These narratives keep cropping up in cyber security, only in different terms:
SIEM is dead. Then it's alive again. Then it's dead again. SOCs are considered obsolete, protocols are irrelevant and people are the biggest weak point. Detections should happen automatically. With AI, but also without AI. The entire attack surface must be visible, but contextualised, please. Automation should ease the burden, but without new dependencies. Reaction was yesterday. Now only proaction counts.
... And so we are slipping from SOC to SOC 2.0 - and with AI we have arrived at 3.0.
At the same time, security operations are still considered the centrepiece of modern cyber security.
Of course. Because this is where signals converge. This is where attacks are recognised. This is where it is decided whether an incident becomes an incident or not. And yet hardly any other area of cyber security is under so much pressure to justify itself.
While the narratives change, the reality remains surprisingly constant. SecOps teams are struggling with several structural problems at the same time:
Analysts work under high pressure, often in shifts, frequently reactively instead of strategically. A large part of their time is not spent on actual analyses, but rather on:
Expectations are also constantly rising: react faster, recognise more, make fewer errors. Andthe result is a system that is constantly under tension: pipelines are the bottleneck. Then storage is the bottleneck. Everything takes too long, is too complex, too expensive, too small, not scalable. And the implicit message is always the same: it's time for a revolution in cyber security!
Because revolutions promise clarity. They promise a clear "before" and "after".
Especially under pressure, we long for a quick, big change: exploding alert numbers, rising costs, scarce resources and a management that rightly expects answers ... the idea of a quick, radical new beginning seems pretty attractive. Even if the promised SOC revolution is more like a transformation, the term signals dynamism and progress.
Evolution, on the other hand, feels totally slow. Incomplete. Almost like an admission that you can't get it "right". Not today - and not any time in the future.
So although we know that the evolutionary approach in SOC enables continuous improvement and change with comparatively low risk, the impression is that "nothing changes".
While most security operation centres are evolved environments with existing structures, a revolution requires conditions that hardly exist in real security organisations:
A revolution in operational cyber security therefore requires a 100% perfect security organisation.
Do you happen to know one?
SOCs are not greenfield projects, but evolved systems: tools build on each other, detection logic is often created under time pressure. Workflows are characterised by audits, incidents and regulatory requirements. Decisions come from different phases, from different people in charge. This system is not perfect. But it has evolved over time - and it works. And that is precisely what makes a radical new start so risky, or simply unnecessary.
Evolution in SOC means
Consciously taking framework conditions and limitations into account instead of ignoring them in favour of idealised target images
Keeping what works instead of rashly replacing it
creating options instead of forcing irreversible decisions
Allowing different speeds
making mistakes correctable
But above all: not trying to solve everything at the same time!
Alert flood, detection quality, data costs, analyst workload ... These problems cannot be solved with a single architectural leap. Priorities must be set, levers must be set in motion and foundations must be built.
Some layers of the security stack - such as the detection logic - benefit from clear decisions, tight feedback loops and precise responsibilities. Other areas, such as the infrastructure, must be deliberately stable, reliable and difficult to breach, while adjustments remain low-risk.
And agentic AI? Promises autonomous detection, immediate response and seemingly unlimited speed. But in practice, it is clear that even the most advanced AI is of little use without stable foundations, clear processes and experienced teams.
Revolution fulfils a deep need: to finally act, simplify and create order. But this control is often only temporary. The real consequences only become apparent later: in migration fatigue, half-finished platforms, shadow processes and teams that recreate their old working methods in the new system in order to remain able to work at all. Then a lot was replaced, but little was simplified - and what was intended as a fresh start suddenly leads to additional complexity.
Not one that declares the old world dead. Rather, one that is anchored in reality and makes security comprehensible instead of just promising it. Healthy security platforms should not formulate revolutionary claims. They should show a way forward:
to start where you currently are
change one thing without destabilising ten others
build confidence and experience step by step in order to shape policies and strategies independently
Threats develop dynamically - by leaps and bounds and at the same time continuously. Often faster than organisations can react. This makes it all the more important to have a security strategy that does not start from scratch every time.
Evolution is no excuse for standing still. It is the only strategy that takes complexity seriously - and that is precisely why it works in the long term. It enables genuine further development based on trust, understanding and sustainability. Less spectacular, but sustainable.
The SOC of the future: an evolutionary approach and managed risk exposure for 360° cyber defence
Why are we so interested in SOC (r)evolution? On 28 April 2026, we will celebrate the re-opening of our Cyber Defence Center (CDC) in Neu-Isenburg near Frankfurt. We have always had a SOC. But thanks to the merger of InfoGuard Switzerland and InfoGuard Germany, we now operate two highly available, integrated SOCs - data sovereign, staffed around the clock and for customers in the entire DACH region.
A radical new start was neither necessary nor sensible for us. Instead, we are consistently focussing on further development: Integration instead of disruption, targeted reduction of legacy burdens, automation with a sense of proportion and strengthening existing teams. This is how we are making our CDC and MDR services stable, resilient and fit for the future.
The technological basis is our cyber defence platform with open XDR architecture, which combines security functionalities, automation and AI while enabling flexible operating models - even under the highest data sovereignty requirements.
The focus is not only on the detection of attacks, but in particular on the targeted and proactive identification of vulnerabilities and attack surfaces before they can be exploited. This creates transparency about where there is actually an increased risk, which systems are exposed and where targeted measures will have the greatest effect. Security measures can thus be consistently aligned with the actual risk and resources deployed where they deliver the greatest added value.
Our SOC, which is operated 24/7, remains a key success factor. Because as powerful as technology and AI are: Effective cyber defence can only be achieved through the interplay of automation, integrated risk management and sound classification by experienced specialists, especially when quick and reliable decisions are required. For us, this is where the real SOC (r)evolution lies: in continuous further development - without jeopardising operational stability.
Find out first-hand! On 28 April, we are offering you the special opportunity to experience Cyber Defence in the SOC live and cordially invite you to our Security Exchange 2026 event in Neu-Isenburg near Frankfurt. We look forward to exchanging ideas with you in person, register now and stay one step ahead of attackers!
Image caption: Image generated with AI