According to the survey, security specialists can expect to earn between $90,000 and $120,000 in 2014, up from $80,000 to $110,000 last year.
Aura Information Security managing director Andy Prow said the reason for the increased demand was clear: "catch up.''
"People previously didn't see it as a huge issue so there is still a huge amount of old-legacy and business-as-usual systems around, and now everyone is panicking because security is at the forefront of everyone's mind and they're playing catch up.
"Two years ago around most company board rooms the issues of privacy and information security wouldn't even have been discussed. Nowadays, at briefings with exec teams or boards they're talking about information privacy: what if we got hacked? Could we be in the press?''
It wasn't only the private sector that was hopping to beef-up their security systems.
"There is a huge push across government to make sure that New Zealanders' information is being protected properly. The push is as big across the public sector as it is in the private sector.''
Mr Prow said Aura had nearly doubled its workload in the last 12 months alone and had taken on more staff.
Without specifying, he said staff had received more than a 9 per cent pay increase in that period.
One of the major incidents which led to the change in mentality in New Zealand was the 2012 data breach at WINZ, Mr Prow said.
According to Ministry of Social Development documents, released under the Official Information Act, more than $4 million was spent on cyber security as a result, with $340,500 going towards security testing by third party companies, $776,500 to internal staff and $3 million to "external resources''.
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