"If you think you might be burning out, you're already on your way there," says Andrew Tillman, former head of cyber risk and assurance for the UK's Health Security Agency.
He says cyber security can, at times, be "the best job in the world". But when things get bad "it can be a bit of a dangerous place to be".
Mr Tillman has suffered bouts of "burnout" himself through his four years at the agency.
That stress is revealing itself in data collected by ISC2, the membership organisation for cybersecurity professionals.
Its annual Workforce Study showed a 66% favourable job satisfaction rate in 2024, down four percentage points from the previous year.
Burnout is a "major issue" for the sector, ISC2's chief information security officer Jon France says.
He says professionals in the industry are increasingly being asked "to do more with less" which only increases stress and job dissatisfaction.
"Cyber professionals rarely work nine to five", he adds, "Even if they do, they remain on call because threat actors don't adhere to office hours."



