Amazingly put together presentation. Extremely realistic. You’ve stated important points such as In demand skills. The business or corporation is looking to solve its problem and generate revenue. As long as you can get there and assist with that from a security perspective, you’ll get a way in!
Can you make an official list of places you mentioned & think are the best places to get certifications & building your skill. It would be very much appreciative!
Hey Nick (if you don't mind me calling you that. I have a few questions that I think that a mindset of a hiring manager can answer. 1. I'm currently working at a retail (lead associate) job that personally (since I've often called myself the IT guy at work) has 1% IT related components like troubleshooting registers, office computers, and one time my bosses phone. Now I'm still debating whenever to remove it (I put it there to show my soft skills) and replace it with projects (I prefer to be honest instead of changing my job title) or just keep it there. What is the best advice? 2. I'm also doing some bug bounty to do some padding on my resume with freelancing. How do I put it on my resume to make sure it s freelance? Do I put it in under jobs? 3. Leading from 2, besides bug bounty, I have zero cybersecurity experience on my resume and little IT experience (if you call it that). Does hiring managers in cybersecurity prefer someone with some IT experience or no IT experience? And 4. Also leading from 2 and 3: if hiring managers don't care about IT experience. I'm still trying to figure out which part of cybersecurity to get into. I'm currently looking at either a vulnerability scanner operator or a security generalist. On one hand, being a bug bounty and operator does seem to mesh together, but on the other hand, being a generalist does let me learn a bit of the field. What advice do you recommend doing? And in case you ask, no. I do not have any security credentials
New sub here! Very informative and helpful. Will definitely start researching training in Cloud Security. Thank you for the recommendations!!
thanks i am going to start carrer in cybersecurity by watching your video i know many things thanks man for this love from india
Have a question the university im have register has 2 options cyber technology and cyber operations. Would like to know abt the difference
Amazingly put together presentation. Extremely realistic. You’ve stated important points such as In demand skills. The business or corporation is looking to solve its problem and generate revenue. As long as you can get there and assist with that from a security perspective, you’ll get a way in!
Absolutely! I'm glad you enjoyed this
Can you make an official list of places you mentioned & think are the best places to get certifications & building your skill. It would be very much appreciative!
Hey Nick (if you don't mind me calling you that. I have a few questions that I think that a mindset of a hiring manager can answer.
1. I'm currently working at a retail (lead associate) job that personally (since I've often called myself the IT guy at work) has 1% IT related components like troubleshooting registers, office computers, and one time my bosses phone. Now I'm still debating whenever to remove it (I put it there to show my soft skills) and replace it with projects (I prefer to be honest instead of changing my job title) or just keep it there. What is the best advice?
2. I'm also doing some bug bounty to do some padding on my resume with freelancing. How do I put it on my resume to make sure it s freelance? Do I put it in under jobs?
3. Leading from 2, besides bug bounty, I have zero cybersecurity experience on my resume and little IT experience (if you call it that). Does hiring managers in cybersecurity prefer someone with some IT experience or no IT experience?
And 4. Also leading from 2 and 3: if hiring managers don't care about IT experience. I'm still trying to figure out which part of cybersecurity to get into. I'm currently looking at either a vulnerability scanner operator or a security generalist. On one hand, being a bug bounty and operator does seem to mesh together, but on the other hand, being a generalist does let me learn a bit of the field. What advice do you recommend doing? And in case you ask, no. I do not have any security credentials
Thank you for this video! Very informative. Exactly what I needed as I’m beginning my journey to break into the career field.
It's a lot of work but it is a very rewarding career! Best of luck to you and reach out if you need assistance
Great talk.. I needed to hear this.
Glad it was helpful!
This very useful! Thnaks
You make some of the best content
I appreciate the kind words! So glad you found the presentation valuable.
Great video
Thank you for watching! I'm glad you enjoyed the presentation