cbdudek wrote: » There are 3 areas that all employers look at. 1. Experience 2. Education 3. Certifications
jax7 wrote: » I am curious if there are any CISMs on the message board that can weigh in on the value of the CISM when looking for a job. To put this in context, I am talking about jobs that would be posting for "CISSP, CISM, CISA, CEH, etc..." I realize everything is relative to a resume and the exact job description. In a nut shell, I am approaching 25 years working in the technology space with at least ten cumulative years directly working in information security going back to 1999. When not working directly with security, I have been specializing in networking and more recently with cloud/SDN technologies. I have 10+ years working in technical management roles and otherwise have held individual contributor roles at the expert level. I have tried to keep this varied so I could have a credible resume for either type of role in the future. I am currently working for a network/security vendor in a pre-sales technical role and this allows me to work from home with some travel. In the future, I would like to find a similar arrangement although my goal is not to be a traveling consultant who spends most of every week on the road. I imagine that rules out incident handling roles, for example. I have two CCIE certifications going back to 2001, ten years with the CISSP, a JNCIE from 2004, VCP4-DV, VCP6-NV, and most recently the AWS CSA Associate. Any advice? Thanks in advance.
EJMADELINE wrote: » For what it's worth, I've been contacted about more management type roles since adding the CISM to my resume. I also have the CISSP, and while that does garner the most attention in IT security, the CISM seems to be opening more doors.
jax7 wrote: » Thanks. This is very helpful because I've been avoiding my gap in education. I've been lucky it has not posed a problem for me so far and might have gotten a bit too comfortable in this area. I need to figure out an answer that makes sense given the cost in time and money vs. ROI. But, that's a whole different topic. It does seem the CISM should be easy enough to just complete regardless of whether it really makes a difference.