Measuring the ROI of Cybersecurity Training

A single data breach cost Canadian organizations an average of CA$6.98 million in 2025 — a 10.4% increase from the year before, and one of the steepest climbs among industrialized economies. This number is the starting point for any honest conversation about what cybersecurity training is worth.
Most leaders frame training as a cost. The CIRA 2025 Cybersecurity Survey found 98% of Canadian organizations provide some form of cybersecurity awareness training — but 29% do so only once a year. Frequency is nearly unchanged since 2022, despite the threat environment shifting dramatically. Checking the compliance box is not the same as reducing risk.
What You Are Buying When You Train Staff
Training is not about certificates on a wall. It changes how employees behave when they encounter a phishing link, a suspicious USB drive, or an unusual login request. Security awareness training running monthly — not once a year — reduces an organization’s phish-prone rate by an average of 86% within twelve months. This figure comes from multi-year research across thousands of organizations globally.
When you reduce phishing susceptibility, you reduce the most common initial access vector in breaches. IBM’s 2025 Cost of a Data Breach Report for Canada found organizations with well-trained employees cut their breach costs by approximately CA$250,000 compared to organizations with no ongoing education program. A CA$250,000 reduction is not a rounding error. It is a meaningful financial outcome from a program costing a fraction of the amount to run.
How to Calculate the Return
Start with your annualized loss expectancy. Estimate the probability of a breach in a given year and multiply it by your expected breach cost. For a mid-sized Canadian organization, the expected breach cost sits above CA$6.9 million. Even a 5% reduction in breach probability — a conservative figure given the evidence — translates to roughly CA$345,000 in avoided loss per year.
Compare this against the cost of a structured training program. A well-run internal program with an external platform typically runs between CA$30,000 and CA$150,000 per year depending on headcount and scope. The return on investment is not difficult to calculate.
The CIRA 2025 survey also found 42% of Canadian organizations reported a breach of customer or employee data in the past year, up from 29% in 2022. Organizations training monthly reported meaningfully lower incident rates than those training annually. Frequency matters. Depth matters. One e-learning module in October is not a program.
What Leadership Needs to See
Finance and operations leaders want risk reduction framed in dollar terms, not security jargon. Your training program should be reported alongside breach incident trends, click rates on simulated phishing campaigns, and time-to-detect metrics. These numbers tell the story of whether your investment is working.
The Canadian Centre for Cyber Security recommends organizations build training into their broader security governance structure — not as a standalone HR activity, but as a controlled, measured program aligned with risk management objectives. CCCS guidance on awareness and training (ITSP.10.093) frames employee education as a core component of organizational cyber resilience, not an optional add-on.
If your organization operates under ITSG-33 requirements or follows the CCCS Baseline Controls for SMOs, documented and measured training programs are part of the expected control set. You need to be able to demonstrate training runs, who attended, and whether behaviour changed.
Who Owns the Training Program
In most Canadian organizations, cybersecurity training lives in a no-man’s land between HR, IT, and security. Ownership is not clear. Accountability is not clear. The result is a program running inconsistently and getting cut when budgets tighten.
Ownership needs to sit with someone who understands both security risk and organizational behaviour. A Certified Information Systems Security Officer or a Certified Information Systems Security Manager is positioned to own this function — setting objectives, selecting content, tracking outcomes, and reporting to leadership in terms they understand.
Without a dedicated owner with formal security governance training, a program’s ROI remains uncertain and the program itself stays vulnerable to budget cuts.
Where Security Awareness Fits in a Mature Program
A mature training program covers more than phishing simulations. It includes role-specific content for finance staff, IT administrators, remote workers, and executives. Each group faces a different threat profile. A CFO targeted by a business email compromise scam needs different training than a sysadmin managing privileged accounts.
Security Awareness Level 1 is a starting point for organizations building a structured, role-based security culture. It gives employees a common baseline — terminology, threat recognition, and reporting behaviour — supporting every other layer of your security program.
A training program structured, measurable, and role-aligned is not overhead. It is a risk control. And like any risk control, it needs to be tracked against outcomes, adjusted when not working, and reported to leadership as part of your organization’s overall security posture.
The CA$6.98 million question is not whether training is worth the cost. The question is whether your organization is training frequently enough, deeply enough, and with enough accountability to move the number.
