NEW PONEMON RESEARCH: Growing Security Operation Center Challenges, Increasing Complexity & Rising Costs Drive Investments in...
January 12 2021 - 7:00AM
Business Wire
Ponemon Institute and FireEye release second
annual study on the Economics of Security Operations Centers,
uncovering increasing management complexity, higher staffing and
outsourcing costs, and anticipated spend on new technologies
FireEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: FEYE), the intelligence-led security
company, today released the “Second Annual Study on the Economics
of Security Operations Centers: What is the True Cost for Effective
Results?” report from Ponemon Institute. The report finds that
organizations are spending more to account for widespread security
operation center (SOC) challenges including growing security
management complexity, increasing analyst salaries, security
engineering and management outsourcing costs, yet are still
dissatisfied with the outcomes. However, companies are also
boosting investments in new SOC tools like Extended Detection and
Response (XDR) and security automation to help solve these
issues.
“The findings of the Ponemon Economics of the SOC report show
that organizations are facing an onslaught of rising security
operations costs, but despite these increased investments, are
still unhappy with their ability to combat growing cyberthreats,”
said Chris Triolo, Vice President of Customer Success, FireEye.
“Many security teams are now seeking new technologies that can
provide greater efficiencies and visibility, while cutting alert
overloads and eliminating mundane tasks to improve analyst
morale.”
Perceived ROI of the SOC Drops, While Costs Rise
The ROI of SOC investments have been worsening, due to
increasing complexity and rising security engineering and
management outsourcing costs.
- Perceived ROI of the SOC is Dropping Due to Management
Complexity: More than half (51 percent) of respondents say the
ROI of the SOC is getting worse, compared to 44 percent in 2019.
More than 80 percent rate their SOC’s complexity as very high,
rising from 74 percent in 2019.
- Rising Outsourcing Costs Lessen Appeal: The cost to pay
MSSPs for security monitoring also increased and may impact ROI.
The average cost for respondents is $5,307,250 annually, an
increase from $4,441,500 in 2019 (i.e., approximately 20 percent
year over year).
- High Security Engineering Costs Aren’t Resolving Needs:
Organizations surveyed are spending an average of $2,716,514 per
year on security engineering. However, only 51 percent of
respondents rate their security engineering efforts as effective or
very effective.
SOC Workers Unhappy, Despite Increasing Salaries
Even with increasing salaries, organizations are not able to
boost employee morale.
- Security Analyst Morale Impacted by Long Hours and Demanding
Work: 85 percent of respondents say working in the SOC is
painful or very painful, with this sentiment growing from 72
percent in 2019. Increasing workloads and being on call are
overwhelming security analysts, with 75 percent saying that these
factors cause burnout, rising from 70 percent in 2019.
- SOCs Can’t Meet the Rate of Security Analyst Turnover:
Despite organizations surveyed expecting to hire an average of five
analysts in 2021, three will resign or be fired in one year.
Organizations are increasing security analyst salaries, with the
average rising from $102,000 in 2019 to $111,000 in 2020. However,
only 38 percent still believe they can hire the right talent.
New Technology Investments Show Promise
However, increasing investments in new XDR and security
automation tools show promise to reduce security engineering costs,
boost SOC performance and employee morale.
- XDR and Security Automation Budgets are Increasing:
Organizations are investing in XDR as an emerging category to
improve SOC performance. Organizations surveyed intended to spend
an average of $333,150 for XDR; $345,150 for SOAR; $285,150 for
MDR; and $183,150 for SIEMs.
The SOC is Key for Maintaining Security Posture
Despite current ROI perception, respondents noted that the SOC
is more important than ever to having a strong security
posture.
- The SOC is Essential: The number of respondents who said
their SOC is essential or very important increased from 73 percent
last year to 80 percent now. Meanwhile, the most important SOC
activities are: Minimizing false positives reporting (88 percent);
having agile DevOps functions (increasing from 73 to 85 percent);
and automating machine learning tools (increasing from 72 to 80
percent).
Additional Report Resources
- FireEye blog post with additional report analysis:
https://www.fireeye.com/blog/products-and-services/2021/01/is-your-soc-effective-people-and-tools-help-determine-the-roi.html
- Ponemon 2020 Economics of the SOC report:
https://respond-software.com/resources/reports-ebooks/second-economics-of-the-soc/
Ponemon Study Methodology
The Ponemon Institute surveyed 682 SOC managers, security
analysts, general security practitioners, IT managers and directors
who have a Security Operations Center and are knowledgeable about
cybersecurity practices in their organizations.
In 2019, this report was sponsored by Respond Software, now a
part of FireEye.
About FireEye, Inc.
FireEye is the intelligence-led security company. Working as a
seamless, scalable extension of customer security operations,
FireEye offers a single platform that blends innovative security
technologies, nation-state grade threat intelligence, and
world-renowned Mandiant® consulting. With this approach, FireEye
eliminates the complexity and burden of cyber security for
organizations struggling to prepare for, prevent, and respond to
cyber attacks. FireEye has over 9,600 customers across 103
countries, including more than 50 percent of the Forbes Global
2000.
© 2021 FireEye, Inc. All rights reserved. FireEye and Mandiant
are registered trademarks or trademarks of FireEye, Inc. in the
United States and other countries. All other brands, products, or
service names are or may be trademarks or service marks of their
respective owners.
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