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Why Tech Companies Are Looking to HBCUs to Expand the Cybersecurity Workforce

We examine why big tech companies and the US government are teaming up to recruit students attending historically Black colleges and universities for cybersecurity careers, and offer tips for creating your own mentoring program.

 & Kim Key Senior Writer, Security

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When Microsoft hired Thomas Moore in 2008, he joined the company as a software engineer but quickly noticed that he was the only Black employee on his team. Later, Moore had the chance to attend a school career fair at Florida A&M University (FAMU) on behalf of Microsoft. After working with administrators, students, and his manager to create career prep events, his efforts resulted in strong new hires at Microsoft from a historically black college or university, or HBCU.

Last year at REFACTR, a convention focused on diversity and inclusion in the tech industry, Moore shared the challenges he faced while recruiting Black students and the solutions he came up with to better prepare them for rigorous job interviews at top tech companies. I attended the convention and was impressed with his efforts to connect with students.

Though Moore did not mention the cybersecurity industry specifically in his talk, there are now initiatives to fill positions in that field with students from HBCUs. I believe there are a few similarities between Moore's work at Florida A&M and the new programs major tech companies and the US government have designed to attract and prepare recent graduates to enter the cybersecurity workforce.

According to the National Science Foundation, almost 18% of Black students with STEM degrees graduated from HBCUs, and a third of all Black students in the US who have earned doctorates got their bachelor's degrees from HBCUs. The schools are an underused resource for new talent that could solve the tech industry's struggles to fill open positions, particularly in certain niches such as security.


Closing the Cybersecurity Skill Gap

The demand for trained cybersecurity employees is massive, despite cybersecurity being one of the best-paid careers in tech, according to a 2020 study. From May 2021 through April 2022, the US had 180,000 openings for information security analysts, CyberSeek reported. Only 141,000 workers are currently employed in those positions, resulting in an annual shortage of 39,000 employees.

At the same time, a study from EdWeek revealed students in small and high-poverty school districts are significantly less likely to be exposed to cybersecurity education. That means lower-income and minority students have fewer pathways to cybersecurity careers.

The National Cybersecurity Alliance (NCA), a cybersecurity nonprofit, launched the Historically Black Colleges and Universities Career Program in 2022. The initiative allows schools and tech companies such as Dell Technologies, Quanta Services, and Proofpoint to work together to prepare students for careers in cybersecurity through mentoring programs.

In 2022, the US government expanded Project Reach. This program connects K-12 schools to HBCU computer science and cybersecurity programs via campus visits, classroom support, and kid-friendly cybersecurity activities. “This collaboration between universities and high schools will be critical to solving the cybersecurity workforce shortage and introducing students to cybersecurity careers at a young age,” said Laurie Salvail, the director of cyber.org, the workforce development organization running Project Reach.

The pilot initiative launched with Grambling State University in 2021, and Project Reach recently announced that ten additional HBCUs intend to join the program.


How to Prepare Students for Tech Careers

When Thomas Moore first visited FAMU's career fair to scout for Microsoft career candidates, Project Reach hadn't even started yet. But in his case, finding a talent pool wasn't the problem.

Moore with Microsoft hires Gregory Flowers and Sebrenia Coleman when they were students in fall 2017
Moore with Microsoft hires Gregory Flowers and Sebrenia Coleman when they were students in fall 2017

While many of the potential candidates he talked to were intelligent and ambitious, they hadn't been prepared for the rigorous technical interviews that major tech companies are known for. These are entirely different from standard job interviews with stock questions like, "Where do you see yourself in five years?" Moore connected with an outgoing student named Jay at the career fair and organized a separate session with a small group of students to teach them how to approach technical-interview questions.

During subsequent visits to FAMU, Moore was approached by administrators about their computer science curriculum, and he worked with them to find ways to prepare students to interview for lucrative careers at big tech companies. His advice eventually landed him a spot on the school's advisory board. He also obtained funding for future interview-prep breakout events with students. 

