Cybersecurity engineers are the personnel responsible for keeping their networks safe. They have many ways of achieving this. The first is the management of the cybersecurity suite and software. When I was in the Navy, we used a McAfee suite called HBSS or Host Based Security Systems. This was an agent that hosted our Host Intrusion Prevention and Detection software, our Network Intrusion Prevention and Detection software, Anti-Virus software and other necessary items. I was also in charge of managing our vulnerability scanners and applying patches when vulnerabilities were discovered. Ensuring that the needed security updates provided by windows, or the program owners were carried out in a timely manner also fall on the cybersecurity engineers. While they might not oversee the writing and designing of all cybersecurity policies, it is important that the engineers have a say on what goes into them. Cybersecurity engineers are the subject matter experts as well as the ones enforcing and upholding these policies. It is important that they have a say on how they are implemented. This can prevent bad policies from being enacted. Cybersecurity engineers are also the people who need to provide training for the non-cybersecurity professionals. Cybersecurity is the responsibility of all hands. All workers require training to ensure that the network and all data on it stays safe. The training needs to come from the subject matter experts. For every day, non-IT employees, cybersecurity, and the actions they should take for network safety are not always on the forefront of their minds. In the navy it was obvious by the lack of even the most basic precautions taken by the crew. Stuff like how to identify social engineering attempts, preventing tailgating in secure spaces, locking your computer before walking away and other concepts that should be common sense need to be trained on regularly to ensure compliance.