Two controversial pieces of cybersecurity career advice I give to a lot of people I talk to on mentorship calls:

1) Don't become a manager unless you genuinely want to be a servant leader and devote yourself to people and program management for the joy and fulfillment of it.

2) Don't become a red teamer unless you genuinely in your heart of hearts want to be a red teamer, you understand what the role entails (even the boring parts), and you are willing to very deeply commit extra time and effort. They're generally much more competitive roles.

@hacks4pancakes the writing.

ALL the writing.

Red Teamers who are good at writing are a blessing to their organizations

@RandomDamage @hacks4pancakes 100%. I don't care how hot shit you are at finding vulns in stuff, writing tools, and all the other technical stuff - if you can't communicate the details in writing then you can't do the job.

language barrier is fine - most places have peer review or editorial staff to help with that. but communication is like 80% of the job role, you need to commit to being good at it.