Unprecedented demand for IT security professionals has employers fighting to retain talent.This is particularly true for Certified Information Systems SecurityProfessionals (CISSP), according to the latest market trends reportfrom Ambition, an Australian recruitment firm.In fact, certified IT workers are in such high demand that someemployers have stopped including them in staff development programsfearing they will be better prepared to walk out the door, Ambitiontechnology director Jane Bianchini said.This demand, which has dominated 2005 recruiting, will continue in 2006. Bianchini said organizations’ use of data for competitive advantage has driven demand, along with compliance and governance.“I think with the amount of information now being extracted from data,intellectual property (IP) is starting to become quite important.Organizations want to protect IP so there is more of an awareness ofdata protection,” she said. “Organizations are using data to extract key decisions about the marketplace and it is critical there are no leaks.“While companies want to retain the necessary talent to protect IP,they are not always willing to pay the salaries being sought by ITsecurity professionals. This has led to workaround solutions, but theemployment market is not yielding to the pressure.”According to Bianchini, salary increases across the board were few andfar between. Contractor roles have shown little increase in salary(about 0.5 percent) but project managers have seen their salariesincrease 16 percent.Other skills in high demand are .Net and Java and J2EE.Bianchini said the demand for specialized database administrators inthe banking and finance world is comparable with the shortages in .Net,java and J2EE.“Organizations are hiring multiples of Java developers because of thisshortfall and it is all driven by the evolution of CRM systems to aWeb-enabled front-end and business process re-engineering … themarket now is caught between the latter two stages,” she added. By Michael Crawford – Computerworld Today (Australia) Related content news Is China waging a cyber war with Taiwan? Nation-state hacking groups based in China have sharply ramped up cyberattacks against Taiwan this year, according to multiple reports. By Gagandeep Kaur Dec 01, 2023 4 mins Cyberattacks Government Government news Apple patches info-stealing, zero day bugs in iPads and Macs The vulnerabilities that can allow the leaking of sensitive information and enable arbitrary code execution have had exploitations in the wild. By Shweta Sharma Dec 01, 2023 3 mins Zero-day vulnerability feature The CSO guide to top security conferences Tracking postponements, cancellations, and conferences gone virtual — CSO Online’s calendar of upcoming security conferences makes it easy to find the events that matter the most to you. By CSO Staff Dec 01, 2023 6 mins Technology Industry IT Skills Events news Conti-linked ransomware takes in $107 million in ransoms: Report A ransomware campaign linked to the ostensibly defunct Conti malware group has targeted mostly US businesses, in a costly series of attacks. By Jon Gold Nov 30, 2023 4 mins Ransomware Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe