Unlocking Momentum

What Leaders Still Get Wrong About Cyber Attacks

41 min · 1 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio What Leaders Still Get Wrong About Cyber Attacks

Descripción

Cybersecurity is no longer just an IT issue. It is a leadership, operations, and communication challenge that touches every part of the business. In this episode, Aaron Kopel sits down with Chetrice Romero [https://www.linkedin.com/in/romeroclm], Senior Cybersecurity Advisor at Ice Miller LLP [https://www.icemiller.com/], to unpack what organizations still get wrong about cyber readiness. Chetrice shares her unconventional path from public relations and crisis communications into cybersecurity leadership, including her work shaping Indiana’s statewide cyber strategy and advising organizations through high-stress incidents. She explains why the biggest cyber risks today are often people problems, why geopolitics now matter to business leaders far beyond government, and why incident response planning has to extend well beyond the IT department. Chetrice also breaks down what effective tabletop exercises actually look like and why leaders need to understand their role before a real incident hits. This conversation is a practical look at how momentum in cybersecurity comes from preparation, shared responsibility, and the ability to respond calmly when the pressure is highest. Key takeaways: * Cybersecurity is a people and business problem, not just a technical one * Tabletop exercises reveal leadership gaps before a real incident does * Vendor risk, geopolitics, and poor preparation can quickly become operational crises Episode highlights (00:00) Intro (01:04) From PR into cyber leadership (02:51) Building Indiana’s cyber strategy (14:06) Geopolitics and destructive attacks (17:38) What tabletop planning should cover (24:21) When vendor breaches hit operations (25:46) PR, panic, and crisis pressure (28:16) What cyber insurance really covers (29:48) How to run useful tabletops (35:53) Rapid fire questions and reflections Chetrice Romero on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/romeroclm [https://www.linkedin.com/in/romeroclm]  Aaron Kopel on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel [https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel] Explore Ice Miller LLP: https://techpoint.org/indiana-cio-networkhttps://www.icemiller.com/ [https://www.icemiller.com/]  Explore Project Brilliant: https://projectbrilliant.com [https://projectbrilliant.com] The Science of Scaling by Benjamin Hardy: https://a.co/d/76xHeGD [https://a.co/d/76xHeGD]  Buy Unlocking Momentum: https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS [https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS]

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14 episodios

episode Scaling AI in Business: Insights on Organizational Change artwork

Scaling AI in Business: Insights on Organizational Change

Technology may enable momentum, but people, leadership, and mindset are what truly move organizations forward. In this episode, Aaron Kopel sits down with Gervais Johnson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/gervaisjohnson/], an experienced leader in AI, Agile transformations, and digital strategy. Gervais shares his journey from working at NASA and General Dynamics to becoming a pivotal player in Agile and AI transformations at major organizations like IBM. Through his career, Gervais demonstrates how business and organizational transformation come before technological change, and how AI is not just a tool but a strategy that can open up new business models and revenue streams. He discusses the importance of blending Agile principles with AI adoption and highlights how strong leadership, intentional transformation strategies, and continuous learning drive success in today's fast-paced business environment. Gervais emphasizes that true transformation requires not just technology implementation but fostering a culture of collaboration, understanding organizational needs, and focusing on empowering people. He also explores how AI's rapid evolution impacts workflows, governance, and the critical role of leaders in shaping this new landscape. Key takeaways: * Companies that delay embracing AI risk falling behind * AI is a tool for organizational and business transformation * Strong leadership and strategy are key to effective AI adoption Episode highlights (00:00) Intro (04:51) How Lilly scaled enterprise AI adoption (06:35) Career lessons on stability and negotiation (08:59) Building momentum through organizational change networks (13:16) AI transformation beyond technology alone (16:32) AI augments humans, not replaces them (18:45) AI investment strategy, costs, and KPIs (22:35) Agent governance, guardrails, and human oversight (26:53) Documenting end-to-end workflows before AI automation (30:02) Why leaders must actively use AI (32:49) AI first versus AI native explained (35:38) Vibe coding, agents, and AI development (36:56) Companies risk falling behind without AI adoption (38:04) CIO roadmap for enterprise AI transformation (41:43) Rapid fire questions and final thoughts Gervais Johnson on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gervaisjohnson/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/gervaisjohnson/]  Aaron Kopel on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel [https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel] Explore Project Brilliant: https://projectbrilliant.com [https://projectbrilliant.com] Buy Unlocking Momentum: https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS [https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS]

