How to Measure & Communicate What Matters in Cybersecurity Risk

RICHARD SEIERSEN
CYBER RISK AUTHOR

Ivan Milenkovic
Cyber Risk Technology
Specifically designed for CISOs and security executives, our workshops and briefings delve into the heart of cybersecurity risk measurement. The focus will be on discovering which risks are most likely to cause significant business losses across the intersection of assets, threats, and vulnerabilities.
Cyber Risk In-Person Workshops: half-day sessions that go deep into how to measure and communicate risk
Richard Seiersen is the Chief Risk Technology Officer at Qualys and the author of two books on cybersecurity risk management:How to Measure Anything in Cybersecurity Risk and The Metric Manifesto: Confronting Security with Data. Richard has facilitated over 400 engagements with CISOs on metrics, risk quantification, and board presentations via IANS.
Ivan Milenkovic is the VP of Cyber Risk Technology at Qualys and a certified S-CISO with global experience leading security programs across five continents. He has built and led cyber teams of 100+, managed €30M+ budgets, and established global resilience centers. Ivan is a mentor for SECO’s CISO 2.0 Program and a founding member of the pan-European CISO Tribe, focusing on strategy, resilience, and risk communication.
These interactive half-day sessions will include three progressive cyber risk workshops. You’ll learn what's important in measuring and communicating risk, as well as share knowledge and best practices with your peers. Space is limited to 10- 12 participants. Topics include:
Experience our in-person Cyber Risk Workshops first hand—select a location that works for you and attend one or all sessions in this progressive, expert-led series.
Americas


EMEA


James Hanbury, Global Lead Director, Cyber Risk Insights, KPMG
“Richard’s session on measurement and communication of cyber risk was pragmatic, insightful and actionable. It will be the best few hours of professional development time you do this year, and might just displace your use of a few of the engrained (and inadequate) methods our industry is all used to!”