If your security plan is “we’ll know when something breaks,” it’s time to hire cyber security expert support.
Because when your company operates in the United States, it’s easier if your talent does too.
They run penetration tests, audit configurations, and review architecture so the weak link gets fixed before it becomes a headline.
They tune SIEM rules, clean up monitoring chaos, and separate “suspicious login from Ohio” from “we are actively being compromised.”
They align technical controls with SOC 2, ISO, HIPAA, or PCI so your security posture holds up in audits, not just in slide decks.
Cloud misconfigurations, container security, API exposure. They’ve seen it. They’ve fixed it. They’ll keep your release cycle intact.
Checkout pages, payment processors, and third-party scripts. They know where fraud hides and how to shut it down without killing conversion rates.
PHI, legacy systems, and regulatory pressure. They design controls that work in real environments, not just on paper.
Layered controls, audit trails, and risk frameworks that regulators respect and attackers dislike.
Monitors logs, supports vulnerability scans, and investigates anomalies without panicking at every failed login attempt.
1-2 years of experience
Runs threat assessments, leads remediation projects, and can explain why that open S3 bucket is a problem in plain English.
3-5 years of experience
Designs secure architectures, leads incident response, and prevents small issues from becoming incident response war rooms.
5+ years of experience
Sets enterprise security standards, aligns with leadership, and ensures security is proactive instead of reactive.
7+ years of experience



They monitor threats, test systems, review configurations, and implement controls that reduce risk across infrastructure, applications, and users.
It makes sense to hire cyber security expert talent when internal teams are stretched, compliance pressure increases, infrastructure scales, or risk exposure changes. Whether preparing for an audit, responding to suspicious activity, or strengthening preventive controls, the right expert adds structure before issues escalate.
A cyber security expert may work across strategy, testing, compliance, and incident response. A security engineer is typically more focused on building and maintaining security systems.
Yes. They implement and validate the technical controls required for common regulatory frameworks.
We’ll work quickly to find a replacement or adjust the talent profile until we get the right match at no extra cost.
Your systems are connected. Your data is valuable. Attackers are motivated.
Hire someone who understands all three.
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