Even in typical times, grocery and household shopping is time consuming. Especially, if you need to visit multiple stores – a main supermarket for your basics, a specialty store to accommodate diet restrictions, and another for bulk items. In a fast-paced world – with time spent working, family caregiving, and other responsibilities – grocery shopping is a tedious but necessary chore…or is it? The evolution of acquiring groceries and household goods has been one to watch as grocery delivery services, such as Instacart and Shipt, is increasingly relevant. These companies have each built a platform with a network of grocery providers to solve the problem – a simple and efficient way for customers to purchase groceries without having to leave their homes.
Now let’s take grocery shopping to the next level. What if you didn’t even need to proactively browse items and put them in your Instacart grocery order. Imagine if your “smart” refrigerator had sensors to detect inventory levels, and connected to Instacart, your recipes, and meal planning apps. Groceries could be ordered automatically or on-demand based on the menu you’ve planned and what you actually need. One platform with all of your apps integrated and automated to simplify not only your grocery shopping experience but your entire cooking experience. This and many other platform experiences have been developing over the last several years to bring two (or more) sides of a connection together with more efficiency and use cases.
The cybersecurity industry is ripe for this type of innovation. We all know that the industry has historically been quite fragmented – at last count, an estimated 3000+ vendors are in this space and customers use, on average, 75 security tools[1]. What does that mean for your security teams? Multiple tools share limited context between them with incomplete, labor-intensive workflows. Going back to the grocery experience, this is akin to visiting seven different stores in one day to tackle a shopping list for each store, and hoping you don’t miss an item. Also consider high lifecycle costs associated with maintaining interoperability, which is often limited. When you need to take into account an ever-evolving threat landscape and attack surface, this trend is not sustainable.
Nearly two years ago, Cisco Threat Response debuted to combat this problem for Security Operations teams. As a valuable add-on application to several Cisco Security products — at no additional cost – Threat Response accelerated investigations and remediation by aggregating and correlating intelligence and data across your security products, both Cisco and third party. Threat Response has helped nearly 9,000 customers simplify their security operations. As Don Bryant, CISO for The University of North Carolina at Pembroke, says, “Having a holistic security platform has helped us simplify and accelerate our security operations. All of our tools seamlessly integrated through Threat Response gives us one view into our layered protection and valuable time back.”
As background, Threat Response provides a visual, real-time answer for if, and how, threats have impacted your environment, so, you can take first-strike response actions in the same interface. Security operations teams use Threat Response to:
Now we’re continuing our mission of simplifying security and building on Threat Response core capabilities with SecureX, a built-in platform experience included with Cisco Security products. SecureX will make life even easier for Security Operations, and will also benefit Network Operations and IT Operations. Let’s talk about this evolution.
Since we announced SecureX at RSA Conference in February, you might be wondering, what’s the difference between Threat Response and SecureX? Are they one and the same – and SecureX is just a sleek rebranding?
The short answer is no. If Threat Response is like the Instacart of today, SecureX is the reimagined seamless grocery shopping experience we’ve envisioned above. Whether it’s the grocery or cybersecurity industry, the goal is always simplification. SecureX builds upon Threat Response’s core concepts of integrating your security products – both Cisco and third-party tools – to simplify security operations. Leveraging the success of Threat Response with Security Operations teams, SecureX takes this foundation to the next level to drive collaboration between SecOps, NetOps, and ITOps. SecureX simplifies security through:
Unifying visibility across your entire security environment.
Enabling automation in workflows to maximize your operational efficiency by eliminating repetitive tasks and human error.
Adding more out-of-box interoperability to unlock new potential from your Cisco Security investments and cascade them across your existing security infrastructure.
Now as a key component of SecureX, Threat Response is enhanced to unlock even more value from your investments. Here’s how:
Similar to the reimagined grocery experience, SecureX brings greater efficiency and simplification in the midst of major market forces. The enhanced visibility, automation, and integrated platform capabilities with SecureX threat response further reduces mean dwell time by accelerating investigations and MTTR for SecOps. Without having to swivel between multiple consoles or do the heavy lifting integrating disjointed technologies, you can speed time to value and reduce TCO. SecureX will enable better collaboration across SecOps, NetOps, and ITOps – and ultimately simplify your threat response.
To get warmed up for SecureX access next month, activate Cisco Threat Response today!
[1] Momentum Cyber Cybersecurity Almanac 2019
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