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Most leaders avoid failure, but Jeremy Turner, VP of Threat Intelligence & Research at SecurityScorecard, has built his leadership philosophy around deliberately seeking challenges where failure is probable. His counterintuitive approach stems from a simple insight: advanced persistent threats succeed through persistence, not technical sophistication, so security teams must embody the same mindset to stay ahead.
Jeremy shares how his failure-driven approach transforms team performance, from screening for initiative and persistence over technical credentials to creating remote work environments that mirror the knowledge transfer of on-site security operations centers.. His decision-making framework favors seeking independent input first, welcoming contributions from junior and non-expert analysts before the group discussions.
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[10:09-10:30] The combination of persistence and initiative is really the greatest criteria for success. And one, when I'm looking at new team members, those are the two qualities that I'm really most interested in because anybody with those qualities can be successful in this field, especially with good advice, mentoring, and also the trust and faith to give them the challenges that will help them get there and the confidence to deal with failure.
Speaker
Jeremy Turner, VP of Threat Intelligence & Research, SecurityScorecard
Jeremy brings over two decades of experience in threat intelligence, including roles at the Pentagon doing computer network defense and at Crumpton Group working with former CIA executives. His background spans reverse engineering, network exploration, and building threat intelligence capabilities for advanced security operations.
Listen to more episodes:
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By MaltegoMost leaders avoid failure, but Jeremy Turner, VP of Threat Intelligence & Research at SecurityScorecard, has built his leadership philosophy around deliberately seeking challenges where failure is probable. His counterintuitive approach stems from a simple insight: advanced persistent threats succeed through persistence, not technical sophistication, so security teams must embody the same mindset to stay ahead.
Jeremy shares how his failure-driven approach transforms team performance, from screening for initiative and persistence over technical credentials to creating remote work environments that mirror the knowledge transfer of on-site security operations centers.. His decision-making framework favors seeking independent input first, welcoming contributions from junior and non-expert analysts before the group discussions.
Stories We’re Telling Today:
Too busy; didn’t listen:
Skip to the Highlight of the episode:
[10:09-10:30] The combination of persistence and initiative is really the greatest criteria for success. And one, when I'm looking at new team members, those are the two qualities that I'm really most interested in because anybody with those qualities can be successful in this field, especially with good advice, mentoring, and also the trust and faith to give them the challenges that will help them get there and the confidence to deal with failure.
Speaker
Jeremy Turner, VP of Threat Intelligence & Research, SecurityScorecard
Jeremy brings over two decades of experience in threat intelligence, including roles at the Pentagon doing computer network defense and at Crumpton Group working with former CIA executives. His background spans reverse engineering, network exploration, and building threat intelligence capabilities for advanced security operations.
Listen to more episodes:
Apple
Spotify
YouTube
Website