What you need to know about the
MSCM program

Lindsey Wilson University's Master of Science in Cybersecurity Management equips students with the skills to become leaders and innovators in the cybersecurity industry. MSCM is a degree for those who want to pursue a career that blends leadership, strategy, and cybersecurity risk management to protect data systems and operations. LWU's cybersecurity management degree provides a broad business and leadership foundation, equipping you with the skills to shape how organizations defend themselves against cybersecurity risks and attacks.

LWU's Master of Science in Cybersecurity Management degree directly addresses how to achieve success in the cybersecurity field and emphasizes cybersecurity management, project management, and leadership.

Job Outlook

The job outlook for someone with a master’s in cybersecurity management is very strong overall, driven by rising cyber threats and a persistent shortage of qualified professionals.

In U.S. government data, cybersecurity-related roles are growing much faster than average. Employment of information security analysts, a core cybersecurity job that many cybersecurity managers either come from or interact with closely, is projected to grow about 29–33% from 2024 to 2034, far faster than the 4% average for all occupations. About 16,000 openings per year are projected over that decade, including growth and replacements. These roles also have median wages well above national averages (around $124,910 as of 2024).

For management and leadership roles such as computer and information systems managers (which include cybersecurity managers at many organizations), growth is strong too, about 15% projected from 2024 to 2034, significantly above the overall job market average. These roles tend to come with higher median pay (often well into six figures).

What Might I Do as a Cybersecurity Manager?

Cybersecurity management focuses on managing risk, priorities, and ensuring the security of data systems and technology. A cybersecurity management professional will typically be responsible for:

Lead the cybersecurity program
  • Define the organization’s security strategy and roadmap
  • Decide what risks matter most (because you can’t fix everything at once)
  • Align security goals with business, academic, or mission objectives
Manage people and teams
  • Supervise security analysts, engineers, SOC staff, or vendors
  • Assign roles, set priorities, and review performance
  • Coach technical staff on communication and decision-making
Oversee risk management & governance
  • Identify vulnerabilities, threats, and third-party risks
  • Apply frameworks (NIST, ISO, CIS) to guide decisions
  • Balance security, usability, cost, and compliance
Develop and enforce security policies
  • Create policies for access control, data protection, and acceptable use
  • Ensure staff and users actually understand the rules
  • Update policies as threats, technology, and regulations change
Lead incident response (when things get exciting)
  • Coordinate response to breaches, ransomware, or insider threats
  • Run drills and tabletop exercises
  • Oversee post-incident reviews and improvements
Communicate with leadership
  • Brief executives or boards on risk in plain language
  • Explain tradeoffs (secure vs fast vs affordable)
  • Advocate for security investments with evidence, not fear

What Does it Mean to Study Cybersecurity Management?

Technology is revolutionary, and its capabilities and impact on our lives continues to grow exponentially. A cybersecurity manager is the person who helps to protect the organization against anything that tries to steal, damage, manipulate, or disrupt digital systems and data.

Just as one groundbreaking advancement is established, another quicker, better technological innovation shatters the shortcomings of its predecessors. Keeping up with the dangers of technology can be daunting for businesses. As a cybersecurity manager, you shape how an organization protects itself, not just today, but long term.

Cybersecurity managers help their companies protect organizations from:
  • Data theft and privacy breaches
  • Malicious software
  • Infrastructure outages
  • Sabotage of critical systems
  • Financial fraud and extortion
  • Legal and regulatory harm

Cybersecurity managers are trained to prevent, identify, and mitigate threats that attempt to steal, damage, manipulate, or disrupt digital systems and data. A technology manager helps businesses develop cybersecurity strategies that protect the company. Additionally, a cybersecurity manager typically oversees the work of other technical professionals to ensure a reliable, productive work environment for clients and employers.

What Can You Do With a College Degree in Technology Management?

The future is bright for tomorrow's cybersecurity managers, who can enjoy a diversity of career opportunities.

Cybersecurity Manager / Security Manager
  • Lead security teams and daily operations
  • Set priorities, allocate resources, manage incidents
  • Translate technical risk into business language
SOC Manager (Security Operations Center)
  • Oversee monitoring, detection, and response teams
  • Ensure 24/7 readiness without burning people out
Security Program Manager
  • Build and run organization-wide security programs
  • Coordinate policy, training, tools, and compliance
Cyber Risk Manager
  • Identify, assess, and prioritize cyber risks
  • Advise leadership on risk appetite and mitigation
Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) Manager
  • Develop policies and controls
  • Manage audits and regulatory requirements (HIPAA, FERPA, PCI, GDPR, etc.)
Third-Party / Vendor Risk Manager
  • Assess security posture of vendors and partners
  • Reduce supply-chain and contractual risk
Director of Cybersecurity / Director of Information Security
  • Own the security strategy and budget
  • Report risk to executives and boards
Cybersecurity Consultant / Advisor
  • Help organizations assess and improve security posture
  • Design policies, roadmaps, and incident plans
Incident Response & Resilience Lead
  • Coordinate breach response and recovery
  • Run tabletop exercises and post-incident reviews