Chief Information Security Officer

Reigate
20 hours ago
Create job alert

This role has a starting salary of £70,975 per annum, for working 36 hours per week.

We are excited to be recruiting a Chief Information Security Officer to join our fantastic team based at Woodhatch Place in Reigate. We offer a hybrid working model with a minimum of two office days per week.

Our Offer to You

26 days' holiday, rising to 28 days after 2 years' service and 31 days after 5 years' service (prorated for part time staff)
Option to buy up to 10 days of additional annual leave
A generous local government salary related pension
Up to 5 days of carer's leave and 2 paid volunteering days per year
Paternity, adoption and dependents leave
An Employee Assistance Programme (EAP) to support health and wellbeing
Learning and development hub where you can access a wealth of resources
Wellbeing and lifestyle discounts including gym, travel, and shopping
A chance to make a real difference to the lives of our residents. About the Role

In this senior leadership role, you will own and drive cyber security strategy, governance and operational resilience across Surrey County Council's complex hybrid environment. Your typical week will include:

Leading cyber risk management, governance forums and assurance activity across IT&D, ensuring risks are identified, assessed and clearly reported to senior stakeholders.
Overseeing incident preparedness and live response, including coordination with suppliers, IT operations and information governance.
Providing expert direction on security technologies, control effectiveness, logging/monitoring, and vulnerability management priorities.
Setting clear security expectations and driving cultural change across service owners, technical teams and leadership groups.
Developing and maintaining cyber policies, standards and evidence based reporting.This is a hands-on leadership role where strategic thinking and operational decision-making are equally important. You will hold line management responsibility for the cyber security function, including analysts or virtual team members through matrix management, and provide leadership and direction across IT&D and supplier teams.

Within your first 12-18 months, you will be expected to lead or significantly contribute to:

Delivery of a refreshed cyber security strategy and multi year improvement roadmap
Establishment of strengthened cyber governance, including improved reporting, risk tracking and decision making structures
Implementation of a formal cyber exercising programme (tabletop and technical) across IT&D, information governance and key suppliers
Measurable improvements in vulnerability management, logging/monitoring coverage and supplier assurance
Significant uplift in incident response maturity, including documentation of playbooks, interfaces and recovery expectations.This role is central to strengthening the resilience of essential public services. You will directly shape the council's ability to manage and reduce cyber risk, influence technology and service design decisions, and embed a cyber aware culture across one of the UK's largest local government environments. With a dedicated investment programme to drive security improvements, you will have a significant opportunity to transform how the organisation protects its people, data and systems.

Your Application

In order to be considered for shortlisting, your application will clearly evidence the following skills and align with our behaviours:

Significant senior cyber security leadership experience in a complex organisation
Strong capability to operate strategically and hands on, delivering measurable security improvements
Deep understanding of cyber risk management, governance and assurance frameworks
Proven experience leading cyber incidents, including response coordination and exercising
Excellent communication and stakeholder influence skills across technical and non technical groups
Familiarity with NCSC aligned approaches and/or frameworks such as NIST CSF
Relevant professional qualifications such as CISSP or CISMTo apply, we request that you submit a CV and you will be asked the following 4 questions:

What steps would you take in your first few months to understand our cyber risks and priorities?
Can you describe a complex cyber incident you have led, including how you coordinated the response and what improvements were implemented afterwards?
How do you balance strategic cyber security planning with hands on delivery to ensure both long term resilience and quick, tactical gains?
Which cyber security governance or risk management frameworks (e.g., NCSC CAF, NIST CSF) have you implemented, and how have they influenced decision making and assurance in your previous organisations?

The job advert closes at 23:59 on 12/04/2026 with interviews planned shortly afterwards.

Local Government Reorganisation (LGR)

Surrey County Council is undergoing Local Government Reorganisation, moving from a two-tier system to two new unitary councils in April 2027. If you are employed by Surrey on 1st April 2027, your role will transfer with current terms and conditions to one of the new organisations, supporting local devolution and greater powers for our communities.

Join our dynamic team and shape the future of local government. Make a lasting impact with innovative solutions and improved services for our community. Help us build a brighter future for our residents!

Our Commitment

We are a disability confident employer which means if you have shared a disability on your application form and have evidenced you meet the minimum criteria, we guarantee you an interview.

Your skills and experience truly matter to us. From application to your first day, we're committed to supporting you with any adjustments you need, we value inclusion and warmly welcome you to join and help build a workplace where everyone be

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Director of Group Cyber Security Services

Penetration Tester

Data Engineer

Test and Testability

Test and Testability Expert

Cloud and Infrastructure Engineer

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Penetration Tester Jobs in the UK: What Employers Actually Want in 2026

The demand for skilled professionals in cyber security has never been higher, and penetration testers sit at the very heart of this rapidly evolving industry. As organisations across the UK continue to digitise their operations, protect sensitive data, and defend against increasingly sophisticated threats, the need for ethical hackers has grown dramatically. If you are considering a career in this field—or looking to advance within it—it is essential to understand what employers are really looking for in 2026. This guide breaks down the current expectations, required skills, certifications, and practical experience that can help you stand out in a competitive job market.

SOC Analyst Jobs UK 2026: Salaries, Skills & How to Get Hired

Cyber security is one of the UK's fastest-growing career paths — and SOC analyst is where most people begin. It's in high demand, genuinely accessible, and you don't need a degree or years of experience to get started. But knowing what UK employers actually want in 2026 — what they pay, which certs matter, and how to stand out — is a different matter. This guide covers all of it.

How Many Cyber Security Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Cyber Security Job?

If you are trying to build or move forward in a cyber security career, it can feel like the list of tools you are expected to know never ends. One job advert asks for SIEM platforms, another mentions penetration testing tools, another lists cloud security, threat intelligence platforms, endpoint detection, scripting languages and compliance frameworks. Scroll LinkedIn and it gets worse. Everyone seems to “know” dozens of tools, certifications and platforms. Here is the reality most cyber security hiring managers agree on: they are not hiring you because you know every tool. They are hiring you because you understand risk, can think like an attacker and a defender, follow process, communicate clearly and make good decisions under pressure. Tools matter — but only when they support those outcomes. So how many cyber security tools do you actually need to know to get a job? For most job seekers, the answer is far fewer than you think. This article explains what employers really expect, which tools are essential, which are role-specific and how to focus your learning so you look credible, not overwhelmed.