NICE Workforce for Cyber Security: Recruiting, Developing, and Planning Your Cybersecurity Workforce
What if there was a framework to help guide your hiring and talent development process for your cyber security team? The NICE Workforce Framework for Cybersecurity can be employed to help build your cyber team through defining building blocks, work roles and competency areas. Lastly, the NICE Workforce Framework for Cybersecurity can be used to help solve your company's hiring concerns.
About the Speakers:
Kevin Garvey is the US IT Security Manager for an international bank responsible for overseeing incident response, vulnerability management, cyber threat intelligence, as well as the security operations center (SOC). Previously, he worked at New York Power Authority, JP Morgan and WarnerMedia (formerly Time Warner). Kevin has always had a passion to hunt down the adversary and has loved tackling the risk and threat challenges his responsibilities have thrown at him. Kevin teaches SANS MGT512: Security Leadership Essentials for Managers. Read more about Kevin at https://www.sans.org/profiles/kevin-garvey/
Karen Wetzel
Karen joined the National Initiative for Cybersecurity Education (NICE) as Manager of the NICE Framework in October 2020. NICE, led by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in the U.S. Department of Commerce, is a partnership between government, academia, and the private sector focused on cybersecurity education, training, and workforce development. Karen specializes in identifying, communicating, and developing guidance around key issues, emerging trends, and opportunities of special interest. Read more about Karen at https://www.sans.org/profiles/karen-wetzel/
Learn more about the NICE Framework at
https://www.nist.gov/itl/applied-cybersecurity/nice/nice-framework-resource-center/workforce-framework-cybersecurity-nice
SANS is the most trusted and by far the largest source for information security training and security certification in the world. It also develops, maintains, and makes available at no cost, the largest collection of research documents about various aspects of information security, and it operates the Internet's early warning system - the Internet Storm Center.