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Most security organizations promote their best technical performers into leadership roles without any formal training, creating a pipeline of struggling managers who burn out trying to stay hands-on while scaling teams. Daniel Schwalbe, CISO & Head of Investigations, DomainTools, demonstrates why structured leadership development matters more than technical expertise when building security organizations that can handle both complex threats and human dynamics.
Daniel tells Ben why security leadership demands different trust-building approaches, including creating "cone of silence" environments where teams can process high-stress investigations while maintaining strict operational security. He shares practical strategies for identifying natural leaders, implementing formal development programs, and building professional networks that provide career-long value in an industry where knowing the right people can determine success during critical incidents.
Too busy; didn’t listen:
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[24:18-24:41] “You can't have somebody go on social media and be like, “Oh, the thing that we found today!” So when we were still in person in an office, I instituted a rule: when the doors are closed in the office suite, you can say almost anything you want. And if there is a frustrating entity you're dealing with, fine, vent in this closed space. But nothing leaves that area.
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By MaltegoMost security organizations promote their best technical performers into leadership roles without any formal training, creating a pipeline of struggling managers who burn out trying to stay hands-on while scaling teams. Daniel Schwalbe, CISO & Head of Investigations, DomainTools, demonstrates why structured leadership development matters more than technical expertise when building security organizations that can handle both complex threats and human dynamics.
Daniel tells Ben why security leadership demands different trust-building approaches, including creating "cone of silence" environments where teams can process high-stress investigations while maintaining strict operational security. He shares practical strategies for identifying natural leaders, implementing formal development programs, and building professional networks that provide career-long value in an industry where knowing the right people can determine success during critical incidents.
Too busy; didn’t listen:
Skip to the Highlight of the episode:
[24:18-24:41] “You can't have somebody go on social media and be like, “Oh, the thing that we found today!” So when we were still in person in an office, I instituted a rule: when the doors are closed in the office suite, you can say almost anything you want. And if there is a frustrating entity you're dealing with, fine, vent in this closed space. But nothing leaves that area.
Listen to more episodes:
Apple
Spotify
YouTube
Website