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Draup Data Shows Cybersecurity Hiring Pressure Will Persist Into 2028 - Vijay Swaminathan image

Draup Data Shows Cybersecurity Hiring Pressure Will Persist Into 2028 - Vijay Swaminathan

E1934 · Business of Tech
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The core structural shift highlighted involves a skills convergence and expanded role definition across technology and business functions. Draup’s Global Tech Talent Report and commentary by Vijay Swaminathan underscore the rising complexity and blending of job expectations, particularly as artificial intelligence (AI) and automation penetrate workflows. Companies are reorganizing hiring strategies and role definitions, prioritizing adaptable expertise over traditional IT job titles, and emphasizing domain specialization. Service providers are observing a move from specialized roles toward hybrid positions that demand broader understanding of business operations, compliance, security, and AI.

The most consequential development is the persistent and intensifying shortage of cybersecurity professionals, as referenced in Draup’s report. According to Vijay Swaminathan, the gap between open cybersecurity positions and qualified candidates is projected to continue through at least 2028, driven by accelerated adoption of AI/ML, IoT, and cloud technologies. Job requirements have shifted, with a 25–30% increase in skill expectations for roles in engineering, security, and product management. This expansion of necessary competencies outpaces traditional training and hiring channels, further complicating workforce planning for the sector.

Additional developments reinforce these structural stressors. The report asserts that 40% of current core tech skills will be partially obsolete by 2027 due to ongoing skill fusion and AI-enabled workflows, not just layoffs. Companies are also recruiting for new categories such as “builders,” “orchestrators,” and “synthesizers,” whose duties blend technical and business intelligence. Vijay Swaminathan points out an emerging need for deep domain expertise, process documentation, and AI governance, as evolving data collection and product experience initiatives redefine value creation across verticals like retail and hospitality.

For MSPs, IT service providers, and technology leaders, these changes increase operational complexity and demand more investment in continuous upskilling, industry-specific hiring, and governance. Maintaining domain specialization and robust compliance documentation will become baseline requirements for winning and retaining business, but these add overhead and require strategic selection of verticals. The evolving tech stack and expansion of hybrid workflows drive greater dependency on creative, adaptable talent—exposing firms to increased risk if reskilling and governance fall behind the pace of automation and regulatory scrutiny.

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