Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 31 | Page 58

FEATURE: TRAINING ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Steve Tzikakis, President South Europe, Middle East and Africa at SAP (centre), and Ahmed Al-Faifi, Senior Vice President and Managing Director, SAP Middle East North (centre left), meet with Young Professionals Graduates during the SAP NOW event in Riyadh Yasser Zeineldin, CEO, eHosting DataFort, said: “The frequency and very powerful security threats that organisations are facing are now being recognised and discussed in boardrooms. Focused efforts are going into detailed strategies to build and implement comprehensive security for risk management and protection. “The fast-paced developments in cybersecurity also call for specialised skills. Most organisations are unprepared to adapt to this next chapter.” According to a Cisco 2016 Annual Security Report, there is a deficit of one million security practitioners, increasing to 1.5 million by 2019. Globally, 26% of organisations are facing staffing shortages, and 35% are facing expertise shortages with security jobs growing at 12 times the rate of the overall job market, and three times the rate of general IT. The World Economic Forum (WEF) also found that 21% of core skills in the Gulf Cooperation Council will be different in 2020 than in 2015. Regionally, digital penetration across the government and business sectors in the Middle East has been growing at a very rapid pace with the push being spearheaded by local governments especially in countries like Saudi Arabia, UAE and Egypt. Partnering with education providers But what should be done? The response is complex and often stretches across 58 INTELLIGENTCIO www.intelligentcio.com