Gender of Recruiter Makes a Difference: A study into Cybersecurity Graduate Recruitment
Joanne L. Hall, Asha Rao

TL;DR
This study investigates how the gender of cybersecurity recruiters influences the non-technical skills they value in graduate candidates, revealing gender-based differences that impact recruitment practices and curriculum design.
Contribution
It uncovers gender-specific preferences in non-technical skills sought by recruiters, emphasizing the importance of gender diversity in recruitment panels and curriculum adaptation.
Findings
Female recruiters prioritize people-focused skills.
Male recruiters prioritize task-focused skills.
Gender differences in skill valuation are independent of recruit gender.
Abstract
An ever-widening workforce gap exists in the global cybersecurity industry but diverse talent is underutilized. The global cybersecurity workforce is only 25% female. Much research exists on the effect of gender bias on the hiring of women into the technical workforce, but little on how the gender of the recruiter (gender difference) affects recruitment decisions. This research reveals differences between the non-technical skills sought by female vs non-female cybersecurity recruiters. The former look for recruits with people-focused skills while the latter look for task-focused skills, highlighting the need for gender diversity in recruitment panels. Recruiters are increasingly seeking non-technical (soft) skills in technical graduate recruits. This requires STEM curriculum in Universities to adapt to match. Designing an industry-ready cybersecurity curriculum requires knowledge of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInformation and Cyber Security
