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Culture Clash on Pager Duty: Why DevOps, SRE and Cybersecurity Cultures Differ

Webinar

Think About Your Audience Before Choosing a Webinar Title

Sponsored by Sonatype

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On Demand
Anytime

The most beautiful thing about SRE is your error budget. But in cybersecurity, error budgets just can't happen when a critical vulnerability is found in zero-day events. In this session, we'll talk about shared SLOs that serve to keep source code running while keeping vulnerabilities out.

This is a great opportunity for SREs, cybersecurity engineers and researchers and especially the managers who oversee these roles. There are incredibly different methods and motivations for accelerating delivery and tolerating some risk with an error budget, and the cybersecurity approach of zero-tolerance to critical vulnerabilities. Both approaches are absolutely necessary to keep software running in the real world.

This Workshop will show us how to structurally support shared aims with SLOs and create a better culture across teams in modern DevOps-driven enterprises. In addition, you'll walk away with a little more empathy for two dev teams who typically only come together to put out fires.

Sal Kimmich
Developer Advocate - Sonatype
Sal heads developer relations for open source at Sonatype and is passionate about helping engineers, ethical hackers and digital enthusiasts understand the complexity of modern software development. With more than a decade of experience as a machine learning engineer in the healthcare and tech for good sectors, their work is now focused on filling the cracks in the open source software supply chain to build a better digital future for all of us. By day, you'll find Sal working with site reliability engineers, DevOps and cybersecurity specialists to implement best tools and practices to remove toil from developer workflows. By night, you'll find Sal mentoring the next generation of engineers in cloud computing from around the globe, helping them to make the world a better place through the clever use of math.

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What You’ll Learn in This Webinar

You’ve probably written a hundred abstracts in your day, but have you come up with a template that really seems to resonate? Go back through your past webinar inventory and see what events produced the most registrants. Sure – this will vary by topic but what got their attention initially was the description you wrote.

Paint a mental image of the benefits of attending your webinar. Often times this can be summarized in the title of your event. Your prospects may not even make it to the body of the message, so get your point across immediately.  Capture their attention, pique their interest, and push them towards the desired action (i.e. signing up for your event). You have to make them focus and you have to do it fast. Using an active voice and bullet points is great way to do this.

Always add key takeaways. Something like this....In this session, you’ll learn about:

  • You know you’ve cringed at misspellings and improper grammar before, so don’t get caught making the same mistake.
  • Get a second or even third set of eyes to review your work.
  • It reflects on your professionalism even if it has nothing to do with your event.