The cybersecurity threat landscape is continuously evolving, with the frequency and impacts of threats like malware and ransomware increasing every year. Today, organizations of all sizes and in every industry sector must be proactively searching for emerging threats and actively monitoring risk to protect themselves – and respond quickly in the event that a threat is identified. Amid this challenging threat landscape, organizations are struggling to find enough cybersecurity professionals to staff their teams. Globally, there is a cybersecurity worker shortage of nearly 3 million. So how can companies undertake proactive threat detection and response during a vast skills shortage?
Cybersecurity is no longer limited to locking down endpoints and putting firewalls around an organization. Businesses today must be actively monitoring for threats while also threat hunting and preparing to respond at any moment. While technologies like extended detection and response (XDR) and security information and event management (SIEM) can correlate data from various sources and help detect threats and facilitate investigations, they miss some of the proactive security elements needed to stay secure in today's advanced threat landscape. Without the right expertise, organizations won't get the value out of these technologies that they desire. Likewise, a traditional managed security service provider (MSSP) that focuses on monitoring logs and alerts is missing a large part of the picture and can generate many false positives and low-value work for their customers.
Increasingly, organizations are turning to managed detection and response (MDR) services. MDR is one of the fastest-growing areas of cybersecurity. The analyst firm Gartner estimates that 50 percent of organizations will be using MDR services by 2025. Yet, there is often confusion in the industry about what MDR services should include and who is best capable of providing them. Some boutique providers specialize in MDR, with very limited adjacent capabilities and telemetry support. MSSPs claim to provide MDR but are, in reality, only reactively investigating automated alerts. Before investing in more cybersecurity technologies and services, organizations must understand the true value that MDR services can deliver, the differences between MDR and other managed security services, and how to choose the right partner.
Even when an organization has the budget to do so, the effort, time and expertise needed to establish 24/7 threat detection and response capabilities in-house can be overwhelming. Deploying and properly configuring complex technologies like XDR and SIEM platforms across a large number of endpoints, servers, clouds and networks can often take months. Even after these technologies are implemented, it takes further time for an organization's in-house security analysts to gain expertise on the systems, learning how to properly configure and maintain them.
In contrast, an experienced MDR provider can dramatically reduce the time-to-value for cybersecurity solutions, helping an organization achieve its expected ROI much more quickly. By leveraging endpoint detection and response (EDR) agents that can be rapidly deployed and the XDR evolution of EDR that includes out-of-the box integrations with cloud infrastructure solutions, a good MDR provider can have a high-fidelity service running within an organization in a matter of hours – ensuring that your organization is quickly protected from emerging threats.
Another significant benefit of an MDR service is that it can help an organization improve the return on investment (ROI) of the cybersecurity tools they already own. Many organizations make the mistake of buying top-of-the-line cybersecurity technologies. But then they lack the expertise and resources to configure them and use them to their full advantage properly. A good MDR provider brings a wealth of experience with these technologies, as well as round-the-clock monitoring and threat intelligence from other client sites – providing an instant boost to your cybersecurity capabilities, coverage and expertise.
Effectively detecting and responding to the advanced threats targeting organizations today requires a sophisticated mix of people, process and technology. Knowing what to look for in an MDR provider will help organizations get the value they seek out of their cybersecurity program:
A quality MDR provider does much more – actively interrogating endpoints, conducting threat research and hunting, performing forensic investigations, and quickly responding to incidents to mitigate their impact. They bring important insights and contextual knowledge about threats and vulnerabilities derived from other client environments that enable them to be more effective in your environment. Lastly, their expertise on complex cybersecurity technologies and tools enables them to optimize your existing investments, speeding time to value and improving ROI.
All of this affirms that choosing the right MDR provider is perhaps the most important security investment of all.