The Cloud Security Tool Your Resume is Missing (Part 1)
Source: Dev.to
Have you ever sat down to study for your AWS certification, opened your notes or your course material, and then just stared at the screen?
Not because you are lazy. Not because you do not care, but because somewhere in the back of your mind, a voice is telling you that even if you pass this exam, you still have no idea how to compete against people who already have years of experience on their resume.
That voice is not weakness. That voice is one of the most common experiences I hear from people trying to break into cloud security and I want to talk about it honestly today.
No doubt, the cloud security industry has a messaging problem.
Every job posting you read says… 3 to 15 years of experience required. Every LinkedIn success story you scroll past skips straight from “I decided to make a change” to “I just accepted a six-figure offer.” Nobody talks about the messy middle. The months of studying while working a full-time job or the applications that go nowhere. The interviews where you froze because they asked you something you had never seen in any course.
So you start to wonder if the problem is you.
I’m happy to tell you that it’s not you.
The problem is that most people trying to break into this field are preparing for a test when they should be preparing for a job. «Read that again!
Those are two very different things.
What Hiring Managers Are Actually Looking For
I have been on both sides of the table. I have interviewed candidates and I have been the candidate. And I can tell you that the people who get hired are almost never the ones with the most certifications. They are the ones who can talk about real scenarios.
When a hiring manager asks you about IAM least privilege, they do not want you to recite the textbook definition. They want to know if you understand why it matters when a misconfigured role exposes sensitive data in a production.
When they ask about network security, they want to know if you can think through a problem the way someone who has actually worked in a cloud environment thinks through it.
That is the gap most candidates never close, and is exactly the gap that costs most people offers.
The Mindset Shift That Changes Everything
Stop studying to pass. Start studying to do the job. «Read that again!
That sounds simple but it changes everything about how you prepare.
It means when you learn about an AWS security control, you ask yourself what happens if this is misconfigured in a real production environment, how would I detect it, and how would I explain it to a non-technical stakeholder.
It means you stop treating certifications as the destination and start treating them as one part of a larger picture that includes hands-on practice, real-world scenarios, and the ability to communicate what you know clearly and confidently.
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The candidates who make that shift are the ones who stand out. Not because they know more than everyone else. But because they sound like someone who has already been doing the job.
Here’s One Practical AWS Security Control You Should Know This Week
Let’s talk about Cloud Infrastructure Entitlement Management, or CIEM, and specifically one of the most accessible tools in AWS for addressing it i.e., IAM Access Analyzer.
Most people studying for cloud certifications learn that IAM is important. What they do not always learn is just how quickly IAM permissions spiral out of control in a real company environment.
Here is what that looks like in practice.
A development team is moving fast. They need a service role to access an S3 bucket, so someone grants it broad permissions to avoid slowing down the sprint. Then another role gets created for a Lambda function. Then another for a third party integration. Six months later, nobody on the team can tell you exactly what has access to what, and more importantly, nobody has reviewed any of it since it was created.
That is not a hypothetical. That is a typical issue at most companies I’ve assessed.
IAM Access Analyzer continuously analyzes resource policies and trust relationships across your AWS environment. It flags resources such as S3 buckets, IAM roles, KMS keys, Lambda functions, and SQS queues when they can be accessed by principals outside your AWS account or organization.
It tells you not just that something is exposed, but exactly what resource is accessible, who can access it, and under what conditions.
Without it, an unintentionally exposed IAM role trust policy or cross-account resource share can remain unnoticed for months until a security review, audit, or incident brings it to light.
With IAM Access Analyzer enabled and reviewed regularly, you can identify unintended access before it becomes a security issue. It is one of the first services I review when assessing a new AWS environment and one of the most valuable tools for understanding how access is actually being granted in the cloud.
Now..
Write a short post in your own words about what IAM Access Analyzer does and why it matters. Go find and watch a YouTube video about CIEM. In addition, find a few 3rd party cloud security tools that offer a CIEM feature just so you can mention them in an interview. Don’t forget to list it as a tool you are familiar with.
Hiring managers are actively scrolling LinkedIn and a post like that signals immediately that you think like a practitioner, not just a student.
You Do Not Have to Figure This Out Alone
The honest truth is that most people who successfully transition into cloud security did not do it by watching videos alone. They did it by getting into an environment where someone who has actually worked in the field could show them what it looks like in practice, answer their questions, and help them connect the dots between theory and the real job.
That is exactly what I’m trying to help you accomplish with my courses.
For $14.99 a month you get the complete Linux and AWS course bundle, plus one hour of live Saturday office hours with me every week where you can bring your questions and get them answered in real time. The Cybersecurity, Cloud Security and AI Security modules are being added as they drop, you also get a resume template, and access to a private student community. No bootcamp price tag. Just the real, practical skills that gets you hired. Enroll at www.yescertified.com
And if you are not already in the Telegram channel with over 20,000 cloud and security professionals, this is your reminder to join us. I share tips, job leads, and resources there between newsletters and it is completely free. Download the Telegram App and join using this link: t.me/cloudandcybersecurity
Stay informed. Stay ahead. Stay Hired.
Mukhtar Kabir, CISSP, CCSP
Founder, YesCertified.com