According to the report by IANS Research and Artico Search, there is indeed a fair probability that expanded security budgets will continue to rise in 2024, albeit at a slower pace compared to the last couple of years. For this year, security spending has been jacked up some 8%, one notch higher than the 6% increase in 2023. That's still miles away from the increases of 16% and 17% seen in 2021 and 2022, respectively.
Meanwhile, the security budget grew rather insignificantly, and the share of security spending in an IT portfolio has grown from 8.6% in 2020 to 13.2% in 2024. This means that cybersecurity is finding its place as one of the critical components of an IT setup—at least for organisations which depend most on digital technologies today.
Security teams must become the protective force of organisations but are perennially challenged to not get subjugated by competitive priorities and small budgets. "Security is getting pulled closer to the core of the business," said IANS Senior Research Director Nick Kakolowski. "While the level of protection desired by companies goes up, the tools and skills given to security teams fall short of what would satisfy their growing expectations.".
Reduction in the Recruitment of Security Personnel
One of the most striking trends underscored in this report is the remarkable shrinkage in hiring that is taking place in the cybersecurity sector. Security teams were 12% higher in 2024 than a year earlier, but that growth was slower compared to the 31% jump in 2022 and a 16% increase in 2023. This takes place at a time of general economic uncertainty, with businesses placing greater control on the management of their overall costs.
While security remains a top priority for most organisations, economic pressure has held businesses back from increasing teams at the same rate. With shrinking budgets, most security teams have no alternative but to do more with less, further compounding the task of keeping pace with an unprecedented surge in threats.
The Future of Cybersecurity Spending Analysts note that, with the world of business strategies hinging on cybersecurity, the budgeting for security will remain on an upward trend albeit at a slower and more incremental pace. The reasoning is that business success increasingly calls for comprehensive security due to increasing dependence on digital technologies in all its functions. Currently, security investments are set to reach $212 billion by 2025; Gartner has 15% growth estimated over its forecast levels by 2024. That kind of projection accentuates beliefs that spending on cybersecurity is going to remain one of the most critical investments for companies. Overall, with continued rises of security budgets—cybersecurity is on a higher spending bracket than IT budgets; the slow hire rate actually points to the hardship organisations face in trying to grow their security teams as fast as they would want. Because another major business function is the need for organisations to strategically pay attention not only to investment in but also to the management and sustainability of their security postures, especially in periods of economic disfavour.