Ayer45 min
episode What CIOs Must Get Right About AI Adoption Today artwork

What CIOs Must Get Right About AI Adoption Today

Momentum inside an organization rarely comes from technology by itself. It is shaped by people, leadership, and the mindset that guides how teams work, adapt, and move forward together. In this episode, Aaron Kopel sits down with Steven Barley [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sbarley/], Chief Information and Technology Officer at the Indiana Public Retirement System (INPRS) [https://www.linkedin.com/company/indiana-public-retirement-system/about/], to explore how momentum is unlocked by shifting IT from a support function into a strategic business partner. Steven shares his journey from operations into IT leadership and how it shaped his approach to aligning business needs with technology. He explains why real progress comes from understanding core problems, not just applying new tools, and how strong relationships drive better outcomes. Through his modernization efforts, Steven highlights the importance of intentional AI adoption, strong governance, and investing in people through upskilling. He shows how empowering teams, encouraging cross functional thinking, and focusing on customer experience can transform organizations. Ultimately, he reinforces that lasting momentum comes from developing people and aligning strategy with execution. Key takeaways: * Momentum is driven by people and mindset, not just technology * IT creates more value when it acts as a strategic business partner * Understanding problems deeply matters more than applying new tool Episode highlights (00:00) Intro (01:00) Transition from operations to IT leadership (05:32) Advice on l Learning from other industries and experiences (09:31) Networking through conferences and peer groups (14:13) Shifting IT to strategic business partner (19:08) Using skills matrix to upskill teams (22:24) Building data foundation before AI implementation (24:24) Challenges of scaling AI governance efforts (26:15) Starting small to build AI trust (31:54) Key advice for modern CIO leadership (39:17) Creative resources to check out (42:05) Rapid fire questions with Steven  (46:01) Leadership legacy and helping others grow Steven Barley on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sbarley/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sbarley/] Explore the Indiana Public Retirement System (INPRS): https://www.linkedin.com/company/indiana-public-retirement-system/ [https://www.linkedin.com/company/indiana-public-retirement-system/about/] Aaron Kopel on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel [https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel] Explore Project Brilliant: https://projectbrilliant.com [https://projectbrilliant.com] Buy Unlocking Momentum: https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS [https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS]

13 de may de 202647 min
episode AI Goes Beyond Technology, It's a Cultural Shift artwork

AI Goes Beyond Technology, It's a Cultural Shift

AI doesn't fail because of bad technology. It fails because of bad change management. In this episode, Aaron Kopel sits down with Diana Williams [https://www.linkedin.com/in/diana-agilecoach/], Director of Change Management at Project Brilliant [https://projectbrilliant.com], to explore why AI adoption is ultimately a people challenge. Drawing from her experience in state government and consulting across regulated industries, Diana shares how organizations often focus on building the technology, but struggle to get employees to actually use it. She explains that resistance is rarely about the tools themselves, but about fear, trust, and the impact on how people see their roles and value. Diana discusses how AI represents a broader cultural and behavioral shift, similar to past transformations like Agile and DevOps. Through examples like IBM’s Watson Health and UPS’s ORION system, she shows how success depends on involving people early, building trust, and continuously iterating. She emphasizes that the organizations that win with AI aren’t the ones with the best technology; they’re the ones that bring their people along. Key takeaways: * AI adoption is a people and culture challenge, not just a technical one * Involving employees early builds buy-in and reduces resistance * AI implementation should be iterative, not a one-time rollout Episode highlights (00:00) Intro (01:04) Lessons in change management in state government  (04:11) Why networking is critical for growth and learning (07:04) Fear is the real adoption problem (11:37) Case Study: Why IBM Watson failed and UPS ORION succeeded (15:25) You can't automate your way out of bad data  (20:59) People don't resist change, they resist being changed (25:54) Aligning teams and choosing the right use cases (27:37) The role of the CIO goes beyond IT (30:12) AI is a business initiative, not an IT project (34:28) AI success depends on adoption, not capability (35:49) Book recommendation: The Power of Habit Diana Williams on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/diana-agilecoach/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/diana-agilecoach/] Aaron Kopel on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel [https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel] Explore Project Brilliant: https://projectbrilliant.com [https://projectbrilliant.com] Buy Unlocking Momentum: https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS [https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS]

29 de abr de 202638 min
episode Why Alignment Is Key To Organizational Momentum artwork

