I am in a very similar situation. So I feel your pain. I think you have the right attitude about getting involved. Even if you need to start your own chapter/group or get involved with an open source project. Do you have a Blog? Are you leveraging twitter and other social media? Also stayed involved in email lists such as this. Go to CONS (even if it is out of your own pocket). Give back to the community. These things have helped generate more leads for me and I have had a shit load of fun too, so just my two cents.
Best of luck Tim On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 8:28 AM, Josh Little <[email protected]> wrote: > So, I've been trying to leave my job of 11 years for a dedicated security > position and have had little luck. I've had one set of interviews, where I > was passed on for what may have been team personality issues - no big deal, > these things happen. But I can't keep but wonder if there is something I'm > missing - well, I know there are things missing, I just don't know how big a > deal they are. What advice would you guys give me, given the following: > > - I've got some 13-14 years IT experience, with 11 of that being in the > enterprise sector in the advertising industry. The experience is across the > board - helpdesk, operations, network & infrastructure administration, > security, and web application work. The past 4-5 years I have tried to > specialize as best I could in security, while also being required to perform > the tasks of a network administrator, network engineer, voice engineer, and > "digital/web guy". Our entire network operations team is only 5 guys for an > entire multi-site enterprise operation, so I cannot just work in one area. > This is the main reason why I am looking to leave - the breadth of work > experience has been helpful in doing the security work, but I want to be a > dedicated security person, not an NA that also kinda does security. Also, > our operation (and our industry in general) is not terribly concerned with > security for cultural reasons. We have very little management buy-in for > security initiatives. Even after incidents occur, management may be > concerned for a month or so before slowly ignoring the controls put in place > to help prevent another incident. > > - I've "concentrated" on intrusion detection, network analysis, incident > response, and web app testing. This has mostly been out of necessity, as > these have been the areas most needed at my current job. I've dabbled in > other areas of security, but these are the ones that I get the most exposure > to. My skills are, I believe, decent but not awesome. They are decent enough > that I can reliably find compromises, explain why the machine is to me > considered compromised, find the source of the compromise, and determine to > some level how it came to be that way. I obviously don't know if I am > missing anything - I may just be able to find the bottom rung of owned > machines. There in lies problem number two - I have no one to compare myself > to or learn from. The security program at my current place of work was > developed pretty much by me and no one else there has a strong security > background beyond the basic security concepts. I listen to PDC and most of > the other security podcasts and have no trouble following along and taking > what is said and applying it back into my own organization, so I know I'm > not just a clueless n00b, but I have no benchmark by which to compare > myself. I've signed up to the Security Mentors program, both as a mentor and > a mentee, but have heard nothing back from them. There are a couple local > groups that meet - one is attached somehow to U of M in Ann Arbor (40 > minutes away) and meets on a college students schedule. I'm looking into the > local Infraguard chapter. > > - I have no certifications or special training. Everything I know I've > either learned on the job or taught myself. My job will not pay for security > training for me and I've found the cost of most training to be outside my > budget in the past. Would you consider this to be a big minus? If so, where > would you suggest I start? I'm not looking to spend a year + taking classes > and earning certs, mainly because I don't have the time or money to do so, > but if there was one, possibly two classes to take what would you suggest? > > I think I've got a lot going for me. I've gathered a good sense of business, > something that a lot of younger security guys don't have. My skills are > good, though just how good I'm not sure. I'm at the "strong" part of my > career (I'm 35), but I just want to make sure I take it in the right > direction. It's now time for me to make that next step, but I'm not really > sure if I'm in the position to do so. Let me know what you guys think. > > PS - If anyone is interested in taking a look at my resume, I can provide > that privately. > > ZT > > _______________________________________________ > Pauldotcom mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.pauldotcom.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pauldotcom > Main Web Site: http://pauldotcom.com > _______________________________________________ Pauldotcom mailing list [email protected] http://mail.pauldotcom.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pauldotcom Main Web Site: http://pauldotcom.com
