Renata Spinks details Marine Corps’ work with zero trust Feb 10, 2020 Related Videos See All Videos Renata Spinks says the Marine Corps’ Talent Management 2030 is critical for cybersecurity U.S. Marine Corps Assistant Director, IC4, Renata Spinks, shares her thoughts on what her office is doing to adjust to the chronic cybersecurity staffing shortage that many… Dec 20, 2022 Gerald Caron on HHS’ zero-trust maturity, discusses roadmap for future Dec 14, 2022 Trellix’s Tom Gann on deploying zero trust during evolving policy environments Oct 26, 2022 Share Facebook LinkedIn Twitter Copy Link Advertisement More Like This MacroSolutions executives unveil the power of workforce modernization and data analytics By Scoop News Group Lauren Simpson of Hirevue spotlights innovative workforce strategy, prioritizing internal mobility By Scoop News Group Accenture’s Stephen Hurley on attracting top talent and shaping the future of employee experience By Scoop News Group Advertisement Top Stories White House fleshes out plan for agencies to collect software vendor attestation forms By John Hewitt Jones GSA to install Jeff Lau as acting chief human capital officer By Nihal Krishan Top border protection acquisition official hopes retirement will bring ‘fresh’ ideas By Madison Alder
Renata Spinks says the Marine Corps’ Talent Management 2030 is critical for cybersecurity U.S. Marine Corps Assistant Director, IC4, Renata Spinks, shares her thoughts on what her office is doing to adjust to the chronic cybersecurity staffing shortage that many… Dec 20, 2022
MacroSolutions executives unveil the power of workforce modernization and data analytics By Scoop News Group
Lauren Simpson of Hirevue spotlights innovative workforce strategy, prioritizing internal mobility By Scoop News Group
Accenture’s Stephen Hurley on attracting top talent and shaping the future of employee experience By Scoop News Group
White House fleshes out plan for agencies to collect software vendor attestation forms By John Hewitt Jones
Top border protection acquisition official hopes retirement will bring ‘fresh’ ideas By Madison Alder