Emma Whitford
Manager, Technical Engagements

5 Common Mistakes When Running a Bug Bounty Program

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It’s an inspiring feeling to see the impressive growth in the adoption of bug bounty programs across industries. Yet, time and again, I hear from organizations who have experienced challenges with their programs. The issues range from blowing through their budgets in a matter of hours to having zero hacker engagement in their program. I’ve found there are five critical mistakes that organizations make that drastically impact the success of their bug bounty programs. Let’s dive into these mistakes and how to solve for them.

1. Unprepared to Manage Incoming Vulnerability Reports

Naturally, the purpose of running a bug bounty program is to identify vulnerabilities beyond what your security team can find — and remediate them. However, when launching a bug bounty program, many security teams are unprepared for just how many vulnerabilities will be identified and struggle to work to address them. Without the right scoring systems in place, it can be very challenging for security teams to prioritize incoming vulnerability reports and remediate them in an organized way.

Solution: Organize and Prepare Your Activity and Scoring Platform

Security teams need an effective vulnerability activity and prioritization scoring platform to help manage the reports that come in from bug bounty hackers. HackerOne’s platform provides all the necessary insights, organization, scoring, and resources to empower security teams to effectively address vulnerabilities. 

For example, our Hacktivity platform includes a CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures) Discovery feature that offers customers insights into which CVEs are being actively reported by hackers. In addition, the platform utilizes both CVSS (Common Vulnerability Scoring System) and EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System) scoring, empowering strategic prioritization based on comprehensive factors.

HackerOne Customer Success Managers (CSMs) also work closely with organizations to scale hacker invites to the appropriate amount for their unique needs and goals, avoiding overwhelming security teams with an unmanageable number of hackers and reports.

2. Untested Attack Surface

One of the reasons many security teams are unprepared for what a bug bounty program will yield is they don’t have a thorough understanding of the security of their attack surface. While a bug bounty program is the right goal, security teams often skip some earlier steps, such as code reviews and pentests, that help shed light on what to expect from future bug bounty reports. 

Solution: Run Code Reviews and Pentests

Each code review, performed by a specialized cohort of the HackerOne community, takes a median of 88 minutes to complete and surfaces an average of 1.2 vulnerabilities. Eighteen percent of security fixes are incomplete, making them one of the most essential types of code changes to audit.

While bug bounty is generally an ongoing program, pentests typically follow a structured methodology that encompasses a comprehensive, time-bound examination of the system, focusing on identifying vulnerabilities that adversaries could exploit.

The top vulnerabilities identified through code reviews and pentests often overlap with that of bug bounty, identifying common vulnerabilities like:

  • Misconfiguration
  • Cross-site scripting (XSS)
  • Information disclosure
  • Improper access control

In addition, the smaller scope and timeframe dedicated to code reviews and pentests make them important stepping stones toward understanding your attack surface and preparing for a bug bounty program. HackerOne pentesters can also be added to an organization’s ongoing bug bounty program, developing anchor hackers that drive even greater value.


Download the 7th Annual Hacker Powered Security Report


3. Unclear Business Case

Let’s be clear: there absolutely is a clear business case for implementing a bug bounty program. The issue is that many security leaders are challenged to articulate that business case to stakeholders and board members, and that’s a difficult conversation to have without the right information. As a result, security teams don’t receive the budgetary resources they need, and the program is run ineffectively.

Solution: Calculate Measurable ROI

It’s no secret that board members speak in the language of dollars and cents, and without a calculated breakdown of cost savings and ROI, security teams won’t be granted the appropriate budget to effectively run their bug bounty program. 

According to the 7th Annual Hacker Powered Security Report, the median price of a bug on the HackerOne platform is $500, up from $400 in 2022. The average bounty in the 90th percentile is up from $2,500 to $3,000. The cost of these vulnerabilities going unnoticed and being exploited, however, is significantly more than the cost of the bounty.

HackerOne customers consistently factor in cost savings when measuring the success of their bug bounty programs, with 59% valuing the estimated savings of reputational or customer-related incidents and 54% valuing the financial savings estimated from avoiding risk.

"Since 2019, Zoom has worked with 900 hackers, of which 300 have submitted vulnerabilities that we have had to quickly move on. We’ve paid out over $7 million. It’s a substantial investment but the returns are worth it: we find world-class talent to find real-world solutions before it’s a real-world problem."
— Michael Adams, CISO, Zoom

4. Misaligned Incentives

While there are more factors than financial compensation, 80% of hackers hack for money (up from 71% in 2022). With this in mind, the level of financial incentivization is important when establishing bounties. Many organizations might think they know what the appropriate amount is for any given bug bounty, but they find a lack of engagement in their program from the hacker community. That’s because 48% of hackers will opt not to join a program if the bounties are too low.

Solution: Price Bounties With Peer Benchmark Data

Security teams don’t have to price bounties on an island. Peers in every industry have embraced the power of bug bounty and ethical hacking. It’s essential for teams to examine average bounty costs within their industry because the averages can be vastly different from one sector to the next. For example, you can see from the Hacker Powered Security Report below that the average bounty for Travel & Hospitality is $700, while in Cryptocurrency & Blockchain, it’s over $3,000.


5. Failure to Build Hacker Relationships

While money is certainly a significant factor for hackers when selecting a bug bounty program, it’s not the only thing they find important. In fact, there are many things that can put a hacker off of a program.

As you can see, slow response times (60%) and poor communication (55%) are actually more important than low bounties (48%) for hackers being discouraged from a bug bounty program.


Solution: Make Your Program Work for Hackers 

Hackers are more likely to spend time on your program when they have a relationship with your organization’s security team. So, your bug bounty program should offer more than just the bounty payment. In order to attract the best hackers, you need to communicate effectively, offer a varied scope through which hackers can learn, and invest the time to quickly remediate the vulnerabilities they identify.

“When I’m looking at a new program, I will look at the metrics in terms of time to triage and bounty and to what degree the program is hitting those metrics. I would advise companies to have both a public and private program. The public program will screen and interview researchers that can be moved into the private program where you can provide them with more access and resources. A private program allows you to have an elite group of hackers really digging in and finding those critical vulnerabilities. For example, some hackers specialize in reconnaissance and finding those corners of infrastructure that no one is thinking about and looking in the corners, then you have other hackers that have hundreds of servers scanning for vulnerabilities. Novelty and scale are important for delivering impactful reports.”
— Tom Anthony, Hacker

HackerOne: Combining Bug Bounty Expertise With a Deep Hacker Community

It’s challenging for security leaders to check all of these boxes in order to run the most effective bug bounty program. Managing the reports, receiving the budget, setting the right bounties, and building hacker relationships can all seem too daunting to do correctly and simultaneously. 

At HackerOne, we provide the best combination of in-house expertise to run the right bug bounty program for your organization’s unique needs, with an extensive hacker community ready to go to work for you. If you want to learn more about how to run the most effective bug bounty program for your organization, download the 2023 Hacker Powered Security Report or contact our team at HackerOne today.

The 7th Annual Hacker-Powered Security Report

Hacker-Powered Security Report