Insights For Success

Strategy, Innovation, Leadership and Security

career

Microsoft has launched an initiative to help individuals acquire new digital skills

GeneralEdward Kiledjian

Microsoft has launched an incredible new initiative powered by free learning content, low-cost certifications and job seeker tools to help 25 million individuals re-enter the workforce.

Microsoft has launched a new initiative that combines content from it's LinkedIn learning and Github entities, mixed with other content previously only available internally to Microsoft employees.

The purpose of this initiative is to help upskill or retool individuals that may have lost their jobs due to COVID. Microsoft is forecasting up to a quarter-billion unemployed individuals (globally) in 2020 due to COVID. Microsoft is using its proprietary data to identify the most in-demand jobs; it is building a curriculum from its various entities and is offers low-cost certifications.

You can access all of these resources and more at opportunity,linkedin.com.

Combining all of its employment and tech-related data, Microsoft believes that the ten most in-demand jobs (globally) over the next decade will be:

  1. Software developer

  2. Sales representative

  3. Project manager

  4. IT Administrator

  5. Customer service specialist

  6. Digital marketing specialist

  7. IT support

  8. Data analyst

  9. Financial analyst

  10. Graphic designer

Microsoft has designed a custom curriculum for each of these career paths and makes the training content available for free until March 2021.

The content is available in English, French, Spanish and German.

Each custom-designed curriculum path includes LinkedIn learning content. The curriculum may also include content from Microsoft Learn. To prove proficiency, Microsoft has made its new role-based certifications available for $15 (if you attest that COVID19 has impacted your job).

Microsoft blog

What makes a good Chief Information Security Officer (CISO)

GeneralEdward Kiledjian

Only five years ago, the title of Chief Information Security Officer was likely awarded to an employee that had worked hard and was dedicated to the company. It was an honorific title often given as a reward. Times have changed and companies need a new breed of CISO.

The number, severity, and impacts of cyber threats are continually increasing. Companies now rely on complex highly integrated IT systems whose confidentiality, availability and integrity are paramount. 

The WannaCry ransomware was a good example of how poorly managed security can cripple an organization. The National Health Service in the United Kingdom had up to 70,000 infected devices and was forced to turn away non-emergency patients. (1)

The CISO is now a senior-level business executive who can directly impact the profitability and viability of an entire organization. Instead of being a technical specialist, the CISO must now be a seasoned business leader that can become a trusted advisor to other executives within the organization. 

CISOs can help maintain your brand value, help build relationships with various stakeholders, and are charged with protecting an organization's most important assets (the digital ones).

The job of a true modern CISO is getting harder by the day, and organizations need to ensure they have the best CISO they can find & afford, to guiding them. 

If we agree that the nature of the CISO's role has changed and that the modern CISO is a very different creature than his predecessor, what makes a good CISO?

1 - Problem solvers

A modern-day CISO can solve complex rapidly changing problems under stress and high pressure. A CISO must enjoy solving complex puzzles while being able to juggle day-to-day tasks and driving the organization's long-term vision. The CISO must understand that every decision made today can have dramatic repercussions tomorrow. 

2- The CISO must be a people person

The modern CISO is often a front-line representative of the organization to shareholders, customers, partners, and regulators. They must have the ability to build strong relationships based on trust and respect. The CISO must have the ability to communicate complex security issues to stakeholders that may not understand even basic IT. The modern CISO must be a people person. The modern CISO must lead his team with fervor and engender commitment from the security team. 

3 - The CISO is a citizen of the world

Information flows without respective national boundaries, but companies are being asked to navigate complex global regulations that sometimes contradict each other. The only way a CISO can manage this increasingly complex regulatory environment is with non-traditional skills (for an IT person) that include law, business, compliance and governmental relations. 

