What Is a CISO and Does Your Canadian Organization Need One?

The Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) is the executive responsible for an organization’s information security strategy, risk posture, and compliance. For large enterprises, a CISO is standard. For mid-size Canadian organizations, the question is more complicated: Do you actually need one? And if you do, can you afford a full-time hire?

Cybersecurity risk has reached every level of the Canadian business landscape. Ransomware affects municipalities, law firms, and healthcare providers as readily as it affects large banks. The CCCS National Cyber Threat Assessment 2025-2026 identifies Canadian organizations of all sizes as active targets. The question is not whether your organization faces cybersecurity risk — the question is who is accountable for managing it.

This article explains what a CISO does, what alternatives exist for organizations that cannot support a full-time hire, and how to determine what level of security leadership your organization actually needs.

What Does a CISO Do?

The CISO sits at the intersection of technology, business risk, and regulatory compliance. The role is strategic, not operational. A CISO does not configure firewalls or patch systems — they determine the security strategy, set risk tolerance, manage the security budget, and communicate the organization’s security posture to the board and executive team. A complete threat risk assessment is one of the first deliverables a CISO should own.

  • Security strategy and program ownership. The CISO owns the information security program, from its goals and governance framework to how it is resourced and measured.
  • Risk management. A CISO identifies, quantifies, and prioritizes security risks in business terms. They decide which risks to accept, mitigate, transfer, or avoid, and communicate those decisions to the board.
  • Regulatory compliance oversight. For Canadian organizations, this means PIPEDA, PHIPA (in Ontario), Bill C-8 (the Critical Cyber Systems Protection Act), and applicable frameworks such as SOC 2 or ISO 27001.
  • Incident response leadership. When a breach or major incident occurs, the CISO leads the organizational response — coordinating technical teams, managing regulatory notifications, and driving post-incident remediation.
  • Vendor and third-party risk oversight. The CISO governs how the organization manages security requirements for vendors, cloud providers, and supply chain partners.
  • Security culture. Cybersecurity awareness training, policy development, and building a culture where employees understand their security responsibilities falls under the CISO’s mandate.

When Does an Organization Need a CISO?

Not every organization needs a full-time CISO. But most organizations past a certain size, regulatory exposure, or data sensitivity need someone performing the CISO function — whether a full-time employee, a fractional hire, or a virtual CISO (vCISO).

  • You handle sensitive regulated data. If your organization processes personal health information (PHIPA), financial data, or large volumes of personal information subject to PIPEDA compliance requirements, you need someone accountable for compliance and breach response.
  • You are a government contractor or supply to regulated industries. Federal and provincial government contracts increasingly require documented security programs. Your clients may require evidence of your security posture before doing business with you.
  • You are subject to or preparing for Bill C-8 / CCSPA. Critical infrastructure operators in telecommunications, energy, finance, and transportation face significant new obligations under the Critical Cyber Systems Protection Act. A CISO is required to lead that compliance work.
  • Your organization has grown past 50 to 100 employees. At this scale, ad hoc IT security becomes inadequate. Security decisions begin affecting operations, customer contracts, and regulatory exposure.
  • You have experienced a significant security incident. A ransomware attack, data breach, or IPC investigation is frequently the trigger for formalizing security leadership. It is more effective to have that leadership before the incident.
  • You are pursuing SOC 2 or ISO 27001 certification. Both frameworks require organizational ownership of the information security program — functions a CISO or vCISO typically drives.

Full-Time CISO vs. Virtual CISO (vCISO) vs. Managed Security

For many Canadian organizations, a full-time CISO hire is financially impractical. The average base salary for a CISO in Canada is $180,000 to $250,000 per year, with total compensation often significantly higher. Three models exist:

Full-Time CISO
Best for large organizations, regulated enterprises, or organizations with complex security programs that require daily executive attention. Provides full accountability and organizational presence, but is the highest-cost option.

Virtual CISO (vCISO)
A fractional security executive who provides strategic leadership on a part-time or retainer basis. The vCISO performs all core CISO functions — risk assessment, strategy, compliance oversight, board reporting — without the full-time cost. This model is well-suited to mid-size organizations that need executive-level security leadership but cannot justify a full-time hire.

Managed Security Services Provider (MSSP)
An MSSP provides operational security services — monitoring, incident response, vulnerability management — but does not replace executive security leadership. MSSPs and a CISO or vCISO are complementary, not interchangeable. For most Canadian organizations in the 50 to 500 employee range, the vCISO model provides the strategic oversight and accountability the business needs at a fraction of the full-time cost.

