A CISO without a security program is like a pilot without a plane. Many organizations under pressure to improve cybersecurity hire their first CISO and expect instant results. The reality is that simply appointing an experienced security leader, without first developing a solid understanding of the company’s security related objectives, cyber risks and tolerances, and at least a foundational consensus on how to proceed, rarely solves the problem. And in fact, it can make the problem worse.
The First CISO Dilemma: Culture Clash and Chaos
Fast-growing companies often delay formal security investment in favor of finding product-market fit, shipping product, and hitting revenue goals, especially outside of regulated market sectors. This approach can make some sense: companies are not going to invest in securing pre-revenue MVPs and corporate IT until there is something worth protecting. Security gets ignored until enough things break; customers threaten to walk, audits expose gaps, or a frightening enough breach nearly happens.
That’s when leadership scrambles to hire a CISO to address the problems. But dropping a CISO into an organization without a clear mandate and cross-functional support is a setup for failure. In a greenfield or restart security situation where the company’s risks and tolerances are not defined and security investment has been driven primarily by pain - interrupted sales, missed customer deadlines, operational disruptions, embarrassing incidents - it’s actually easy for both the company and typical growth or emerging mid market CISO candidates to make the wrong assumptions. What’s positioned as a strategic hire can quickly turn into an expensive mismatch.
Why Hiring a CISO Isn’t a Silver Bullet
A CISO is not cure-all, or a self-contained security program. CISOs are leaders who own the design and execution of a strategy, oversee a security program that impacts and must coordinate with most aspects of an organization and are responsible for driving positive security outcomes.
Here are a few reasons a lone CISO can’t magically fix security:
A Better Approach: Build the Security Foundation First
Instead of expecting the perfect new CISO to create structure from scratch, prepare the organization first so you can find the right candidates and they can lead with clarity and impact.
Hiring a CISO can be a game-changer for your company’s security and customer trust, but only if you set them up for success. Likewise, a CISO delivers the most value when they step into an organization that knows what it wants from its security program and has laid sufficient groundwork for them to execute. If you invest time in building a strong security foundation, your CISO will be an enabler of growth and resilience, not a costly firefighter.
Our Take?
Lay the groundwork before bringing on a CISO. I/Omergent helps growth-stage companies build the foundation for a strong security program, so your next security leader can drive results, not play catch-up.