. A prime example of this trend is Talon Cybersecurity, the Israeli
founded secure enterprise browser company that raised $100 million in series A funding
one of the largest in cybersecurity history. Talon's founding team includes former Unit 8200 operatives who built the product architecture
around real-world USE cases they faced in the field, not hypothetical personas from marketing
decks. Venture capital firms are responding accordingly. Both Ballistic Ventures and Night
Dragon have aligned their investment strategies around founders with operational security experience.
Ballistik's $360 million fund too is dedicated to backing teams with what it calls, Domain
Deep, understanding those who hovelled IR drills, developed society workflows, or deployed
tools at enterprise scale.
Academic research is also shifting gears.
At Carnegie Mellon University's SCIA Lab, the SCIA Lab
venture network is helping applied researchers transition their workinto startup ventures.
Meanwhile, Purdue's CERIAS has begun to position its research output not only for publication but
for practical application particularly in areas like critical infrastructure protection and
threat modeling. The new generation of founders emerging from accelerators like Y Combinator Aerial so notably
different.
Increasingly, these entrepreneurs come not from business school, but from the trenches
of enterprise security.
They've managed blue teams, they've responded to ransomware, they know what's broken and
they're building solutions to fix it.
And they're doing so in the middle of a workforce crisis.
Cybersecurity Ventures Projects that the global cybersecurity talent gap will exceed 3.5 million
unfilled roles by 2025.
This gap is no longer just a staffing issue, it's a constraint on innovation.
Without experienced talent to build and validate tools, even the most promising technologies
risk failure in production environments.
Some organizations are now explicitly funding innovation at the intersection of talent and
technology. One example is EC Council's $100 million Cybersecurity Innovation Initiative,
announced in April of this year. While best known for its certified ethical hacker,
Shea, credential, EC Council is taking a less conventional route by funding early-stage
cybersecurity ventures founded by skilled practitioners.
The initiative backs startups grounded in real-world use cases and built by those with
hands on experience defending systems.
Other programs are targeting talent even earlier in the pipeline.
The SANS Institute Cyber Start Initiative focuses on discovering and training cybersecurity
talent in high school and college prioritizing practical problem solving over academic theory.
These programs are helping to close the experience gap that often separates classroom learning from operational readiness.
All of this points to a structural shift. Cybersecurity is no longer a product first discipline. It is becoming a people first discipline. Innovationist being
shaped by those who understand the complexities of deployment, the limitations of current
tools, and the ways attackers exploit real gaps in coverage. The industry is beginning
to reward experience not just in hiring but in funding, in research, and in product design.
And that shift may be exactly what the field needs not just to catch up with adversaries,
but to stay ahead of them.
Info this article is published under Hacker Noon's business blogging program.
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