4 - The CISO must be business minded

The CISO must make security decisions based on how it impacts the organization or enables the organization to perform its primary business functions. The CISO must weight security decisions against profitability, efficiency and must build a competitive advantage for the organization. A CISO must be obsessed with efficiency and must be resource conscious (people, time and money). Gone are the days when a CISO makes purely technical decisions based on technical need. 

5- CISOs tend to be workaholics

Even if work-life balance is all the rage, a CISO is always on call. Unfortunately, the bad guys never take a break and often neither does the CISO. It is common for a CISO to work long hours and weekends while guiding the organization to where it needs to go. The modern CISO is humble and respects the capabilities of his/her adversaries. A CISO must always be vigilant. A CISO is continually thinking about how he/she will keep the organization one step ahead of threat actors.

6 - Strong team building skills

CISOs work long and hard but so do their teams. A CISO must be self-confident enough to hire the highly skilled professionals the organization needs to succeed. I have met many CISOs who refused to hire employees that were more technically competent than them for fear of being replaced. This is the reflex of a "bad" CISO that doesn't understand his/her new role. A good CISO will hire the best resources he/she can find and them coach them to grow and become exceptional. The stronger the team, the better the CISO.

7 - Your CISO doesn't need to be certified 

Full disclosure, I do not currently hold any security certifications but I believe I can challenge anyone that does. The CISO is a business professional with security experience, not a security professional with business experience. 

You should rely on the proven track record.

Conclusion

The role of CISO is constantly changing, and the ideal candidate must also be constantly evolving.  I have been a security executive since 2001 and have seen the role of CISO morph from a backroom function performed by geeks, to a font of the house leader that can communicate with clients and regulators. The right CISO can drive business growth while the wrong one can sink your entire organization. 

Invest the time, energy and resources required to hire the right CISO for your company. If you have a CISO already, make sure he/she is the right one your organization needs right now. 

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(1) Ungoed-Thomas, Jon; Henry, Robin; Gadher, Dipesh (14 May 2017). "Cyber-attack guides promoted on YouTube"The Sunday Times. Retrieved 14 May2017.

3 tips to limit your career growth now

GeneralEdward Kiledjian
Image by Ken Teegardin used under Creative Commons License 

Image by Ken Teegardin used under Creative Commons License

 

I have written a bunch of articles about growing you career. Why not use the opposite angle.

I wanted to provide 3 powerful tips to help stunt your career growth now. 

1 - Stay within the comfortable confines of your existing department

This is a tip for big company dwellers. A sure way to limit your growth is to concentrate all your efforts to stay in the department you are in. Why leave? It is comfortable in the warm bosom of your familiar department. Sure things aren't perfect but nothing ever is.  Your friends are all here and things are familiar. 

 

Remember that networking outside of your team (or department) is hard. You're going to meet strange people that will have all kinds of new demands for you. Sure they may offer resources you don't currently have but you'll have to prove yourself all over again to a new bunch of people.

Plus once people outside of your department know you, they may expect you to help them solve issues for your entire department (not just your own stuff). If you gambled and worked with complete strangers in other departments, they may remember you and propose you for other big future projects. Who wants all that extra work?

2 - Say no to big new scary opportunities

Let's be honest, learning is hard. The next time an opportunity to work on a high profile project comes up, you should immediately dismiss it. Think about all the risks you would be taking. The bigger the risk, the bigger you may fall. Do you really want to take on big risk? Are you willing to gamble with your career? Sure a good performance could skyrocket you to the company hall of fame but that's not what you want. You want a slow, comfortable, cushy job that is easy to do. And if you fail, you may lose big. you're not a gambler. You prefer to play it safe all the time.

Remember that if you succeed with one of these "scary" projects, you may be nominated for other big scary projects. When will this madness end. 

3 - Never ask for feedback

Only the strong survive and the strong are perfect. You are perfect so why waste everyone's time asking for feedback. Feedback is a mechanism used by the weak to try to show improvement. You aren't weak. You are king. You are perfect and others are in no position to judge your perfection.

