LONDON: Apt Search and BigRed Consulting have released a joint whitepaper to help organisations recruit successfully in the areas of e-discovery, security and information governance. The whitepaper, Information governance – the skills and knowledge organisations need, looks at current personnel challenges faced by organisations and career opportunities now open for individuals.
28 percent of organisations [1] plan to hire for security, compliance and governance roles in 2015. Enticing good prospective candidates to the recruitment table with specialist knowledge of their career paths and aspirations – and the appropriate level of remuneration – is key. According to Apt Search, the shortfall of talent will create a significant gap between what the market is able to supply in terms of skilled staff and what businesses will need. The whitepaper, titled ‘Information governance – the skills and knowledge organisations need’, is targeted at organisations that want to boost their in-house capabilities in the areas of e-discovery, security and compliance. It provides strategies that can be put in place now to manage the expected skills shortfall.
Amit Pandit, Managing Director at Apt Search, explains, “Information governance is a broad discipline that touches on most aspects of the business. It has become a real challenge to find and hire the right people to lead it – 20 percent of CIOs in regulated industries are forecast to lose their jobs in the next few years through failures in information governance [2]. In the past, companies were quite prescriptive. That view has more recently broadened. Organisations are now starting to find the most appropriate people with a wider skillset such as IT and e-discovery, and from project management or compliance backgrounds.”
Tony Ratcliffe, Consultant Director at BigRed Consulting Group, adds, “Information governance as a holistic discipline is swiftly gaining importance in organisations and the role can offer a pathway to the board level for the right person. In the US, the CEO and CIO are starting to be joined by the CIGO – chief information governance officer – and the Information Governance Initiative, the industry body for information governance, is actively consulting on the CIGO role. Contrary to popular belief, information governance does not only affect larger organisations. We have also seen that small to medium sized enterprises are now increasingly at risk of losing their larger, information governance savvy clients, if they are not able to provide proof of effective IG controls. These larger clients, compelled by their own IG programmes, are now pursuing evidence from their supply chains, particularly, in respect of security around their own information held by their suppliers and business partners. Greater awareness of information governance and specialist audits will help to identify risks and provide a path for business owners to address them.”