/ Brian M. Chamberlain

Brian M. Chamberlain

Avatar photo

Brian M. Chamberlain

Brian M. Chamberlain is a seasoned professional with a distinguished career in the United States Marine Corps, where he held various leadership roles including Chief Information Officer, Chief Technology Officer, Chief Operations Officer and DoD Sales Manager for Solarwinds. Currently, Brian is the Navy, Marine Corps Account Executive at SolarWinds. He has extensive experience in the modernization and integration of land-based, space, and maritime communication information systems, supporting U.S. and allied/coalition partners.

During his military career, Brian was responsible for the application, implementation, security, and availability of IT systems and services supporting a globally employed workforce of over 500 employees. He managed a multimillion-dollar DoD classified and unclassified data center and was a member of the DoD crisis response team for the National Capital Region.

As Chief Technology Officer in Okinawa, Japan, Brian led strategic and tactical IT planning for an organization of 19,000 employees. He also served as Chief Operations Officer, overseeing IT communications services for over 19,000 customers across the Indonesian-Pacific region.

Brian's leadership and project management skills were further demonstrated in his role as Project Manager and Marine Corps consultant to the U.S. Navy, where he developed and integrated maritime, space, and ground-based communication systems. He also served as an IT consultant and liaison to allied and partner nations, establishing cyber governance and best practices.

Outside of his professional career, Brian is passionate about leveraging his extensive knowledge of cybersecurity standards and best practices to build high-performing, cross-functional teams from diverse groups of professionals.

The Latest Posts Featuring Brian M. Chamberlain

Inside the Black Box: Bridging the Database Observability Gap
March 27, 2026
Database

Over the past 15 years, Agile and DevOps have accelerated application delivery, enabling faster, more reliable releases. Yet the database layer often remains a blind spot for observability and performance monitoring.

In this article, Kevin Kline shows why closing the database observability gap is critical to improving performance, efficiency, and resilience for DBAs, developers, and the businesses that depend on their data.