About Forrester
Forrester Research, Inc. is an independent research company that provides pragmatic and forward-thinking advice to global leaders in business and technology.

Frank is a member of Forrester's Business Technology Futures team, which serves CIOs and their business partners by predicting the long-term business impact of information technology. His research focus is on new computing platforms and consumerization, analyzing paradigm shifts in the economics of the IT industry caused by the emergence of new infrastructure technologies such as cloud computing services and virtualization, and new as-a-service business models for pricing and provisioning computing solutions.
His current focus is on the dynamic between consumer and business technology markets, the future of back-end and end user hardware in the post-PC era, and a new and emerging software platform — the personal cloud.
Frank kicked off Forrester's research on organic IT in 2002, setting a market-leading vision for shared and automated IT infrastructure. In his 14 years at Forrester, Frank has helped many vendor and enterprise clients develop and improve their strategies and marketing for taking advantage of market developments for more efficient IT infrastructure. Frank's past research also includes enterprise handheld technologies, enterprise portal technologies, application and integration servers, business intelligence, and data warehousing.
Frank joined Forrester in 1998 with two years of experience as an analyst of data warehousing and business intelligence technologies. Before becoming a technology industry analyst, he spent two years at Symmetrix, a consultancy based in Lexington, Mass., where he helped insurance industry clients use information technology to improve their core business processes. Frank developed his initial process improvement expertise with four years of work on total quality management techniques at an auto parts division of General Motors.
Frank has been widely quoted in the press, including such media outlets as BusinessWeek, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal. An accomplished public speaker, Frank also has delivered keynote speeches at many events, including Forrester's Technology Leadership Forum and European IT Leadership Forum.
Frank has a master's degree in management from the MIT Sloan School of Management and a master's degree from the MIT Technology and Policy Program. He also holds a B.S. in mechanical engineering from Duke University, with a second major in political science.
Organization: The Security Architecture And Operations Playbook
This report outlines the organizational implications of Forrester's solution for security and risk (S&R) executives working to rethink their security architecture and improve the effectiveness of...
FAIL at 30,000ish feet When you fly nearly every week, you can get pretty bored on a plane. When I am sick of working, playing games, or watching movies, my latest distraction is checking...
Today EMC announced the acquisition of Silicium Security. Silicium’s ECAT product is a malware threat detection and response solution. ECAT did not adopt the failed signature based...

The San Francisco RSA conference is now less than two weeks away, and this year I am moderating two great panels. I thought I'd reach out and solicit suggestions for discussion. ...
"My master made me this collar. He is a good and smart master and he made me this collar so that I may speak. Squirrel!" In the Pixar film Up, squirrels frequently distract Dug the talking...
Tools And Technology: The Security Architecture And Operations Playbook
Against today's mutating threat landscape and sophisticated cybercriminals, security and risk (S&R) professionals are outgunned and outmatched. The traditional strategy of waiting for an alert and...

Last week I had the opportunity to attend the 15th annual Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas. I have attended DEFCON in the past, but never Black Hat. The conference has grown significantly...
It is with great pleasure that I announce the completion of my first Forrester Wave™: Email Content Security, Q4 2012. I’d like to thank the research associates (Jessica McKee and...
I was very excited to finally get a copy of the much-anticipated 2013 Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report (DBIR.) I have found the report to be valuable year after year. This is the...
From frantic security operations problems to the changing threat landscape, CISOs, senior security leaders, and other IT risk management leaders consistently have trouble keeping up with key trends...

The Nine Providers That Matter Most And How They Stack Up
In Forrester's 47-criteria evaluation of email content security vendors, we identified the nine most significant vendors in the category and researched, analyzed, and scored them: Barracuda Networks,...

Executive Overview: The Security Architecture And Operations Playbook
We've all heard about the "evolving threat landscape." In biology, evolution is a process that takes millions of years to occur as a result of small changes in successive generations. Mutations, on...
Assessment: The Security Architecture And Operations Playbook
Given the continued metastasizing of the threat landscape, it comes as no surprise that enterprises should possess mature incident response capabilities that are built on staff, augmented by...

We have started a new report series on Cyber Threat Intelligence. The first report, "Five Steps To Build An Effective Threat Intelligence Capability," is designed to help organizations...
You are now no doubt aware that Boston-based security firm Bit9 suffered an alarming compromise, which resulted in attackers gaining access to code-signing certificates that were then used to sign...
You remember the tribbles don't you? The cute, harmless looking alien species from the second season of the original Star Trek that turn out to be anything but benign. They are born pregnant and...
Have you ever been in a vendor meeting and heard the vendor extol the greatness of their threat intelligence? You may have even seen a slide that looks similar to this: The vendor probably...