For most cybersecurity teams, the pain doesn’t start with a breach. It starts with the gaps that no one has time to close. Every alert is urgent. Every ticket is priority one. You’re running incident response while patching vulnerabilities while explaining to leadership why the team is behind schedule. Burnout becomes a constant.
The most common pain point is not lack of skill, but lack of visibility. Complex systems hide blind spots. Integrations fail silently. Logs pile up faster than they can be reviewed. A single unpatched dependency can sit unnoticed for months while everyone assumes it’s already fixed. Without clear insight, these weak points grow until they’re the perfect entry for an attacker.
The second pain point is speed. Threats move in minutes. Most processes move in days. By the time an issue is triaged, permissions reviewed, fixes tested, and updates deployed, the original risk has multiplied. Slow remediation turns small vulnerabilities into major incidents.
The third pain point is tool overload. Each platform promises coverage, but every new dashboard demands more attention. Switching between monitoring tools, ticketing systems, and automation scripts wastes hours. Critical alerts get buried under noise. Teams lose trust in their own alerts. The more tools in the stack, the harder it is to see the full attack surface.