Page 43 - FCW, October 2017
P. 43

Amanda L. Day
Enterprise Cybersecurity Awareness and Training Lead
Department of Homeland Security
Being in charge of cybersecurity training for nearly half a million Department of Homeland Security employees is a daunting responsibility. But Amanda Day, who leads DHS’ Enterprise Cybersecurity Awareness and Training program, does it by making sure her team members are empowered and acknowledged.
Chelsea Rainier, DHS’ communications lead in the chief information security officer’s office, has known Day since she started her new role. “She makes sure she invests in us, that we’re where we need or want to be,” Rainier said of Day, who is not her direct supervisor. “She never takes praise without giving credit to her team.”
Day, who previously worked in IT at Customs and Border Protection, also runs DHS’ Information Security Training Working Group, which provides a discussion forum for cybersecurity awareness and training throughout the agency.
Her experience and ongoing coordination with frontline workers help give her team members a clear sense of why their work matters.
“In IT, it can seem like we are separated from the boots on the ground,” Rainier said. “But \[Day’s\] experience has strengthened her passion for the mission, and she reminds us that everyone plays an important role.”
Rather than leading with a rubber stamp of approval, Day empowers her team to make decisions, Rainier added, and
she gives even interns as much
knowledge, training and exposure
as possible.
“She refuses to let our current
intern be called anything but
her title: junior cybersecurity analyst,” Rainier said. The intern is with Day “every step of the way, under her wing, even in a meeting with the CIO.”
For someone who has only been in her job for a year, that’s the kind of leadership that makes one a Rising Star.
— Lauren C. Williams
October 2017
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