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Security teams ‘overconfident’ in detecting cyberthreats, says research

June 17, 2020

Posted by: Anasia D'mello

Steve Moore of Exabeam

A new study by Exabeam reveals that 82% of SOCs are confident in the ability to detect cyberthreats, despite just 22% of frontline workers tracking mean time to detection (MTTD), which helps determine hacker dwell time.

This is one of the results of Exabeam’s annual ‘2020 State of the SOC Report,’ examining the processes and effectiveness of corporate security operations centres (SOCs). Compounding this unfounded confidence, 40% of organisations still struggle with SOC staff shortages and finding qualified people to fill the cybersecurity skills gap.

The survey, conducted among 295 respondents across the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Germany and Australia, was also fielded to determine how analysts and SOC management view key aspects of their operations, hiring and staffing, retention, technologies, training and funding.

“From 2018-2019, we learned that dwell time or, the time between when a compromise first occurs and when it is first detected has grown. Based on this, it is surprising for SOCs to report such inflated confidence in detecting cyberthreats,” says Steve Moore, chief security strategist at Exabeam.

“We see great progress in the SOC with attention paid to employee well-being, measures for better communication and more. However, disparate perceptions of the SOCs’ effectiveness could be dangerously interpreted by the C-suite as assurances that the company is well-protected and secure, when it’s not.”

Highlighting the imbalance is that SOC leaders and frontline analysts do not agree on the most common threats facing the organisation. SOC leaders believe that phishing and supply chain vulnerabilities are more important issues, while analysts see DDoS attacks and ransomware as greater threats.

Technology trends

Small and medium-sized teams especially are more concerned with downtime or business outage (50%) over threat hunting as an operational metric, yet threat hunting stands out as a must-have hard skill (61%). Other prominent findings include:

In general, monitoring and analytics, access management and logging are higher priorities this year for all SOC roles.

To support this, most SOCs expect to see security orchestration, automation and response (SOAR) tools take precedence over other technologies in upcoming years.

Staffing trends

The U.S. and the U.K. SOCs have shown YoY improvements in recruiting costs and identifying candidates with the right expertise. Workplace benefits, high wages and a positive culture were this year’s top drivers for retention in nearly 60% of SOCs. Notably, there remain challenges:

For more information, or to download the full report, please click here.

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