Clarke Rodgers (00:07):
What qualities make for a successful CISO? As the CISO for AWS, my guest today has a great perspective on this question. I’m Clarke Rodgers, Director of Enterprise Strategy at AWS and your guide for a series of conversations with AWS security leaders here on Executive Insights.
We’re happy to welcome Chris Betz, CISO of AWS, to the show. Join us as he shares his thoughts on everything from establishing a culture of security, to hiring for diversity, to mentoring the next generation of great security leaders. Please enjoy.
Clarke Rodgers (00:38):
So, I know you quite well, but would love to get a little bit more about your background for the audience.
Chris Betz (00:44):
As you said, we've known each other for a while. That's one of the things I love about the security community is just how small it is. At a certain point, you end up interacting with people you've seen throughout the world. In my case, my background started in the Air Force. I was in the Air Force for a number of years, went into the federal government, spent more years working cybersecurity there.
I've had a chance to do security at companies like CBS, a media company, a ton of time at places like Apple and Microsoft and Lumen, CenturyLink at the time, and most recently at Capital One. And so, it's just been interesting seeing kind of a diversity of roles and again, like you say, seeing the same faces over and over again.
Clarke Rodgers (01:23):
So, as the AWS CISO, when you're going to meet with customers now and you're answering their security questions, how has that changed things? The ability to say, "Hey, I was in your shoes not too long ago, and this is how I thought about it. And now that I'm here, this is the answer to your question," that sort of thing.
Chris Betz (01:45):
For the past decade, I've been working in security roles in companies that are significant customers of AWS. And so yeah, I've been there alongside AWS as we've gone on our security journey, as we've gone on our technology journey. Recently being a customer lets me go and have that conversation in a very different way because I feel I understand those conversations and the questions and the challenges they have.
One of the things that I appreciate the most about those conversations as well is the ability to stay well-grounded in what our customers are seeing, how they're feeling what's going on in the world, and really the ability to toss ideas back and forth. "Hey, here's what I'm seeing. Here's how I'm solving that problem." "Oh, that's what you're seeing? That's how you're solving that problem." That ability for us to mutually continue to raise the bar within AWS, but within our customers as well is incredibly powerful.
Clarke Rodgers (02:51):
And you're in the position that you can earn more trust by saying, "This is how I solved that problem in the previous role," which is great.
Chris Betz (02:58):
I've got the scar tissue.
Clarke Rodgers (02:59):
Exactly. As a CISO, you have to have depth of security expertise, you have to have business expertise, and you bring it all together, but you have large teams underneath you that actually have to deliver security to the business, to our customers, et cetera. So, with that lens, what are some of the challenges that you see facing security leaders today?