Blog

Latest News & Tips

  • Chief information security officers and their teams must lead their organizations into adopting safe business practices. In our increasingly connected world, this goal is more important than ever. Speaking the language of the C-suite and the board, and translating information security into business terms is key for CISO success. The General Session at this year’s (ISC)² Security Congress will help CISOs chart their paths to successful leadership and cybersecurity practices. “CISO Impact: Driving Security Into the Business” will be presented by Phil Gardner and Stan Dolberg. Both speakers are executives at IANS, an information security advisory and consulting firm: Gardner is founder and chief executive officer, and Dolberg is chief research officer. The session is based on IANS’s data-driven leadership

  • As a young man growing up in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area working in steel mills, (ISC)2 CEO David Shearer learned early on that a strong work ethic and collaborative spirit were important factors to being successful in business. David met fellow Safety Harbor, Florida-based CEO of PivotPoint Risk Analytics Julian Waits, who was originally a budding saxophone player performing in his hometown of New Orleans, Louisiana at the first annual conference for the International Consortium of Minority Cybersecurity Professionals (ICMCP). After realizing that they both resided in the same town in Florida and worked for organizations that could be mutually beneficial, the two leaders began a business partnership to help advance the automation of cyber insurance decisions in an effort

  • When speaking to people who never considered a career in cyber or information security, we often find an audience put off by the perception that it is only for the technically minded. This couldn’t be further from the truth! Lucy Chaplin, a young consultant from the United Kingdom (U.K.) who became an Associate of (ISC)2 last year, demonstrates the possibilities. Lucy considers herself lucky to have missed out on graduate programme schemes for management consulting. Coming out of Bristol University in 2012 with an honours degree in Economics and Politics, these programmes seemed to be the obvious choice at the time; and she made a concerted effort to contact The Big Four global consulting firms and small consultancies alike. Her

  • As Europe absorbs the news that the United Kingdom (UK) has voted to leave the European Union (EU), questions inevitably rise around the impact this decision will have on our profession. During the campaign running up to the vote, I fielded several queries from journalists on the relevance of pending European regulation, and whether the UK would undermine its ability to face cyber threat if voters chose to leave. In or out, I believed, our professional challenges would be unaffected by the result. Earlier this month, as the referendum debates headed into the final weeks, these thoughts were reinforced as London played host to Infosecurity Europe, our region’s largest information security event. This year, the show attracted nearly 14,000 delegates