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Bryson Medlock's path to Threat Intelligence Evangelism Director, CW Research Unit at ConnectWise positioned him to address what actually creates high-performing security teams: treating people as individuals, maintaining psychological safety during crises, and building systems that eliminate months of manual work. Bryson shares how his leadership philosophy draws from a bit of nerdiness, including nearly two decades of running D&D campaigns where managing group dynamics requires constant attention to who's speaking and who needs encouragement to contribute. These frameworks translate directly into security team management, where recognizing that a fresh graduate needs hands-on guidance while a 15-year veteran needs autonomy and trust determines whether teams thrive or fracture.
The conversation explores how Bryson transformed ConnectWise's threat intelligence operations from months of manual spreadsheet work into automated systems that generate insights instantly. He also touches on conducting difficult conversations by focusing on observable facts rather than assumed intentions, building trust through recognizing individual needs rather than applying uniform management styles, and why panic accomplishes nothing in security operations where most situations aren't actually life-or-death.
Too busy; didn’t listen:
Skip to the Highlight of the episode:
[13:44-13:58] “You have got to be able to know when to trust, and when to delegate. I think a lot of it comes down to just recognizing that what it means to be a human, everybody is an individual. Everybody's got individual needs and wants and desires”
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By MaltegoBryson Medlock's path to Threat Intelligence Evangelism Director, CW Research Unit at ConnectWise positioned him to address what actually creates high-performing security teams: treating people as individuals, maintaining psychological safety during crises, and building systems that eliminate months of manual work. Bryson shares how his leadership philosophy draws from a bit of nerdiness, including nearly two decades of running D&D campaigns where managing group dynamics requires constant attention to who's speaking and who needs encouragement to contribute. These frameworks translate directly into security team management, where recognizing that a fresh graduate needs hands-on guidance while a 15-year veteran needs autonomy and trust determines whether teams thrive or fracture.
The conversation explores how Bryson transformed ConnectWise's threat intelligence operations from months of manual spreadsheet work into automated systems that generate insights instantly. He also touches on conducting difficult conversations by focusing on observable facts rather than assumed intentions, building trust through recognizing individual needs rather than applying uniform management styles, and why panic accomplishes nothing in security operations where most situations aren't actually life-or-death.
Too busy; didn’t listen:
Skip to the Highlight of the episode:
[13:44-13:58] “You have got to be able to know when to trust, and when to delegate. I think a lot of it comes down to just recognizing that what it means to be a human, everybody is an individual. Everybody's got individual needs and wants and desires”
Listen to more episodes:
Apple
Spotify
YouTube
Website