Senior Director, Cyber Security

United States. Raleigh, North Carolina, United States

Senior Director, Cyber Security

  • 202601909
  • Raleigh, North Carolina, United States
  • United States
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Description

The Role

This role owns the strategy and execution of a modern, contextual vulnerability management program that moves beyond “scan-and-patch” to a risk-based, decision grade model. You will build an operating model that continuously identifies, prioritizes, and drives remediation of exposures based on business criticality, exploitability, threat intelligence, control effectiveness, and real-world attack paths—across a large, complex, and fragmented enterprise environment. You will partner deeply with infrastructure, cloud, application engineering, IAM, SOC, GRC, third-party risk, and business leaders to measurably reduce enterprise risk while maintaining pace with delivery.

What success looks like

A vulnerability management program that produces actionable priorities (not noise), aligned to business risk and threat reality. • Clear governance, accountability, and service-level outcomes that scale across distributed teams and varied technology stacks. • Measurable risk reduction (attack-path closure, critical exposure burn-down, reduced time-to-fix where it matters most), not just compliance metrics. • A sustainable model: automation-first, integrated into engineering workflows, and resilient to tooling changes, reorganizations, and growth. • Board-level metrics and trend reporting that demonstrate program maturity and enterprise risk reduction over time

The Responsibilities

1) Build the future-state vulnerability management operating model • Define the enterprise vulnerability management strategy, vision, and roadmap, centered on contextual prioritization and continuous exposure management. • Establish a risk-scoring/prioritization approach that combines: asset criticality, internet exposure, identity privilege, exploitability/KEV, compensating controls, lateral movement potential, and business process impact. • Evolve from point-in-time reporting to continuous, near-real-time visibility and prioritization

2) Drive outcomes across a complex, federated environment • Lead cross-functional execution across infrastructure, endpoints, cloud platforms, and application teams. • Build a scalable “hub-and-spoke” model: central standards, analytics, governance, and reporting; distributed remediation ownership and execution. • Establish clear RACI, operational rhythms (triage, remediation planning, exception handling), and escalation paths tied to business risk.

3) Modernize tooling, data quality, and automation • Optimize and integrate vulnerability and exposure tooling, including (examples): Tenable, Wiz, third-party risk/external posture sources such as Black Kite and Security Scorecard, plus CMDB/asset inventories, SIEM/SOAR, ticketing (e.g., ServiceNow/Jira), and CI/CD security signals. • Create a unified vulnerability/exposure “source of truth” that normalizes data, reduces duplicates, and improves attribution to true owners. • Automate workflows: enrichment, deduplication, prioritization, ticket creation, exception approvals, and verification of remediation.

4) Deliver executive-ready reporting and measurable risk reduction • Produce board- and executive-level reporting that explains risk in business terms: top exposure themes, critical attack paths, remediation progress, and residual risk. • Build forward-looking metrics and dashboards that reflect reality in a large enterprise: coverage, confidence/accuracy, time-to-remediate by risk tier, exception trends, and risk acceptance discipline. • Create an evidence-based narrative demonstrating how vulnerability decisions reduce likelihood and impact of material incidents.

5) Embed vulnerability management into engineering and cloud delivery • Shift left: partner with engineering leadership to integrate vulnerability findings into developer workflows and release gates where appropriate. • Establish practical standards for vulnerability remediation in cloud and applications (e.g., images, containers, IaC, SaaS configs), balancing security with delivery velocity. • Enable teams with playbooks, patterns, and self-service dashboards to improve fix rates without constant central chasing.

6) Govern exceptions and ensure realism at enterprise scale • Design an exception process that is disciplined, time-bound, transparent, and tied to compensating controls and risk acceptance. • Differentiate “must-fix” from “monitor/mitigate,” ensuring the program remains credible and relevant rather than flooding teams with unprioritized queues.

Qualifications

The Qualifications

• 10+ years in cybersecurity, with deep experience leading vulnerability management or exposure/risk reduction programs in large, complex organizations. • Demonstrated success transforming programs from traditional CVSS-driven patching to contextual, threat-informed prioritization. • Strong stakeholder leadership across engineering, infrastructure, cloud, product/application teams, and governance groups. • Experience driving operational change at scale: governance, process design, automation, and measurable outcomes. • Comfort with ambiguity, fragmented data, and complex ownership models—able to create clarity and momentum.

Technical requirements

• Vulnerability management domains: infrastructure, endpoints, cloud, applications, identity exposures, and third-party/external attack surface. • Familiarity with tools such as Tenable (or equivalents), Wiz (or cloud CNAPP/CSPM equivalents), external posture/third-party sources like Black Kite and SecurityScorecard, and integrating signals into ticketing and reporting systems. • Understanding of exploitability signals (e.g., KEV, in-the-wild exploitation), attack path concepts, and control validation/compensating controls.

Preferred qualifications

• Experience building a unified exposure model (asset + identity + vulnerability + misconfiguration + external posture). • Experience with security data engineering/analytics approaches (normalization, scoring, BI dashboards, automation). • Familiarity with regulated environments and audit-ready evidence (SOX, HIPAA, etc., as applicable).

Leadership competencies

• Outcome orientation: prioritizes real risk reduction over activity metrics. • Influence at scale: builds coalitions and drives execution without relying on direct authority. • Pragmatism: designs a program that remains achievable and relevant in a large enterprise with competing priorities. • Communication: converts complex technical risk into simple, credible narratives for executives and boards.

 

Note: Employment-based non-immigrant visa sponsorship and/or assistance is not offered for this specific job opportunity.

This position will remain posted for a minimum of three business days from the date posted or until a sufficient/appropriate candidate slate has been identified.

Company Benefits (US locations)

WTW provides a competitive benefit package which includes the following (eligibility requirements apply):

  • Health and Welfare Benefits: Medical (including prescription coverage), Dental, Vision, Health Savings Account, Commuter Account, Health Care and Dependent Care Flexible Spending Accounts, Group Accident, Group Critical Illness, Life Insurance, AD&D, Group Legal, Identify Theft Protection, Wellbeing Program and Work/Life Resources (including Employee Assistance Program)
  • Leave Benefits: Paid Holidays, Annual Paid Time Off (includes paid state/local paid leave where required), Short-Term Disability, Long-Term Disability, Other Leaves (e.g., Bereavement, FMLA, ADA, Jury Duty, Military Leave, and Parental and Adoption Leave), Paid Time Off (Washington State only)
  • Retirement Benefits: Contributory Pension Plan and Savings Plan (401k). 

We understand flexibility is key to supporting an inclusive and diverse workforce and so we encourage requests for all types of flexible working as well as location-based arrangements. Please speak to your recruiter to discuss more.

Pursuant to the San Francisco Fair Chance Ordinance and Los Angeles County Fair Chance Ordinance for Employers, we will consider for employment qualified applicants with arrest and conviction records. 

EOE, including disability/vets

Contacto no solicitado

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