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The Cyber Defense eMagazine January Edition for 2024

Cyber Defense eMagazine January Edition for 2024 #CDM #CYBERDEFENSEMAG @CyberDefenseMag by @Miliefsky a world-renowned cyber security expert and the Publisher of Cyber Defense Magazine as part of the Cyber Defense Media Group as well as Yan Ross, Editor-in-Chief and many more writers, partners and supporters who make this an awesome publication! 201 page January Edition fully packed with some of our best content. Thank you all and to our readers! OSINT ROCKS! #CDM #CDMG #OSINT #CYBERSECURITY #INFOSEC #BEST #PRACTICES #TIPS #TECHNIQUES

Cyber Defense eMagazine January Edition for 2024 #CDM #CYBERDEFENSEMAG @CyberDefenseMag by @Miliefsky a world-renowned cyber security expert and the Publisher of Cyber Defense Magazine as part of the Cyber Defense Media Group as well as Yan Ross, Editor-in-Chief and many more writers, partners and supporters who make this an awesome publication! 201 page January Edition fully packed with some of our best content. Thank you all and to our readers! OSINT ROCKS! #CDM #CDMG #OSINT #CYBERSECURITY #INFOSEC #BEST #PRACTICES #TIPS #TECHNIQUES

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call upon. I find this fascinating because the vCISO is part cybersecurity advisor, part strategist, part<br />

practitioner and part recruiter.<br />

I am sure more niches will evolve, but, based on my interviews, these are the most common. One<br />

consistency I have noted is the initial due diligence required with each client, usually called a gap analysis<br />

or gap assessment. My takeaway is that if you are offering vCISO services, you have to be offering gap<br />

analyses.<br />

Go It Alone or Build a Scaling Business<br />

It is exciting to start your own business working <strong>for</strong> yourself. While consulting businesses are often<br />

considered “lifestyle” businesses, they still can grow and scale like a startup. I personally like to analogize<br />

cybersecurity consulting firms to law firms and I think the model works well. <strong>The</strong> most highly experienced<br />

partner starts the firm and starts to grow enough client work such that they need help due to bandwidth<br />

constraints. At first, they have a few vCISO friends who can pitch in and consult when needed. Eventually,<br />

they need to hire someone to take over the client work so they can focus more on marketing and sales.<br />

Eventually, the founding partner is managing several other vCISOs and also associates who are earlier<br />

in their career. In this model, a vCISO partners with the associate. <strong>The</strong> associate has a cheaper hourly<br />

rate than the vCISO and works on more of the heavy lifting, like conducting the due diligence <strong>for</strong> gap<br />

assessments, reviewing vendor evidence of security and responding to security questionnaires on the<br />

client’s behalf. <strong>The</strong> vCISO partners focus more of their time on high-level tasks, training the associates<br />

and keeping abreast of changes to any standards or regulations (like NIST CSF 2.0 or CMMC).<br />

Meanwhile, the founding partner now spends almost all of his/ her or their time managing the business,<br />

hiring and firing and marketing and sales. It is worth taking the time to understand what you want. Do you<br />

want to run a business or do you like doing the work <strong>for</strong> the clients? Your decision will determine whether<br />

you stay a one-person firm or grow into something much larger.<br />

Back to the law firm analogy, I see vCISO firms eventually having specialties like law firms do now. One<br />

firm may have an entire practice area that focuses on audit readiness while another practice area that<br />

focuses on secondments within companies. Basically, those choices you made to start your firm, which<br />

niche to offer, becomes one division of your much larger firm.<br />

2023 was the year of the explosion of the vCISO market and I do not anticipate that it slows down in<br />

<strong>2024</strong>. If anything, we will start to see larger and larger firms emerge as top-tier with reputations <strong>for</strong> being<br />

best in class. If you have been thinking of starting your own firm, I say the time is now be<strong>for</strong>e the price of<br />

entry gets too high.<br />

As you dive deeper into running your own firm, you'll discover even more insights and nuances. Stay<br />

curious, adapt to the changing landscape, and never stop learning. With dedication and the right<br />

strategies, you can build a vCISO firm that brings you challenges that are worth experiencing and<br />

enjoyment in your work that you never thought possible.<br />

<strong>Cyber</strong> <strong>Defense</strong> <strong>eMagazine</strong> – <strong>January</strong> <strong>2024</strong> <strong>Edition</strong> 121<br />

Copyright © <strong>2024</strong>, <strong>Cyber</strong> <strong>Defense</strong> Magazine. All rights reserved worldwide.

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