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hat does it really take to build security architectures that protect enterprises — and to champion the next generation of cyber professionals doing it? We sat down with Christine Joy Matuto, a Cybersecurity Architect whose career spans network security, enterprise design, and cybersecurity enablement, to find out.
Bridging Business and Technical Security
Christine's role is equal parts engineer and educator. "My role acts as a bridge between technical security requirements and business objectives," she explains. Beyond designing end-to-end enterprise and SMB security architectures, she drives cybersecurity enablement, translating foundational security concepts for non-technical teams and fellow technology architects so they can confidently understand and position security solutions for diverse customer segments.
It is a role that demands both depth and breadth, and one that she arrived at through deliberate, self-directed growth.
A Career Built on Curiosity
Christine's journey into cybersecurity began in network security implementation and operations. But her ambition outpaced her job title from the start. Before earning formal certifications, she was already taking cybersecurity courses and pursuing postgraduate studies — driven, she says, by a deep fascination with security as a discipline.
"I have always been deeply fascinated by security as a whole. I find it challenging but very interesting."
Navigating a predominantly male-dominated industry in the early stages of her career, she leaned on mastery rather than comparison. "I poured my energy into the technical fundamentals and certifications so my skills would speak for themselves," she says. Equally important was finding community. "Being a minority in the room is not a disadvantage. It is an opportunity to bring a diverse and much-needed perspective to problem-solving."

The Trends Shaping Cybersecurity's Future
Ask Christine what keeps her up at night, and two forces loom large: the weaponisation of AI and the horizon of quantum computing.
"As adversaries leverage AI to automate attacks, organisations must adopt AI-driven defences to keep pace," she warns. At the same time, the industry must build crypto-agility — the architectural flexibility to adapt cryptographic algorithms as quantum computing matures and renders today's standards vulnerable.
But technology alone isn't the answer. The deeper shift, in her view, is cultural and architectural: a move toward Cyber Resiliency and Zero Trust. "The traditional perimeter no longer exists. Organisations must shift from purely preventing attacks to assuming breaches will occur — designing resilient architectures that contain threats and enable rapid recovery."
The Skills That Actually Matter
She is emphatic that technical skills, while essential, are only the beginning. The professionals who thrive, she argues, are those who pair deep expertise with empathy and business acumen.
"Security is often stereotyped as the 'Department of No,'" she says. "To succeed, you must flip that script and become a business enabler." That means understanding an organisation's operational pain points and demonstrating how security actively helps teams achieve their goals safely.
"You must cultivate empathy and business acumen to truly understand how cybersecurity enables, rather than hinders, a business."
Resilience rounds out the picture. High-pressure situations, tight deadlines, and problems without textbook answers are part of the job. She recommends building that resilience deliberately: through hands-on simulations, mentorship, and the willingness to treat failure as a necessary step in the troubleshooting process.
And the one skill that never appears on job descriptions? "The willingness to learn with the boundless curiosity of a child," she says - noting that the English translation of her surname, Matuto, is fittingly "to learn."

The Work That Stays With You
Early in her career, Christine faced a project with an immovable deployment deadline — and no automation tool available. Her solution: she engineered a manual process that effectively replicated automation, brought the project in ahead of schedule, and then documented the entire step-by-step methodology as standard operating procedures for her team.
"Watching the team succeed together was incredibly satisfying," she recalls. It is a story that encapsulates her instinct to build, to teach, and to leave things better than she found them.
A Message for Women in Cyber
Christine pushes back firmly against the lingering misconception that women are better suited to administrative or process-driven roles within cybersecurity. "Women excel across the entire spectrum of the field," she says. "We are equally capable of leading deep technical engineering, incident response, and complex architecture — working as hands-on builders and defenders of technology."