The man now leading security for a major university first got the security bug when dealing in government secrets about nuclear power.

Sara Peters, Senior Editor

November 3, 2014

3 Min Read

If you had a broken toy that needed fixing when you were a kid, Quinn Shamblin was the neighborhood boy to take it to. Even as a child, Shamblin was "the guy who liked to know weird, unusual stuff," and the go-to guy for taking things apart and putting things together.

"Infosec is the first career I really latched onto that uses all those old things that were drivers for me as a kid," says Shamblin, now the executive director and information security officer at Boston University (which does not use C- titles like CISO).

He did not, however, set out for a career in infosec. He was a physics major, and after school was recruited to teach Naval forces about nuclear power.

It was then, while dealing with so much classified information, that he became interested in security.

He pursued that new fascination by going to work for Proctor & Gamble. At P&G, it wasn't just the intellectual property confidentiality that was important, it was availability. They required 99.997% uptime, says Shamblin. "Eleven minutes would cost the company $200,000."

Also at P&G, he met the manager who would be a professional mentor for the rest of his career.

"You need to have people believe in you," says Shamblin. "Someone has to look at your work and say, yeah, wow, there's value here."

For Shamblin, that person was Kevin McLaughlin, a former felony investigator for the Army, who shared some of the same attitudes Shamblin had developed through his tenure in the military.

The two worked well together, so when McLaughlin left the company to go create a new information security department at the University of Cincinati, he invited Shamblin to join that new team.

It was McLaughlin again who recommended Shamblin for the job at Boston University in 2010, while declining the offer to take that job himself.

Shamblin is continuing the tradition by playing the role of mentor himself. Instead of hiring people who've done precisely the same job elsewhere, he hires people with promise and trains them up.

"I want people to get better and better at their job," he says, "and I want them, at some point, to leave." Shamblin believes that he's preparing his employees for great careers wherever they decide to go, and in a broader sense, "improving the industry by investing in these people."

Although most companies hire CISOs from outside the organization, Shamblin wants his successor to be someone he trained, and deliberately prepared to take over.

Most of the lessons he's passing on to those future CISOs have little to do with technology, and everything to do with business sense and communication skills.

"As a CISO, it's more important to understand risk and the business than to understand technology," he says. "Understand that if I do X I won't have a business."

Shamblin says that a CISO needs to sound like a CFO. He or she must appreciate the balance of risk and reward, and must be able to comprehend a financial analysis. He did earn an MBA himself while working at the University of Cincinati, but there is something else he gives more credit for his success than his degrees.

"I can talk," he says. "I'm genuinely interested in [people] and they can see it."

One key piece of advice he gives to all aspiring CISOs is to improve their communication skills, both written and face-to-face. He urges them to get formal training on this, because the difference between a well-written email or document and a poorly written one is huge -- but without training you might not see the difference.

If he weren't an information security pro, Shamblin says he would pursue another career in emergency response -- and isn't that what a lot of infosecurity is all about?

This is part three of Dark Reading's "How To Become a CISO" series. Read parts one and two now. Come back next Monday for the next CISO origin story, which is set in a law school.

About the Author(s)

Sara Peters

Senior Editor

Sara Peters is Senior Editor at Dark Reading and formerly the editor-in-chief of Enterprise Efficiency. Prior that she was senior editor for the Computer Security Institute, writing and speaking about virtualization, identity management, cybersecurity law, and a myriad of other topics. She authored the 2009 CSI Computer Crime and Security Survey and founded the CSI Working Group on Web Security Research Law -- a collaborative project that investigated the dichotomy between laws regulating software vulnerability disclosure and those regulating Web vulnerability disclosure.


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