As Q1 draws to a close, many organisations are reviewing what worked — and what didn’t — in their cybersecurity strategy.
Budgets were approved.
Roles were opened.
Security initiatives were planned.
Yet for many teams, progress has been slower than expected.
Not because the intent wasn’t there — but because execution in cybersecurity is increasingly tied to talent.
And that’s where the difference between average teams and winning teams is becoming clear.
The Shift Happening in 2026
Cyber threats are evolving faster than organisational structures.
AI-driven attacks, cloud complexity, third-party risk exposure, and increasing regulatory pressure are forcing leaders to rethink how their security teams are built.
The organisations that stay ahead are not necessarily the ones with the largest budgets.
They are the ones aligning capability with risk.
What Winning Cyber Teams Are Doing Differently
1-Hiring with precision, not volume
Winning teams are moving away from generic roles and focusing on specific expertise aligned to real security challenges.
Whether it’s a Security Architect shaping long-term resilience, a Security Engineer strengthening technical controls, or a Risk Analyst managing exposure — each role serves a clear purpose.
Precision hiring reduces noise and increases impact.
2-Streamlining hiring decisions
The best candidates in cybersecurity rarely stay available for long.
Winning teams understand this and are removing friction from the hiring process — fewer interview stages, clearer decision ownership, and faster alignment between stakeholders.
Speed combined with clarity wins the strongest talent.
3-Treating retention as a strategic priority
In cybersecurity, institutional knowledge is a powerful asset.
Replacing experienced professionals is expensive, disruptive, and risky.
Winning teams are focusing on:
• Clear role expectations
• Realistic workloads
• Career development and mentorship
Retention isn’t just a HR metric — it’s a security advantage.
4-Aligning cybersecurity hiring with business strategy
Cybersecurity can no longer operate in isolation.
Winning teams ensure their hiring decisions support broader organisational goals — whether that’s regulatory compliance, digital transformation, or customer trust.
The result is a security function that supports business resilience, not just technical defence.
The Competitive Advantage
In 2026, the difference between organisations that struggle and those that lead will not simply be technology.
It will be people.
The expertise they bring.
The processes used to hire them.
And the environment that keeps them performing at their best.
Looking Ahead to Q2
As we move into the next quarter, the question for leaders isn’t:
“Do we need more cybersecurity talent?”
It’s:
“Are we building the right cybersecurity team for the threats we actually face?”
Because the organisations that answer that question well will not just keep up with change.
They’ll stay ahead of it.
For CISOs and security leaders:
What is the one change you are making to strengthen your cybersecurity team in Q2?



