For years
we’ve been talking about the skills shortage that plagues the cybersecurity
industry and which some reports now peg at three million
and growing. Organizations lack trained, experienced resources in many
areas including expertise in management and monitoring of the infrastructure
protecting an environment, incident responders, threat intelligence analysts,
security operations engineers and even security leadership. These gaps increase
cybersecurity risk for organizations and their key stakeholders, including
customers, employees, business partners and shareholders.No group feels the impact more every single day than an organization’s cybersecurity team. Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG) recently surveyed cybersecurity professionals and Information Systems Security Association members about their experiences on the job.The report, “The Life and Times of Cybersecurity Professionals 2018,” concludes that the ramifications of the skills shortage include an increased workload on existing staff, an inability to fully learn or utilize some security technologies to their full potential, and the need to spend significant time training junior employees since it is difficult to hire experienced cybersecurity professionals.
When organizations do manage to hire
top talent, they experience trouble with retention. Three quarters of survey
respondents told ESG that they are solicited to
change jobs by recruiters at least once a month. The result? Salaries,
attrition and competition for skilled applicants are soaring.Outsourcing
to a managed security services provider (MSSP) or a provider of managed
detection and response (MDR) services is one of the strategies that
organizations are using to close the skills gap while mitigating cybersecurity risk. MSSPs offer 24x7 monitoring
and management of security devices and systems and are in the position to hire, train
and leverage security experts across many different customers. Providers of MDR
services focus on detecting threats that have infiltrated an organization’s
network, capabilities sometimes not offered by MSSPs. Both types of services
help organizations reduce costs building out their own security operations
center and get the expertise they need to adequately protect their environment.
These services are in such demand that
IDC predicts global security spending will top $103 billion in 2019, with
managed security services accounting for the largest category of spending at
more than $21 billion.MSSPs and MDR services will remain an important option for
many companies for the foreseeable future, particularly when you consider other
factors at play beyond the skills shortage, specifically: a dynamic threat
landscape, an ever-expanding attack surface and an increasingly complex
security technology environment. Organizations must be able to identify and
mitigate the threats most relevant to them and these factors make that task
more difficult.Recognizing that security isn’t one-size-fits-all, MSSPs and MDR services offer a way for organizations to get the solutions they need from a menu of options.Take for example threat intelligence, which is the foundation for any security operations program and essential to discovering what is happening in your environment and what actions to take. If an organization doesn’t have the resources to take full advantage of the capabilities of a threat-centric security operations platform, a service provider can assume the task of customizing and managing threat intelligence for you and conducting alert triage.Turning data into actionable threat intelligence, they can deliver threat intelligence prioritized based on your risk. They can also use the threat intelligence that’s relevant to your organization to deliver additional, high value and customized services such as risk assessments, vulnerability management, spear phishing investigations, threat hunting and incident response. Going a step further, they can provide support to integrate threat intelligence into your infrastructure and operations and ensure the right data is sent automatically to your security infrastructure to protect against the threats that matter most to you.If you’re considering outsourcing some or all aspects of your
security operations, be sure to consider these key points:
Make
sure the service provider can protect your entire technology stack – on-premise
and in the cloud. You may not need support for both immediately but validating
that they have the capability will ensure they can adapt as your needs evolve.
Unfortunately,
in security there are no silver bullet solutions, and this holds true with managed
services. There is no way to guarantee 100% protection. However, putting
Service Level Agreements (SLAs) in place can help ensure support expectations
are met, for example with respect to response times.
When
evaluating a service provider one of the most important things you can do is
speak to references with similar environments and/or in similar industries.Make sure you understand what happens
when there are problems and look for a partner that will respond as one of your
team.
If
you feel that you are lacking security leadership, consider a CISO-as-a-service
offering, also known as a virtual CISO (vCISO). Ten percent of the
organizations that responded to the ESG survey say they are now retaining a
vCISO. In addition, 29% of the CISOs surveyed are working as a vCISO while
another 21% are considering doing so.
The time is now for many organizations to
consider managed security services to help address their security needs. They
fill the cybersecurity skills gap and, in the process, help you overcome a
broad spectrum of security challenges so you can improve your overall security
operations.Matt McCormick, SVP Corporate and Business Development, ThreatQuotient
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