Security Magazine logo
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Security Magazine logo
  • NEWS
    • Security Newswire
    • Technologies & Solutions
  • MANAGEMENT
    • Leadership Management
    • Enterprise Services
    • Security Education & Training
    • Logical Security
    • Security & Business Resilience
    • Profiles in Excellence
  • PHYSICAL
    • Access Management
    • Fire & Life Safety
    • Identity Management
    • Physical Security
    • Video Surveillance
    • Case Studies (Physical)
  • CYBER
    • Cybersecurity News
    • More
  • BLOG
  • COLUMNS
    • Career Intelligence
    • Cyber Tactics
    • Cybersecurity Education & Training
    • Leadership & Management
    • Security Talk
  • EXCLUSIVES
    • Annual Guarding Report
    • Most Influential People in Security
    • The Security Benchmark Report
    • Top Guard and Security Officer Companies
    • Top Cybersecurity Leaders
    • Women in Security
  • SECTORS
    • Arenas / Stadiums / Leagues / Entertainment
    • Banking/Finance/Insurance
    • Construction, Real Estate, Property Management
    • Education: K-12
    • Education: University
    • Government: Federal, State and Local
    • Hospitality & Casinos
    • Hospitals & Medical Centers
    • Infrastructure:Electric,Gas & Water
    • Ports: Sea, Land, & Air
    • Retail/Restaurants/Convenience
    • Transportation/Logistics/Supply Chain/Distribution/ Warehousing
  • EVENTS
    • Industry Events
    • Webinars
    • Solutions by Sector
    • Security 500 Conference
  • MEDIA
    • Interactive Spotlight
    • Photo Galleries
    • Podcasts
    • Polls
    • Videos
      • Cybersecurity & Geopolitical Discussion
      • Ask Me Anything (AMA) Series
  • MORE
    • Call for Entries
    • Classifieds & Job Listings
    • Newsletter
    • Sponsor Insights
    • Store
    • White Papers
  • EMAG
    • eMagazine
    • This Month's Content
    • Advertise
  • SIGN UP!
CybersecurityManagementSecurity Leadership and Management

CISOs Under Pressure: How Security Leaders Can Reclaim Their Seat at the Board Table

By Matt Hillary
Conference room
Nastuh Abootalebi via Unsplash
October 15, 2025

Nearly seven in ten CISOs and CIOs say they’ve been told to stay quiet about security incidents, a sign of how often the desire for more transparency conflicts with reputational risk management. At the same time, only 64% of CISOs say their boards see eye-to-eye with them on cybersecurity, a sharp decline from 84% last year.

This disconnect leaves organizations exposed to the reality of how impactful security incidents are as cyber risks grow more frequent and costly, with the global average breach costing organizations more than $4 million over the last year. 

If boards reduce CISOs to mere cost-center defenders measured only by audits passed, vulnerabilities fixed, or incidents avoided, they are far less likely to heed critical security and GRC recommendations — a stance that creates major, avoidable risk for the organization. One example: 64% of CISOs who were forced to forgo support for a business initiative due to insufficient security funding said the cutback led to a breach or other incident.

To secure influence in the boardroom, CISOs must evolve from protectors into business-savvy enablers. That shift starts with speaking the board’s language by tying well operating security and GRC programs to growth outcomes and proving its value with tangible, data-driven insights.

Why Board Alignment Is Slipping

Boards and CISOs share a common goal: protecting the organization’s future. But they often bring different assumptions, priorities, and definitions of risk to the table.

CISOs are, at times, evaluated on one thing: zero breaches. Though, others may be graded on operational outcomes such as vulnerabilities reduced, audits passed, or incidents minimized enough to avoid headlines. Because breaches so often unfold in public and carry reputational fallout, a single incident can overshadow years of steady progress and even have a direct impact on the CISO’s competency and reputation. Other executives may also face narrow scorecards, but their setbacks rarely damage trust as visibly. That leaves CISOs with unusually fragile influence in the boardroom, especially when the board may be focused on other business metrics such as new and retained revenue and company financials.

The gap also comes down to language. Boards frame discussions in terms of risk to revenue and strategy, while CISOs tend to speak in technical detail about security and GRC risks, vulnerabilities, and controls. Without translation between those perspectives, alignment falters and confidence in security leadership erodes. 

Until boards and security leaders align on a clear, shared perspective on risk and priorities, CISOs risk losing their seat at the very table where their voices matter most.

4 Ways CISOs Can Regain Boardroom Influence

Gartner predicts that 70% of boards will include at least one member with cybersecurity expertise by 2026. While most boards recognize they cannot make sound strategic decisions without a stronger grasp of cyber risk, appointing a single expert is not enough to rebuild alignment.

CISOs must seize this moment to shift perceptions and reframe security as a growth driver.

1. Speak the board’s language.

To gain credibility, CISOs must frame security discussions around business impact: revenue protection, deal velocity, customer retention, and operational resilience. 

