Skip to main content
Logo GMV

Main navigation

  • Sectors
    • Icono espacio
      Space
    • Icono Aeronáutica
      Aeronautics
    • Icono Defensa y Seguridad
      Defense and Security
    • Icono Sistemas Inteligentes de Transporte
      Intelligent Transportation Systems
    • Icono Automoción
      Automotive
    • Icono Ciberseguridad
      Cybersecurity
    • Icono Servicios públicos Digitales
      Digital Public Services
    • Icono Sanidad
      Healthcare
    • Icono Industria
      Industry
    • Icono Financiero
      Financial
    • Icono Industria
      Services
    • All Sectors

    Highlight

    EMV Transit
    EMV Transit: technology that keeps on working
  • Talent
  • About GMV
    • Get to Know the Company
    • History
    • Management Team
    • Certifications
    • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Communication
    • News
    • Events
    • Blog
    • Magazine GMV News
    • Press Room
    • Media library
    • Latest from GMV

Secondary navigation

  • Products A-Z
  • GMV Global
    • Global (en)
    • Spain and LATAM (es - ca - en)
    • Germany (de - en)
    • Portugal (pt - en)
    • Poland (pl - en)
    • All branches and all GMV sites
  • Home
Back
New search
Date
Blog
  • Cybersecurity

In Cybersecurity, Look to Your Soft Skills

10/03/2020
  • Print
Share

You think you’re the best hacker, and you might well be, but in a meeting with your colleagues your pride spills over into an arrogant, overbearing attitude. You’re a security manager and you’ve made your own way to the top, working up from a good technical foundation, so you know exactly what you're dealing with, but when it comes to defending your budget with your bosses you get bogged down in technical details in spite of yourself. You’re the best salesperson for the best cybersecurity vendor; you think your clients are lining up to snatch the product from your hands, but when it comes to positioning your product you stray into empty verbosity. In short, you’re loaded with hard skills and woefully lacking in soft skills and you might not even realize it.

El desarrollo de Soft Skills es clave en el entorno de la ciberseguridad

Let’s look at an example calling for a lot of soft skills: a cybersecurity diagnosis in an industrial environment. The service consists of analyzing the current state of cybersecurity at an industrial plant, comparing it with cybersecurity best practices and standards and proposing the actions necessary to create the best solution. To carry out the initial fact-finding analysis you need to glean information from a lot of people, who may or may not be collaborators; who may or may not bridle at feeling audited; who, deliberately or otherwise, may hide information, etc. The consultant therefore needs to hone their soft skills to get the necessary information. At a minimum, this will require using empathy, listening skills, humility, and savoir faire. It goes without saying, obviously, that any consultant will master the hard skills.

After a long and painstaking research procedure the crux comes when the findings are presented and the improvement recommendations made. This presentation of results is usually made to client executives from various departments, all affected in one way or another. The paradox is that many of them will not have promoted the diagnosis; each one will have their own vested interests, which may not tally with the interests of the cybersecurity department. Here is where the soft skills come into their own, public speaking, flexibility, leadership, rapport, and negotiation savviness, to ensure the presentation is productive and even exceeds the clients’ expectations.

During the latest Basque Industry 4.0, held in Bilbao last November, I ran a workshop on “Cybersecurity diagnoses in industrial environments,” as part of my ongoing collaboration with the Industrial Cybersecurity Center (Centro de Ciberseguridad Industrial: CCI). The workshop ended with a role play with students volunteering to act as the consultancy team and me playing the part of various clients to whom the results were being presented. Despite the contrived situation, one thing became crystal clear; even the best consultancy work and a mastery of hard skillsmight flounder if you address clients in terms they can’t understand, if you overkill the fear factor or slip into technicalities, if you fail to look for value beyond the project’s scope, if you’re not fleet-footed enough to field the complaints made on the spot, if you come across haughtily clever, or incur in any other of a whole host of soft-skill blunders.

So, if you work in any cybersecurity area, look to your soft skills . They will make a difference.

Author: Javier Zubieta

  • Print
Share

Comments

About text formats

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang target> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
CAPTCHA

Related

Slopsquatting
  • Cybersecurity
Slopsquatting: A silent threat born from the hallucinations of LLMs
Blog ciberseguridad RRSS
  • Cybersecurity
How to protect your personal data on social networks
Black Friday
  • Cybersecurity
BLACK FRIDAY, may this Friday not be really black

Contact

Alameda dos Oceanos, 115
1990-392 Lisbon, Portugal

Tel. +351 308801495
Fax. +351 213866493

Contact menu

  • Contact
  • GMV around the world

Blog

  • Blog

Sectors

Sectors menu

  • Space
  • Aeronautics
  • Defense and Security
  • Intelligent Transportation Systems
  • Automotive
  • Cybersecurity
  • Digital Public Services
  • Healthcare
  • Industry
  • Financial
  • Services
  • Talent
  • About GMV
  • Shortcut to
    • Press Room
    • News
    • Events
    • Blog
    • Products A-Z
© 2025, GMV Innovating Solutions S.L.

Footer menu

  • Contact
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Footer Info

  • Commitment to the Environment
  • Financial Information