16
April 2008
Security Officer should have more strategic role
John Sterlicchi US Bureau Chief, reporting from RSA
When it comes to defining what a Chief Security Officer does in an
enterprise think less of a corporate cop and more of a business enabler.
That was the message at the RSA Conference from Dave Hansen, former
CIO at CA and now a senior vice president and general manager of the
company’s Security Management business.
At present 46 percent of CSOs spend up to a third of their day just
analyzing security event reports and that is not good use of their time
said Hansen.
“Instead, the CSO should be deeply engaged in understanding the
lines of business and devising ways to use security to increase efficiency
and drive profitable growth. That’s what strategic security is
all about," he said.
“No longer merely an enforcer of security protocol, the CSO works
with the CIO, CFO and other C-Suite executives as a business enabler,
a strategist, and a security evangelist who helps the organization recognize
the need to embed secure practices in every facet of the business,”
he added.
Hansen told his audience that nowadays there’s a lot of debate
about to whom the CSO should report. “Some favor having the position
report to the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors. Some say it
should be the office of the Chief Counsel. Others say the CIO or even
the CEO.”
He believed that where exactly the CSO reported was less important than
ensuring that the CSO was working closely with the organization’s
senior leaders. “Security demands an executive voice with the
appropriate degrees of insight and muscle behind it.”
As to the future, he said that as companies migrate to Software as a
Service, the demands on the CSO will continue to evolve. Greater agility
in responding to customer needs will be essential and an ever deeper
interaction with the business will be the norm.
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