The CISO job isn't to protect the entire business from all threats for any budget. It's to spell out what level of protection executives can expect for a given budget.

Douglas Ferguson, Founder & CTO, Pharos Security

October 31, 2019

4 Min Read

Most modern security programs are centered around "maturity" toward compliance to a security framework, or a subjective "expert" opinion. Neither of these approaches can justify security spend or deliver a meaningful protection-from-impact result. To justify security budget, CISOs need to be able to answer questions, such as:

  • Who can and cannot breach a crown jewel?

  • Is this level of protection justifiable?

  • What cost did we achieve this for, and is that cost reasonable?

To answer these questions, CISOs need quantifiable data and terms that influence costs and results because executives are results driven. They care much less about what security is doing, and much more about what they get in return for it. They want to know how differences in security spending quantifiably change the business's exposure to big impacts. For that reason, security professionals need to change the narrative from "security is a journey, not a destination" to "security is a chosen destination, with a justified journey to get and remain there."

Our starting point: Align protection "destinations" to assets that irrefutably matter to executives. Let's call these the crown jewels. Keep these easy to understand and in business terms. With well-chosen protection targets, the value of protecting them and the liability of not credibly doing so will be obvious. This way, you also don't need to rely on a cadre of quants using dubious data sets and computing probabilistic equations to produce "risk statements" that tell the board what they already know: They have a security risk exposure problem.

An annual report is a great source for target discovery as it typically states what matters most to the business. Generally, you'll want to consider how the business generates revenue (e.g., products and markets, income mechanisms, customer experience and satisfaction, and trade secrets that produce competitive advantage), sensitive operations like finance, human resources, and legal, and core operations such as facility access, email, accounts, and networks.

Now that you have established protection targets that are meaningful to executives, you need to manage the key dimensions that influence security cost. The first two are the quality and quantity of security. These directly impact the level of protection and the exposure to impact to be expected. The latter two affect the pace and the proficiency of security operations to deliver protection results.

How deep is our security quality? Threat actors aren't all equal. We know some are more sophisticated than others. The more advanced the threat actor, the more access to attack resources and methods they have. This makes them more complex to protect against because controls must implement more complex countermeasures.

How broad is our security scope and coverage? Attackers can breach an organization across many surfaces (e.g., Internet devices and applications, mobile devices, facilities, personnel, vendor supply chain). Leadership must consider how much security coverage they can apply to these assets. As we know from previous breaches, it's often the forgotten accounts, devices, etc., that are the key links in the breach chain. More scope and coverage will logically cost more, but it crucial to close the scope and coverage gap for a security program to be successful.

How quickly can we achieve protection targets? Security operations leverage expensive resources: people, technology, vendors, and even property. It's usually the case that if you want something done faster, you need to apply more resources sooner to get that result. Not only are you spending money sooner, you often must also pay more to get access to those resources sooner.

Are our resources and operations optimized? We don't have to be Six Sigma black belts to know that there is often a lot of irrelevance, ineffectiveness, and inefficiency in SecOps. Some even call it security theatre. There is usually considerable duplication of effort, missed opportunities to gain efficiencies of scale, and overbuilding some controls while underbuilding others. Most frustrating is the failure to leverage expensive people, technology, and vendor resources.

The CISO job isn't to protect the entire business from all threats for any budget. The successful CISO must spell out what business executives can expect for any given budget. That way, business executives and the board end up choosing the risk appetite on clear cost-benefit terms. The board may see that they can only justify protection up to, say, organized crime, but leave breach coverage from nation-state actors to insurance, for everything other than critical business crown jewels. The CISO benefit is that it doesn't matter how much security budget you have. By laying out clear protection strategies that quantify levels of protection against specific threats, you've put yourself, and your team in a position to succeed in a well-defined mission.

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Check out The Edge, Dark Reading's new section for features, threat data, and in-depth perspectives. Today's top story: "Cybersecurity's 'Moral Imperative.'"

About the Author(s)

Douglas Ferguson

Founder & CTO, Pharos Security

Douglas Ferguson, a security professional of over 20 years, is the founder and CTO of Pharos Security. Pharos specializes in aligning security goals and strategy to the business and a calibrated risk appetite, ensuring an integrated business plan and optimized operations build to that plan, and on budget.


Prior to Pharos, Ferguson was with Barclays Bank in London, where he was responsible for numerous security programs and initiatives across more than 40 countries. Ferguson was also a managing consultant and researcher on the acclaimed X-Force at Internet Security Systems. He delivered security services to more than 200 clients globally and was a co-creator of the breakthrough System Scanner technology.

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