Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) are successfully obtaining increased cybersecurity budgets by fundamentally changing their communication strategies with executive boards. This success is attributed to a strategic shift from technical jargon to the financial language of the C-suite.
By framing cybersecurity as a core business function rather than a technical cost center, security leaders are more effectively articulating the value of their programs. This pivot involves presenting security initiatives in terms that resonate with financial decision-makers, directly linking security investments to business outcomes.
Shifting from Technical Metrics to Business Value
The modern CISO’s budget proposal moves beyond detailing the number of blocked threats or patched vulnerabilities. Instead, the focus is on articulating how security investments protect revenue streams, ensure operational uptime, and reduce the financial liability associated with potential data breaches. For example, discussions center on how a specific security control reduces the probable financial loss from a ransomware attack. This approach connects cybersecurity spending directly to the organization’s bottom line, making the value proposition clear to non-technical stakeholders and board members.
The Language of Risk Quantification
A key component of this new strategy is the quantification of cyber risk. CISOs are increasingly using established models to translate potential security incidents into specific financial figures, including potential revenue loss, regulatory fines, and operational recovery costs. By presenting a data-driven analysis of financial risk exposure versus the cost of mitigation, security executives enable boards to make informed investment decisions based on familiar concepts like return on investment (ROI) and risk-buy-down. This financial framing has proven effective in securing the resources needed to build robust organizational cyber resilience.
Source: https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2025/11/11/chris-wheeler-resilience-cisos-cybersecurity-budgets/