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Why does the XDR market exist?

  • Apr 06, 2021
  • Gorka Sadowski
  • 3 minutes to read

Table of Contents

    The extended detection and response (XDR) market has emerged as a direct reaction to the current cybersecurity landscape. As many security vendors have started associating themselves with the XDR market, we’re launching this first post as a part of a blog series around XDR and the solutions associated with it. In this post, we’ll talk about the market trends and drivers that have created the necessity for the XDR category… and emerging SIEMs.  

    1. A fragmented enterprise, redefined perimeter and success of the cloud = explosive number of attack vectors and techniques 

    The modern enterprise, with complex business processes, distributed data storage and cloud apps has given rise to a myriad of cybersecurity threats, introducing new attack vectors and techniques for malicious actors to breach even the most protected organization. In this increasingly precarious environment, malware and threats proliferate – zero-days, social engineering, malicious insiders, and more all contribute to the need for solutions to defend organizations against it all. 

    2. Narrowly scoped security solutions in a fragmented security landscape are not capable of defending against attack vectors 

    And because of the variety and dynamic nature of cyberattacks, the market has been inundated with numerous solutions and tools like firewalls, email security, CASBs, EDRs, web gateways, IPS, NDR, IAM…the list and acronyms go on. Each security solution looks at a single (or sometimes several) attack channel or vector but no one solution can cover everything. Supporting threat detection, investigation, and response (TDIR) in a cost-effective way is hard as modern threats come in any number and combination of vectors and channels. 

    3. Traditional SIEMs have become unwieldy trying to address all types of security solutions 

    There’s already a category of solutions that helps combine and centralize the myriad of security solutions to look at everything in a broader scope: SIEMs. But traditional SIEMs fundamentally kept the same approach and architecture as they went through massive scope creep. And in the process, what was supposed to be a strength – the flexibility and customizability – has become a hindrance. Traditional SIEMs that are today trying to address many use cases using their older approach just keep getting more bloated, with many complicated features, knobs and dials to optimize. SIEMs are marketed as infinitely extensible and customizable. But traditional SIEM tools are hard to operationalize and tune, due to the number of variables and features that are available. Taking months to stand up a traditional SIEM solution and even longer to keep tuning and adding new rules is no longer a viable option.

    A breaking point – from traditional SIEMs, to XDRs and newer SIEMs 

    The reaction to all the above forces 1) has created the XDR category and 2) is forcing traditional SIEMs to adapt and innovate (stay tuned for a post soon on this topic).

    The premise is that an XDR is a SaaS-based turnkey TDIR tool that a security or IT team can switch on – and it works. This is accomplished by being a more prescriptive and narrow technology with a laser focus on achieving TDIR outcomes. Instead of spending time to endlessly customize the product to handle TDIR, analysts can immediately focus on threat detection and response across concerns like compromised credentials or malware so as to return the organization back to its known good state as efficiently as possible. XDR provides visibility across many important data sources — including endpoint, network, cloud, email, identity, IoT/OT, and others — to find threats missed by individual point solutions. XDR solutions are used to solve the threat investigation and response piece of the puzzle of the SOC mission, while the emerging SIEMs can do that and more… with a bit more complexity.  

    In future posts, we’ll delve deeper into what defines an XDR, use cases, and more. Feel free to let us know if there’s a topic around XDR that you’d like discussed. 

    Gorka Sadowski

    Gorka Sadowski

    Chief Strategy Officer | Exabeam | Gorka Sadowski is Chief Strategy Officer at Exabeam. In his role, Gorka assists the executive team and functional leaders across the company with developing, communicating, executing, and sustaining corporate strategic initiatives. Gorka has more than 30 years of security experience spanning leadership roles across product management, sales, marketing, and operations. Most recently, he was senior director and security and risk management analyst at Gartner driving coverage for security information and event management (SIEM), security operation center (SOC), and managed detection and response (MDR), while also leading research for IT leaders on emerging topics. Prior to Gartner, he led business development at Splunk where he established and built the Splunk security ecosystem. Prior to Splunk, he established presence for LogLogic in Southern Europe, ran security activities for Unisys in France and launched the first partner-led intrusion detection and prevention system (IDPS) in the industry as lead for NetScreen’s Emerging Technology efforts. A certified CISSP, he received a computer science degree from Universite de Pau in France before moving to the U.S. as a Ph.D. candidate in network security at the University of Miami.

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