For example, show how automated compliance reporting reduces procurement delays or how streamlined trust documentation accelerates deal cycles. Revenue unlocked and impacted over time directly resulting from security and GRC efforts is another key metric. The time to value as a result of these efforts can be quantified in core business metrics such as ARR and NRR influenced by security and GRC team efforts. Examples like these help boards see the business value of a stronger security posture.

2. Quantify trust.

Trust no longer has to be abstract. Track metrics like time to complete security questionnaires, the frequency of NDA requests, and rates of documentation access during procurement. 

When connected to pipeline and deal data, these metrics help show how strong security readiness reduces friction and accelerates sales.

3. Reframe objectives.

Audits and incident prevention are table stakes. Go further by setting objectives around faster deal cycles, stronger retention, or easier purchasing experiences for customers. This makes the link between security investments and business outcomes explicit for the board.

4. Lead with consistency and transparency.

Boards value clear, regular communication. CISOs who share plain-language updates and are honest about breaches or near misses will build trust over time. 

Providing visibility into response timelines and control improvements further demonstrates accountability and shows that security is being managed effectively.

Trust Is a Two-Way street

While CISOs can demonstrate the business value of security, they cannot close the gap alone. Boards must involve security leaders early in strategic planning, not just during audits or after incidents. 

By requesting trust-focused metrics alongside compliance updates and creating space for transparency — even when the news is uncomfortable — boards help shift the CISO from a reactive responder to a proactive partner in growth. 

The seat at the table is still there. Now it’s time for CISOs to claim and maintain it.

KEYWORDS: boardroom strategies CISO CISO leadership

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Matt hillary headshot

Matt Hillary is SVP of Security & CISO at Drata. 

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
To unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • Cyber tech background

    Security’s Top Cybersecurity Leaders 2026

    Security magazine’s Top Cybersecurity Leaders 2026 award...
    Top Cybersecurity Leaders
  • Iintegration and use of emerging tools

    Future Proof Your Security Career with AI Skills

    AI’s evolution demands security leaders master...
    Columns
    By: Jerry J. Brennan and Joanne R. Pollock
  • The 2025 Security Benchmark Report

    The 2025 Security Benchmark Report

    The 2025 Security Benchmark Report surveys enterprise...
    The Security Benchmark Report
    By: Rachelle Blair-Frasier
Manage My Account
  • Security Newsletter
  • eMagazine Subscriptions
  • Manage My Preferences
  • Online Registration
  • Mobile App
  • Subscription Customer Service

More Videos

Popular Stories

SEC Podcast Header Podcast

Credential Management in High Turnover Environments

Glowing police siren

Security Isn’t a Commodity. Neither Is Off-Duty Law Enforcement

Laptop in darkness

Reframing MFA Bypass: Four Identity Gaps Attackers Exploit

Man with covered face

Why Most Workplace Violence Prevention Starts Too Late

Coding

What Security Leaders Say About the First AI-Developed Zero-Day Exploit

SEC 2026 Benchmark Banner

Events

June 10, 2026

Applying Agentic AI in Security Operations for Faster Decisions & Better Outcomes

Security teams have never had more visibility. We’ll explore how a new decision layer is helping security teams move from detection to decision. Turn alerts into decision-ready context, reducing reliance on manual triage and enabling faster action.

July 8, 2026

The 2026 Security Maturity Benchmark Report: Insights From Senior Security Leaders

In this webinar, speakers will share key insights from the report, including why today’s threat environment demands greater maturity and how to evaluate your organization’s current security posture.

View All Submit An Event

Products

Security Culture: A How-to Guide for Improving Security Culture and Dealing with People Risk in Your Organisation

Security Culture: A How-to Guide for Improving Security Culture and Dealing with People Risk in Your Organisation

See More Products


Alertmedia sponsored webinar

Related Articles

  • Gaining a Seat at the Table - Security Magazine

    How Security Leaders Can Gain a Seat at the Table

    See More
  • Technology in the talent gap

    How security leaders can close the tech talent gap — once and for all

    See More
  • office desk setup with laptop

    How security leaders can prepare for emerging threats

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • school security.jpg

    School Security: How to Build and Strengthen a School Safety Program

  • security culture.webp

    Security Culture: A How-to Guide for Improving Security Culture and Dealing with People Risk in Your Organisation

See More Products

Events

View AllSubmit An Event
  • July 8, 2026

    The 2026 Security Maturity Benchmark Report: Insights From Senior Security Leaders

    In this webinar, speakers will share key insights from the report, including why today’s threat environment demands greater maturity and how to evaluate your organization’s current security posture.
View AllSubmit An Event
×

Sign-up to receive top management & result-driven techniques in the industry.

Join over 20,000+ industry leaders who receive our premium content.

SIGN UP TODAY!
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Store
    • Want More
  • SIGN UP TODAY
    • Create Account
    • eMagazine
    • Newsletter
    • Customer Service
    • Manage Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing