Most security leaders know the argument by now: align with the business, speak the language of growth, position the function as a partner to the rest of the executive team. What's harder is knowing what that looks like on a Tuesday morning in the briefing you're about to give, the budget request you're about to file, the threat you're about to escalate.
We’re not oblivious to the fact that over a third of S&P 500 companies provided executive security perks in 2025 (after the Brian Thompson tragedy), up nearly 13% from the year before, and the median value rose 20% in a single year, to $130,468, according to Equilar's analysis of proxy filings. Corporate boards are funding security at levels that would have been unthinkable five years ago.
But spending isn't the same as influence. A bigger budget is a signal of attention. A seat at the table is something different, and security leaders earn it through small, consistent decisions, in the briefings they give, the language they use, and the moments they choose to insert their team into the conversation.
Here is what the teams that earn it actually do differently.
Translate Threats Into Business Outcomes
Executive attention follows familiar language. A threat briefed in security terms competes for relevance against every other item on the agenda. A threat framed in terms the executive team already uses, such as revenue exposure, brand risk, regulatory cost, and operational disruption, slots directly into existing priorities. For instance, a doxxing campaign targeting a C-suite executive is a risk to the talent the board has invested in, an exposure window during the upcoming earnings call, and a story the comms team will be reacting to if something escalates. A surge in chatter around an upcoming product launch is a potential delay to the launch that the board just approved.
Translation is where the strategic work happens, in every brief, every escalation, and every budget conversation. If your team can't routinely connect what it sees to what the business is already trying to do, the briefings will get shorter, the budget conversations will get harder, and the seat will stay just out of reach.
Show Up With A Point Of View
What boards want from a security briefing is the interpretation. They want to know what those alerts revealed that the rest of the business hadn't yet noticed.
Insight means synthesis: pulling signals across sources, weighing what is likely to escalate against what is noise, and putting a recommendation in front of a decision-maker before they ask for one. The teams’ earning influence are the ones that arrive at the meeting with a position, “ here's what we're seeing”, “here's what we think it means”, “here's what we recommend”. What earns attention is the recommendation that follows the data. This is where threat intelligence moves from cost center to strategic input. Interpreted threat data, connected to specific business decisions, is what justifies the program.
Measure What Executives Already Measure
‘Alerts processed ' tells an executive nothing. ‘Hours saved by automating triage’ tells them you understand efficiency. ‘Executive trips supported without incident’ tells them you understand operations. "Days of media exposure avoided through early intervention" tells them you understand the needs of the brand.
The metrics that earn a seat are the ones already on someone else's scorecard. Borrow them. Map your work to them. Report against them. Over time, the security team's work begins to read on the same scorecards that executives are already watching.