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Home - Security - Why the cybersecurity skills gap is partly self-inflicted
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Why the cybersecurity skills gap is partly self-inflicted

Apu PavithranBy Apu PavithranApril 7, 20265 Mins Read
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Cybersecurity Skills Gap Is Partly Self-Inflicted
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The cybersecurity skills gap is usually framed as a hiring problem. Organizations respond by expanding recruitment pipelines, investing in certifications, and launching internal training programs. The logic seems simple: if security teams are understaffed, the solution is to add more talent.

There is some truth to that. Skilled cybersecurity professionals are indeed scarce globally. The ISC2’s 2025 Cybersecurity Workforce Study found that 59% of organizations report critical or significant skills shortages, with many struggling to find the talent they need.

Yet this diagnosis misses a harder truth. What if the shortage we talk about so often is partly a consequence of the systems we design?

Enterprise security stacks have grown dramatically more complex over the past decade. The average enterprise now operates 83 security tools from 29 different vendors, with 52% of executives citing complexity as their biggest operational challenge.

When talent is already scarce, environments that require deep expertise just to navigate only deepen the skills gap.

The problem may not only be that we lack enough cybersecurity professionals. In many cases, it could be because we are asking them to operate systems that are unnecessarily difficult to manage.

Complexity raises the bar for security talent

Security leaders often assume that adding new tools automatically strengthens their defenses. In practice, every additional platform introduces a new management console, its own configuration logic, and another operational workflow that administrators must learn.

Over time, routine tasks such as device enrollment, policy updates, or compliance checks begin to span multiple systems. Device state may be managed on one platform, identity on another, and threat detection on a third. Even experienced admins may need to move between dashboards to piece together what is happening across the environment. In many organizations, IT teams spend more than four hours onboarding a single employee across disconnected tools and workflows.

The impact might be subtle at first. Tasks take slightly longer, and the additional steps are manageable. But as these dependencies scale, consistency becomes harder to maintain. Policies can drift across layers, and gaps between systems introduce blind spots that are not immediately visible. Troubleshooting requires correlating signals across platforms before any action can be taken.

This changes the way admins get work done. Security teams spend less time responding to threats and more time interpreting the systems meant to manage them. The constraint is no longer just skill, but the effort required to navigate fragmented environments.

This also affects how teams scale. As environments become more difficult to manage, the time it takes for admins to become productive increases. New hires must learn not just the security principles, but also the operational quirks of each platform in the stack.

In that sense, complexity does more than slow down IT teams. It quietly raises the operational bar for the talent organizations are trying to hire.

When sophistication becomes structural complexity

Another issue lies in the platforms’ architecture. Many “modern” security platforms are often assumed to be sophisticated because of the scale of capabilities they promise. Yet the real test comes during deployment. When a platform takes months to implement, it often signals architectural complexity rather than technological sophistication.

Lengthy deployments frequently indicate a heavy reliance on custom integrations before the platform can function within an existing environment. Security tools must connect with identity systems, endpoint infrastructure, directory services, and network controls. When these connections depend on bespoke integrations, deployment timelines can stretch significantly.

In other cases, the platform itself may be the result of multiple acquisitions stitched together over time, creating fragmented architectures that require additional configuration just to function as a unified system.

The consequences appear soon after deployment. Admins must manage complex configurations and maintain fragile integrations between components. When those integrations fail or fall out of sync, automation workflows break, forcing teams to intervene manually. This introduces another layer of operational overhead. Systems designed to reduce manual effort begin to require continuous oversight. As automation becomes less predictable, teams compensate by increasing manual validation, further stretching already limited resources.

Ironically, the very tools introduced to improve security operations can become sources of friction that slow down decision-making and response times.

Escaping the complexity trap

The challenge does not end with deployment. This architecture also makes change difficult.

When a platform requires lengthy rollout processes, large-scale device re-enrollment, or policy recreations, migration quickly becomes a major operational effort. Even when better tools exist, switching platforms can mean weeks of disruption across devices, policies, and workflows.

That friction discourages teams from moving at all. Organizations often remain trapped in inefficient systems simply to avoid the risk and effort of migration. This hesitation can create broader security concerns.

Breaking out of this cycle requires simplification.

Start by rationalizing the security stack. Many environments accumulate overlapping tools over time; each is introduced to address a specific requirement. The result is a management layer that grows heavier with every addition. Consolidating these systems reduces management overhead and allows teams to operate through fewer, clearer control points.

Migration and onboarding must also be frictionless. Platforms that support fast device enrollment and built-in migration capabilities allow organizations to transition devices and policies without large-scale rollout projects. When moving between systems becomes easier, teams gain the flexibility to adopt better tools instead of remaining locked into inefficient ones.

Integration should be equally deliberate. Platforms that align naturally with identity services, endpoints, and network infrastructure provide shared visibility across the environment. This reduces the need to manually correlate alerts across multiple consoles and allows teams to move from detection to response more quickly.

Finally, automate wherever possible. Patch deployment, compliance monitoring, and device remediation are predictable processes. When these tasks run continuously in the background, security teams can focus their expertise on investigation and response rather than platform maintenance.

Ultimately, closing the cybersecurity skills gap will always require developing more talent. Yet in many environments, the more immediate solution may be simplifying the systems those professionals are expected to operate.

Apu Pavithran
Apu Pavithran

Apu Pavithran is the visionary Founder and CEO of Hexnode, the enterprise software company behind Hexnode UEM, Hexnode XDR, Hexnode IdP, and Hexnode UEM MSP. With over 15 years of experience in enterprise software and cybersecurity, Apu has transformed Hexnode from a small startup into a global leader trusted by organizations in over 130 countries. An avid writer featured in Forbes, TechCrunch, Entrepreneur, etc., Apu frequently shares insights on leadership, enterprise IT, and the evolving future of work.

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The opinions expressed in this post belong to the individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Information Security Buzz.

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