Conclusion

Self-improvement methodologies recommend being proactive, getting out of your comfort zone and pushing your limits. All things you don't want to do because you do not want or need career progression. Enough said. You  read this article so you deserve a coffee break. Go buy yourself a coffee and muffin as a reward.

 

 

3 secrets to using LinkedIn to advance your career

GeneralEdward Kiledjian
Image by Adriano Gasparri used under Creative Commons License

Image by Adriano Gasparri used under Creative Commons License

LinkedIn has created a unique niche for itself amongst professionals looking to bolster their career. Read my article about The You Brand , and you may start to see opportunities to use LinkedIn as your personal self promotion platform. 

Related Articles:

Here are some of the elements you could use to improve your overall LinkedIn visibility and credibility.

Update Your Profile

Sounds pretty basic but it deserves a special spot here as the first suggestion.  Remember that LinkedIn is where potential employers go to discover who you are. It is often the first opinion a potential partner or employer will have of you. 

It is very important to remember:

LinkedIn is not Facebook, please stay professional

Make sure everything in your profile exudes professionalisms from the level of english you use to describe your positions to the picture you upload. You'll notice on my LinkedIn profile that my background (on the very top) is a serene picture of a forest. Chose something that describes you without going overboard. 

LinkedIn also allows you to add other content which may be relevant to your future job prospects such as whitepapers, images, presentations, etc.

LinkedIn Profile Tips:

  1. Have a well lit professional looking photo
  2. Have an original (non job title) tagline that describes your capabilities
  3. Have more contacts. Add anybody you have met to LinkedIn. There is something powerful when that 500+ connection number is shown on your profile
  4. When using LinkedIn for intelligence work, turn on anonymous browsing (link) to do it discreetly
  5. Linkedin in NOT a resume and shouldn't be treated as such. Consider it a living document that describes you. 
  6. It is important to update your LinkedIn status at least once a week. Remember to stay professional.
Image by Sean MacEntee used under Creative Commons License

Image by Sean MacEntee used under Creative Commons License

Blogging

Blogging is the great equalizer of the internet. Everyone has an equal opportunity to produce quality content and demonstrate their thought leadership capabilities.

In fact this article you are reading will be posted on my own personal blog at kiledjian.com and also cross-posted on LinkedIn using their blogging feature.

If your readers like your content, they can like or share it which increases your visibility beyond your own network.

Image by Hans Põldoja used under Creative Commons License

Image by Hans Põldoja used under Creative Commons License

Nurture your network

LinkedIn created the Connected app (link) and describes it as: " Because most opportunities come from the people you already know, and fostering genuine relationships can help you be more successful."

LinkedIn is telling you how important nurturing your network is... Are you listening? 

You want to be top of mind within your network. If an opportunity comes up, you want your contacts to think of you. Remember that 70% of jobs aren't posted so your LinkedIn army can help you get hired.

How to handle a "crappy job"

Behavior, MotivationEdward Kiledjian

One of my first articles was entitled “the YOU brand” and is still one of my favorite articles.

I strongly recommend you read it as it has helped many people change their approach to career management. I will assume you read it and accept the premise that you are selling your services to your company in exchange for salary, benefits and working conditions.

What happens if you are in a “crappy job”? Crappy can mean different things to different people. For some it means no work-life balance. For others it means sub-par pay. For others it may mean lack of career progression. Regardless of what it means to you, what do you do?

You are not responsible for being in a “crappy job”, you are responsible for staying in it.

As a consultant selling your services to your company, you are responsible for your career and all its qualities/deficiencies. Ultimately the decision to stay in the “crappy job” is yours and yours alone. Remember that there are always options and that you should manage your career like a business. If the conditions are no longer favorable, switch positions, departments or companies. If you don’t have the skills or experience to switch right away, make a plan and follow-it. 

Remember that the best investment you can make is in yourself.