Cloud security engineering is the fastest-growing specialty in cybersecurity right now, and the demand gap is not closing it is widening. Every organization that has moved workloads to AWS, Azure, or GCP has created a security engineering need that most traditional security programs are not staffed to meet. If you are looking for a role where your skills will be in high demand, where the work is genuinely complex and interesting, and where the market will pay you well from day one, cloud security engineering deserves serious attention. What I want to be direct about upfront: this is not a role you can credential your way into. Passing the AWS Security Specialty exam without hands-on cloud engineering experience will get you through a resume screen and fail you in the first technical interview. Cloud security engineering requires you to actually understand how cloud infrastructure works not just the security controls layered on top of it. That distinction matters enormously for how you ...
Most people trying to break into cybersecurity spend too much time debating which certification to get next and not enough time building the hands-on skills that hiring managers are actually filtering on. Certifications matter — they validate knowledge, signal commitment, and open doors with recruiters who use them as keyword filters. But a candidate with a modest cert stack and a strong lab portfolio consistently outperforms a candidate with an impressive cert stack and no practical experience. The sequence matters, the context matters, and the hands-on work is not optional. This post is the follow-up to Breaking Into Information Security: The Complete Guide for Beginners . That guide covered the foundational path. This one goes deeper: which certifications actually align with which career tracks, what your home lab needs to contain, what skills hiring managers are genuinely filtering on, and how to build a portfolio when you have no job history to point to. The Certification Lan...