There's been a lot of dissension about the use of badges to encourage participation on (ISC)2 Community, which some see as a bit demeaning.
That's dwarfed by the outbursts regarding the main site's recent 'revamp' which is causing a hell of a lot of inconvenience to members, particularly when it comes to maintaining CPEs.
Ironically, (ISC)2 can tackle all this by issuing a new set of badges, shown below: -
The first badge in this set; to earn it you must complete the following:
To earn this badge, you must complete the following:
To earn this you must complete the following:
To earn this you must complete the following:
To earn this badge, you must complete the following:
The ultimate badge; to earn it you must complete the following:
Notes:
(My apologies to the managers / moderators of the community; I needed a new way to vent my frustrations)
I suspect your getting some negative feedback in terms of generational expectations and length of career issues.
Those of us who are say late baby boomers were trained from birth to work hard, contribute, keep your head down and compete individually but carry the group when necessary. Millennials have been taught much the opposite, growing up with far more emphasis on collaboration and most notably "awards".
As far as rewards go, you have a number of audiences and expectations, hence the pushback on such.
Keep that in mind.
- Brent Eads (BEads)
Rest assured, this is purely related to the badges & the CPE portal. I am appreciative of the community and will continue to contribute to it / support it.
At the same time, its shortcomings can't go unnoticed and are to be pointed out, to be addressed by those who maintain the site and it's operations. That was the purpose of this...
Its my attempt to help you understand why the pushback, nothing more.
Hello @Shannon,
We appreciate you bringing these concerns to us. Our team is working through all documented issues with the CPE Portal and are actively fixing those issues while putting a priority on problems where users cannot gain access to the Portal. The (ISC)2 team is looking to complete all of the enhancement work on the portal in 2019. I understand the frustrations that you and other members have brought forward, and we encourage you all to continue to share your recommendations so that we can work to make the Portal the best that it can be for everyone. Based off of all of the feedback we have received our teams are working on guides and tutorials to help navigate through the existing portal.
If you, or anyone else, is experiencing issues with the portal, we ask that you engage with Member Services, who can be reached at membersupport@isc2.org.
Thank you,
@Shannon, that is priceless. And, even though I am on the no badges and no kudos team, I will definitely kudo that as soon as August rolls around so I can use it to get the Enable badge.
Its not just boomers that complain about how fickle and unreliable millennials came to the work place, you hear the same exact comments from 'the greatest generation' and generation X. Even Generation Y or the millenials themselves complain about how fickle millenials come across.
Much of the digression of late in my area is seeing business move into major metropolises. Spending millions if not billions of dollars to relocate into the major cities where the millennial generation complained loudly that it was the place they wanted to be. Locally, we have seen McDonald's, Walgreens, Takeda pharmaceuticals and a host of other businesses, some 5500 local jobs move to Chicago only to fast hear the millennials complain that they no longer want to live the downtown dream. Now, they want to move to the suburbs but their jobs, once local are now 30-50 miles away and its difficult to recruit people to move into the cities! I hear this every day from workers, hiring managers and workers.
My own organization spent millions convincing staff to come into the city, only to see 36 percent leave the organization citing the commute into the city as the primary reason.
I am a disabled veteran of another generation as well so its nothing to do with being a veteran either. Generation-Y has made to tempting a target not take advantage.
Now, if I may go back to my board hiatus...
- b/eads
@Beads wrote:Its not just boomers that complain about how fickle and unreliable millennials came to the work place, you hear the same exact comments from 'the greatest generation' and generation X. Even Generation Y or the millenials themselves complain about how fickle millenials come across.
Much of the digression of late in my area is seeing business move into major metropolises. Spending millions if not billions of dollars to relocate into the major cities where the millennial generation complained loudly that it was the place they wanted to be. Locally, we have seen McDonald's, Walgreens, Takeda pharmaceuticals and a host of other businesses, some 5500 local jobs move to Chicago only to fast hear the millennials complain that they no longer want to live the downtown dream. Now, they want to move to the suburbs but their jobs, once local are now 30-50 miles away and its difficult to recruit people to move into the cities! I hear this every day from workers, hiring managers and workers.
My own organization spent millions convincing staff to come into the city, only to see 36 percent leave the organization citing the commute into the city as the primary reason.
I am a disabled veteran of another generation as well so its nothing to do with being a veteran either. Generation-Y has made to tempting a target not take advantage.
Now, if I may go back to my board hiatus...
- b/eads
Just another version of "young people these days are so lazy and entitled". I get it now.