Many companies assume that if a role is important enough, strong candidates will naturally apply.
In most areas of tech, that logic can sometimes hold. In IT security, it rarely does.
The reality is that many of the strongest security engineers are not actively applying for roles – even when they might be open to the right move.
The Passive Nature of Security Talent
Good security engineers are usually already employed, often in roles with significant responsibility. They’re embedded in systems, trusted by leadership, and aware of the impact of their work.
Security professionals also tend to be more cautious by nature. Career moves are rarely impulsive. They think carefully about risk, stability, leadership structure, and reporting lines. They want to understand how seriously an organisation takes security before they consider moving.
As a result, the majority of high-performing security engineers sit in the “passive” part of the market. They are not scrolling job boards every evening. They are not sending out speculative applications.
That doesn’t mean they would never move – but it does mean they rarely apply directly.
Security Roles Carry Higher Personal Risk
Moving jobs in security can feel different from moving jobs in other technical disciplines.
A developer joins a new team and writes code. A security engineer often inherits risk – legacy systems, cultural issues, unresolved vulnerabilities, unclear ownership. They may become accountable for decisions they didn’t make.
Good security engineers are very aware of this. Before moving, they want clarity on:
- Reporting structure
- Budget and authority
- Executive buy-in
- Existing security maturity
A job description rarely answers these questions.
Why Job Ads Alone Don’t Work
Security job adverts often focus heavily on tooling and certifications:
SIEM experience, cloud security, ISO frameworks, DevSecOps, penetration testing, compliance standards.
All important – but rarely the deciding factor for senior security professionals.
The real questions are more strategic:
- How seriously does the business take security?
- Is this role reactive or proactive?
- Will I have influence, or just responsibility?
- Is this a culture I can work in?
Those answers don’t always translate neatly into a job post.
The Implication for Hiring Teams
If you rely purely on inbound applications for security roles, you are often selecting from a narrower slice of the market – typically those who are actively looking.
That doesn’t mean they are poor candidates. But it does mean you are unlikely to access the full pool of high-performing, currently employed security talent.
Strong security hiring usually requires proactive engagement, targeted conversations, and a clear articulation of why the role is worth the risk of moving.
Security Hiring Is About Trust
At its core, security is built on trust – and so is security hiring.
The strongest candidates want to understand leadership, strategy, and intent. They want transparency about challenges. They want to know whether they will be empowered or simply exposed.
Until that trust is established, many won’t apply at all.