What to Look for in a CISO or vCISO

Whether you are hiring full-time or engaging a fractional provider, the right security leader needs:

  • Business communication skills. The CISO’s most important audience is the board and executive team, not the IT department. They must translate technical risk into business language and secure the resources the security program needs.
  • Canadian regulatory knowledge. PIPEDA, PHIPA, CCCS threat intelligence, and emerging legislation (Bill C-8/CCSPA) require specific Canadian expertise. A CISO hired from a purely US context will have gaps.
  • Incident response experience. A CISO who has never managed a real breach is a significant liability. Look for documented experience leading incident response, including coordination with legal counsel, insurers, and regulatory bodies.
  • Framework fluency. NIST CSF, ISO 27001, SOC 2, and the CCCS Baseline Cyber Security Controls are the primary frameworks in the Canadian context. Your CISO should know which apply to your organization and why.
  • Vendor-neutral judgment. Security vendors have strong commercial incentives to oversell. A CISO independent of vendor relationships can assess solutions on their merits rather than partnership agreements.

How Brigient Supports Organizations Without a Dedicated CISO

Many Canadian organizations come to Brigient in exactly this position: they recognize the need for executive security leadership but are not ready — or cannot afford — a full-time hire. Brigient’s virtual CISO services provide the strategic security leadership your organization needs on a flexible engagement model, including risk assessment, security program development, compliance readiness (PIPEDA, PHIPA, SOC 2, ISO 27001, Bill C-8), board-level reporting, and incident response leadership.

For organizations that need both strategic oversight and operational capability, Brigient offers a combined model: vCISO services backed by our full security engineering team. This includes identity and access management implementation and hands-on ransomware incident response — without two separate vendors or the cost of a full-time hire.

What Is the Difference Between a CIO and a CISO?

The Chief Information Officer (CIO) is responsible for IT strategy — the technology infrastructure that enables business operations. The CISO is responsible for securing that infrastructure and managing cybersecurity risk. In small organizations, the roles are sometimes combined, but their mandates are distinct. A CIO optimizes technology for productivity; a CISO protects it against threats and ensures compliance.

Does a Small Business Need a CISO?

Most small businesses do not need a full-time CISO, but they do benefit from someone performing the CISO function — even on a part-time or advisory basis. At a minimum, every business that handles personal data should have a designated privacy and security contact, documented policies, and a basic incident response plan. A vCISO can provide this without the cost of a full-time executive.

What Does a Virtual CISO Actually Deliver?

A vCISO typically delivers a security risk assessment, a security roadmap aligned to your business goals, written security policies, compliance gap analysis, board and executive reporting, vendor risk oversight, and incident response leadership. Engagements range from a few days per month to more intensive arrangements during compliance projects or incidents.

How do I evaluate a vCISO provider? Ask for references from comparable organizations, confirm Canadian regulatory expertise, and ask specifically about incident response experience. Look for a provider who can explain your risk in plain language and who does not have a commercial interest in recommending specific security products.

What Happens to CISO Responsibilities During a Cyber Incident?

The CISO leads the organizational response — coordinating technical investigation, managing communication with the executive team and board, overseeing regulatory notification obligations, and directing post-incident remediation. If your organization does not have a designated security leader when an incident occurs, this coordination function falls into a gap with predictable consequences for the speed and quality of your response.

Every Canadian Organization Needs Security Accountability

Every Canadian organization past a threshold of size, data sensitivity, or regulatory obligation needs someone accountable for cybersecurity strategy — not just IT maintenance. The question is what form that leadership takes. A full-time CISO, a fractional vCISO engagement, or a structured partnership with a security services provider can all meet that need, depending on your organization’s scale and complexity.

Brigient provides virtual CISO services and end-to-end cybersecurity programs for organizations across the GTA and Canada. Contact Brigient to discuss what level of security leadership your organization needs and what that looks like in practice.

Sameer Malik

Written by

Sameer Malik

Founder & Managing Director, Brigient

Sameer Malik is the Founder and Managing Director of Brigient, a boutique cybersecurity advisory firm based in Mississauga, Ontario. With over 20 years of experience in cybersecurity, governance, risk management, and IT strategy, Sameer has led more than 300 incident and ransomware response engagements for organizations across Canada. He holds a BA from the University of Toronto and is certified in TOGAF® 9 (The Open Group Architecture Framework) and ITIL (IT Infrastructure Library). Sameer's approach to cybersecurity is built on four pillars: Identify, Respond, Recover, and Govern.

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