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The Most Important Skills for a Cybersecurity GRC Professional (Hint: They’re Not Technical)

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Structuring Roles and Gaining Executive Approval to Build the Organization

InfoSec Made Easy Security Leadership and Organizational Development Structuring Roles and Gaining Executive Approval to Build the Organization How to make the business case for security growth — and keep earning the trust that makes continued investment possible You've done the work. You've mapped the gaps, built the phased roadmap, and identified exactly what roles your security organization needs to close the most critical exposures. Now comes the part that many technically strong security leaders find unexpectedly difficult: getting a room full of executives to say yes. This is where security programs stall. Not because the need isn't real. Not because the logic isn't sound. But because the case gets made in the wrong language, at the wrong level of abstraction, without the business framing that turns a technical argument into a strategic one. The security leader walks in with a presentation about headcount and walks out with a polite deferral and a request to revis...

What Functions a Large Enterprise Security Organization Must Have — And Why

If you are operating in a large enterprise, you are not building security for coverage. You are building it for: Scale Resilience Regulatory defensibility Revenue protection Investor confidence Brand preservation At this stage, “having security tools” is irrelevant. What matters is: Clear functional ownership aligned to enterprise risk. Let’s break down each major function, why it exists, what it does, and how to justify it. 1. Security Operations (SecOps) Why This Function Exists Because breaches are inevitable. The question is not: “Will we be attacked?” It is: “How fast can we detect and contain it?” Large enterprises have: Complex environments Hybrid cloud M&A integrations Third-party access Massive identity sprawl Without engineered detection capability, breaches become long-dwell events. Dwell time equals cost. What This Function Actually Does A mature SecOps team should: Engineer detection rules (not just review ...

What to Outsource (Without Losing Control)

InfoSec Made Easy Building Your Security Team Series — Part 2 Smart Use of External Partners How to extend your security capabilities through outside partners — without losing the oversight and accountability that leadership depends on you to maintain At some point in every midsize security leader's career, the math becomes undeniable. You have a list of capabilities your organization needs. You have a team that's skilled, motivated, and working hard. And there is a significant gap between the two that cannot be closed by asking more of the people you already have. 24/7 monitoring. Forensic investigation. Red team exercises. Threat intelligence. Advanced tool engineering. These are not optional capabilities — they're things a mature security program genuinely needs. But they're also things that require levels of specialization, tooling, and staffing that a six-person team simply cannot replicate on its own, regardless of how talented those six people are. So what do you...