Why Alignment Is Key To Organizational Momentum

Organizational momentum is no longer just about pushing harder or following a plan. It is a leadership, alignment, and focus challenge that impacts every level of the business. In this episode, Aaron Kopel sits down with Patrick Bogan [https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrickbogan/], VP IT Strategy and Operational Excellence at CNO Financial Group [https://www.cnoinc.com/], to explore the importance of alignment in driving organizational momentum. Patrick reflects on his extensive experience leading meaningful change, both as an independent consultant and now within a major financial company. He shares how momentum doesn't come from working harder or having the right plan, but from aligning teams around what truly matters most. Patrick emphasizes the need for focus, transparent decision-making, and leadership that aligns all departments toward common goals. Through his journey, Patrick discusses the critical role of self-awareness, trust-building, and aligning priorities across the enterprise. He reveals how aligning technology modernization efforts with business goals ultimately unlocked momentum at CNO Financial Group, and explains why focusing on what really matters is the key to overcoming resistance and driving success. Key takeaways: * True momentum is unlocked through alignment, not effort * Leadership is about influence and building trust, not authority * Transparent decision-making and prioritization are essential for success across the enterprise Episode highlights (00:00) Intro (00:32) Meet Patrick Bogan and his journey (02:47) Consulting lessons on trust and leadership (04:10) The importance of self-awareness in leadership (05:41) Achieving momentum through strategic alignment (06:39) Tech modernization and leadership tradeoffs (13:11) Debunking the lie: "We can do both" (15:19) Navigating the challenges of AI transformation (17:40) Leading for flow and organizational focus (21:50) Why direction must come from the top (23:26) Career advice: Assume good intent always (27:06) Rapid fire: Hiking and nature inspiration (28:41) Coffee chat: Leadership insights from Chamberlain (30:12) Legacy of kindness and leadership impact Patrick Bogan on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrickbogan/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrickbogan/] Explore CNO Financial Group: https://www.cnoinc.com/ [https://www.cnoinc.com/] Aaron Kopel on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel [https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel] Explore Project Brilliant: https://projectbrilliant.com [https://projectbrilliant.com] Buy Unlocking Momentum: https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS [https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS]

15 de abr de 202631 min
episode What Leaders Still Get Wrong About Cyber Attacks artwork

What Leaders Still Get Wrong About Cyber Attacks

Cybersecurity is no longer just an IT issue. It is a leadership, operations, and communication challenge that touches every part of the business. In this episode, Aaron Kopel sits down with Chetrice Romero [https://www.linkedin.com/in/romeroclm], Senior Cybersecurity Advisor at Ice Miller LLP [https://www.icemiller.com/], to unpack what organizations still get wrong about cyber readiness. Chetrice shares her unconventional path from public relations and crisis communications into cybersecurity leadership, including her work shaping Indiana’s statewide cyber strategy and advising organizations through high-stress incidents. She explains why the biggest cyber risks today are often people problems, why geopolitics now matter to business leaders far beyond government, and why incident response planning has to extend well beyond the IT department. Chetrice also breaks down what effective tabletop exercises actually look like and why leaders need to understand their role before a real incident hits. This conversation is a practical look at how momentum in cybersecurity comes from preparation, shared responsibility, and the ability to respond calmly when the pressure is highest. Key takeaways: * Cybersecurity is a people and business problem, not just a technical one * Tabletop exercises reveal leadership gaps before a real incident does * Vendor risk, geopolitics, and poor preparation can quickly become operational crises Episode highlights (00:00) Intro (01:04) From PR into cyber leadership (02:51) Building Indiana’s cyber strategy (14:06) Geopolitics and destructive attacks (17:38) What tabletop planning should cover (24:21) When vendor breaches hit operations (25:46) PR, panic, and crisis pressure (28:16) What cyber insurance really covers (29:48) How to run useful tabletops (35:53) Rapid fire questions and reflections Chetrice Romero on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/romeroclm [https://www.linkedin.com/in/romeroclm]  Aaron Kopel on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel [https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronkopel] Explore Ice Miller LLP: https://techpoint.org/indiana-cio-networkhttps://www.icemiller.com/ [https://www.icemiller.com/]  Explore Project Brilliant: https://projectbrilliant.com [https://projectbrilliant.com] The Science of Scaling by Benjamin Hardy: https://a.co/d/76xHeGD [https://a.co/d/76xHeGD]  Buy Unlocking Momentum: https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS [https://a.co/d/hKPFqoS]

1 de abr de 202641 min