The sessions Moore created included interview preparation, mock interviews, and opportunities for students to have their resumes reviewed by industry professionals. Several FAMU students were hired at Microsoft while Moore was at the company.

If you're wondering how Moore found the time to take several trips to a university campus in Florida over the years, he negotiated the time spent working on the company's diversity initiative into his job description. Specifically, Moore said he requested 10% of his work time to go toward his work with FAMU to train the future tech workforce, which his manager at Microsoft approved. When he left the company to work for Mozilla as a software engineer, he made a similar pitch, and his new manager also approved it.


Create the Tech Workforce of the Future

Currently, Moore is working again at Microsoft, this time as a senior software engineer. He lamented that the pandemic kept him from visiting the FAMU campus for more than a year. Moore says he kept in contact with the university administrators and staff and is participating in online recruiting activities such as e-mentoring until he can return to Florida for an in-person visit.

In his presentation's conclusion, Moore stressed that he didn't have a specific blueprint to follow for mentoring success. That said, I have turned what I consider to be some key points from his talk into a list of suggestions for anyone working with administrators at an HBCU to prepare Black students for tech careers:

  • Offer your expertise. Reach out to administrators or staffers and let them know you are interested in looking at the current curriculum and helping students find careers in tech.
  • Stay consistent. Showing up on campus once every few years only to sit behind a table at a career fair just isn't enough to attract the job candidates the industry needs. Moore said he established trust with university staffers and students by consistently coming back to the school and talking to students about getting into the tech industry.
  • Be flexible. Moore said he didn't plan to be on an advisory board at FAMU when he first visited the school for a career fair. He built a solid mentoring and recruiting relationship between his companies and the school because he was willing to meet the students where they were in their burgeoning careers and then guide them into the tech industry.

Some of the biggest tech companies have new training and recruitment programs up and running at thousands of educational institutions around the US, such as Microsoft's Cybersecurity Scholarship Program. In 2021, Google launched the Google Career Certificates to help tens of thousands of Americans get job training and help with career placement. IBM is making inroads in combatting the cybersecurity talent shortage with its recent partnerships with HBCUs to develop solid cybersecurity curricula at participating schools.

If you're looking to make a career switch, or if you hope to enter the tech workforce in the future, check out PCMag's guide to training online for some cybersecurity skills.

About Our Expert

Kim Key

Kim Key

Senior Writer, Security

My Experience

I review privacy tools like hardware security keys, password managers, private messaging apps, and ad-blocking software. I also report on online scams and offer advice to families and individuals about staying safe on the internet. Before joining PCMag, I wrote about tech and video games for CNN, Fanbyte, Mashable, The New York Times, and TechRadar. I also worked at CNN International, where I did field producing and reporting on sports that are popular with worldwide audiences.

In addition to the categories below, I exclusively cover ad blockers, authenticator apps, hardware security keys, and private messaging apps.

The Technology I Use

I like testing new software for work, but I'm less "plugged in" to the internet than I used to be. I tend to read app privacy policies to see what kind of data companies collect, and as a result of those findings, I don't use many mobile apps. In a similar vein, I was an early adopter of many social media platforms, but now I’m just an infrequent Reddit lurker.

I'm a gear junkie. I split my work time between a 2021 Apple MacBook Pro and a Lenovo ThinkPad. I shoot most of my videos for PCMag using a Canon M50, a Sony A7iii, and a Sony a6000. I edit videos using Final Cut Pro and Adobe Premiere Pro.

I write all of my words for PCMag either in the MS Notepad app on my ThinkPad or the Notes app on my iPhone 12 mini. If I'm traveling and working, I use my iPad to write short articles or take notes.

My dad built me my first computer sometime in the late '90s, and I used it for reading Encyclopedia Britannica and writing Sailor Moon fan fiction. My first phone was the ubiquitous Nokia candy bar.

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