First Cybersecurity Business Counselors in Nation Housed in Cheyenne Chamber
The Greater Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce now houses the first two Cybersecurity Business Counselors (CBC) in the nation, Alexandra Farkas and Justin Gorman.
As part of a Microsoft TechSpark Grant awarded on March 7, the Greater Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce and CyberWyoming teamed up to train local, business-minded human resources to respond to the need for the Ground Based Strategic Deterrent (GBSD) project.
“It is an incredible honor to be one of two Cybersecurity Business Counselors in the nation,” said Alexandra Farkas, Communication and Operations Specialist for the Greater Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce. “Justin and I aren’t tech people per say….but being a part of this revolution and securing our members and our business community and making our community safer is a great privilege,” she continued.
Cybersecurity Business Counselors are a new profession which CyberWyoming defines as people that speak business language who are in a personal and local trusted position to walk small business owners through a cybersecurity checklist.
“We consider Cybersecurity Business Counselors to be the social workers in technology,” said Laura Baker, CBC trainer and Executive Director of CyberWyoming. “There is a documented problem with most small business owners avoiding the tech world and it is rooted in psychological distortions, so we train the CBCs to motivate, engage, and translate,” continued Baker.
“It is important to build a cyber secure community because we have such a tight knit community here [in Cheyenne] and these threats that are international can hit close to home at a moment’s notice,” said Justin Gorman, Director of Partner Services for the Greater Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce.
The Greater Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce is a 5 star accredited Chamber of Commerce, one of only 100 across the nation. There were four areas of accreditation that the Chamber had to pass: Advocacy, Civic Trusteeship, Sustainability, and Workforce Culture. The process was very positive, so the Cheyenne Chamber decided to bring this process back to their members. However, the national accreditation process didn’t include cybersecurity and, thus to add this important topic, the partnership was formed between the Chamber and CyberWyoming to win the Microsoft grant.
“We feel it [the extra cybersecurity leg in the accreditation process] is that important to put an emphasis on cybersecurity knowledge and training and so that is why as we roll out this accreditation process to our partners [members], we are stressing cybersecurity,” said Gorman.
One of any chamber of commerce’s strengths is bringing the business community together. The Cybersecurity Business Counselor meets this function specifically for technology and cyber issues, but is trained to provide added educational and program support for business owners.
The idea for the collaboration formed in October when Patrick Wolfinbarger and Laura Baker, Co-Founders of CyberWyoming and Dennis Ellis, Microsoft TechSpark Manager, met with Stephanie Meisner-Maggard of the Greater Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce to discuss an idea to build Wyoming’s cybersecurity awareness level.
“The Greater Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce is always looking for ways to provide businesses with resources. With the modernization of FE Warren being around the corner, it is vital for businesses to focus their attention on cybersecurity. CyberWyoming’s Made Safe program is a great solution that we have decided to integrate into our Business Accreditation Program,” said Meisner.
The program is designed as an outreach program to small businesses. Both Farkas and Gorman will help businesses walk through cyber checklists, provide educational materials and presentations, manage a cybersecurity committee that all Chamber members can access, and provide tools and resources to businesses to meet best practices in cybersecurity.
“Cyber threats are constant… Building a strong community that shares awareness practices and provides outside assistance when necessary is the best way to be prepared to defend against these continually moving targets,” said David Powell, Vice Chairman of CyberUSA.
BUSINESS ACCREDITATION INFORMATION