Recruitment site Indeed has good news for cybersecurity professionals: Demand is booming around the world. After a relatively flat period between 2016 and 2017, 2018 saw job postings up 7 percent in the United States, 18 percent in Ireland, and 39 percent in India, recently ranked as one of the least cybersecure countries in the world. Job seeker interest, as measured by the number of clicks on cybersecurity job listings, did not keep pace, except in Israel (one of the few countries to see a dip in job listings), England, France, Australia, and the Netherlands. In the United States, job seeker interest actually dipped 1.3 percent compared with the previous year (see chart, below).
Image: Indeed
Indeed also looked at the highest paying cybersecurity jobs in the United States. Application security engineer came out on top, at US $128,128, ahead of director of information security, at $127,855. Penetration testers, a.k.a. ethical hackers, are earning an average of $114,431 annually.
Rank | Job Title | Average Salary |
---|---|---|
1 | Application security engineer | $128,128 |
2 | Director of information security | $127,855 |
3 | Senior security consultant | $126,628 |
4 | Cloud engineer | $126,365 |
5 | Software architect | $117,633 |
6 | Penetration tester | $114,431 |
7 | Risk manager | $108,465 |
8 | Chief information officer | $103,690 |
9 | Security engineer | $101,808 |
10 | Information manager | $99,930 |
Tekla S. Perry is a senior editor at IEEE Spectrum. Based in Palo Alto, Calif., she's been covering the people, companies, and technology that make Silicon Valley a special place for more than 40 years. An IEEE member, she holds a bachelor's degree in journalism from Michigan State University.