Infosec scholarship winner Kandice Kucharczyk salutes her mentors as she sets her sights high
Kandice Kucharzyk is ready to blaze a trail in the cybersecurity world. She’s ambitious, undaunted by challenge and has her sights set on becoming a future executive — possibly even the director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) like her idol, Jen Easterly.
Kucharzyk attributes her interest in cybersecurity and her hard work ethic to her parents. Although they did not attend college themselves, they taught her to shoot for the stars. She explains they “raised me with an engineer’s eye — to take things apart in my mind, figure out how they worked and then put them back together.” This initially led Kucharzyk to study medicine before leaping into technology.
While taking classes in pre-med and microbiology, someone in Kucharzyk’s life who worked in tech challenged her knowledge of information systems and engineering. This lit a fire in Kucharzyk to prove them wrong. “I grew up around computers, taking them apart, putting them back together. I've always had that engineering mindset; it's just it went from engineering bodies to engineering to computers. So, as long as I kept that main value, my core characteristics, that's what keeps me going here in technology.”
With a new goal in mind fueled by her endless ambition and interest in learning, Kucharzyk began studying cybersecurity. She recently graduated with an associate’s degree in network systems and technology. And in exciting news, her alma mater recently unveiled a bachelor’s degree in cybersecurity and IT systems. Kucharzyk has been exploring that program, including challenging herself by taking a coding class.
What should you learn next?
Importance of mentors and role models for women in cybersecurity
Kucharzyk counts her college professors as some of her top mentors. “They have been paramount in encouraging me to do the things other students couldn't see themselves doing or weren't interested in doing. Starting a Cyber Club, leading it, building the school's first Hackathon, giving me conferences to go to and people to connect with.” Kandice is particularly excited about founding the school’s Cyber Club. She describes the club’s goal as creating a welcoming and equitable environment for students interested in getting involved in technology and cybersecurity. “I work in a predominantly male work environment — not just in my team, but in my entire office — so leading from the bottom is showing others that [...] women can be in tech. Women can lead. This is what a woman in tech looks like, and [I can] teach people how to interact with diverse people in an equitable way.”
In addition to her professors, Kucharzyk looks up to a role remodel: Jen Easterly, director of CISA. Kucharzyk says of Easterly, “I follow her religiously on LinkedIn, and she's the woman I've been looking for that looks like me [...] It feels like she popped up out of nowhere, but she had to trailblaze. She had to do it herself with the help of people who believed in her, and it wasn't until then that she got the recognition that — from a civilian opinion — she so rightly deserves.”
Looking at Kucharzyk’s work with the Cyber Club, it’s clear that she’s already taking notes from her role model about how to support people from all walks of life in their quest to make a mark on the cybersecurity world.
Kucharzyk is also networking with fellow cybersecurity professionals at conferences. She attended her first conference, Hack the Port, because it was welcoming to college students and young professionals. She even got to meet the founder, Armando Seay, and do an impromptu interview that he posted to his LinkedIn page. Kucharzyk says of the experience, “He was so enthusiastic and engaged in what I had to say about my journey, and that really emboldened me and encouraged me to say, ‘Oh, my God, I do belong!’ Sometimes it just takes someone to extend their hand and go, ‘I'm so glad you're here. I'm so excited to see what you do in the future with your degree.’ That changes everything.”
What should you learn next?
Looking forward to an ambitious future in cybersecurity
For the near future, Kucharzyk is looking to secure a job as a security manager. She thinks it would be the perfect fit since it’s “something where you know a little bit of everything, but you don't need to be an expert in necessarily one thing. It's about connecting people, connecting resources and tools to projects to meet stakeholder demands and requests. It's about arming yourself with the expertise and advice of others.” As a people person and someone who’s worn “multiple hats” at her past job, the balance of people management and hands-on cybersecurity tasks would allow Kucharzyk to do what she does best.
Kucharzyk began climbing the career ladder toward becoming a future CISA chief or Fortune 500 director as a desktop technician for local government. At the time, her cybersecurity skills were strictly educational, so getting the job was an important milestone for her. Since then, she’s moved on to a role as a field technician. Kucharzyk offers this advice for up-and-coming cyber professionals looking to secure their first job: “I think it's better to show what you know. Put it into practice rather than [saying], ‘Oh, I got this certification, that certification,’ all the way down the line.” In other words, demonstrate that you’re not only great at taking tests but also great at doing the job. This practical, can-do attitude helped Kucharzyk break into the cybersecurity world — and we’re confident it will take her even further in the coming years.