Rethinking How Cybersecurity Work Gets Organized
Most cybersecurity organizations are structured the way hospitals organize specialty clinics. Discrete functional teams (SOC, IR, GRC, AppSec, vulnerability management, identity) each with their own leaders, metrics, and budgets. Work flows through routing and handoffs. The model builds deep expertise and clean reporting lines, and it is the structure most CISOs inherited. Its failure mode shows up at the seams. The acquisition integration that needs SOC visibility, IR readiness, GRC sign-off, and AppSec review of inherited code moves through four functions on incompatible timelines. The product launch that needs threat modeling, control implementation, monitoring tuning, and incident response plans gets each piece from a different team. The vendor onboarding becomes a series of parallel reviews that finish weeks apart. By the time anyone sees the whole picture, the picture has changed. The pattern isn't a failure of any individual function. Each function is doing its job. The patt...