SOAR: Security Orchestration, Automation & Response

Key Takeaways

  • SOAR platforms integrate and orchestrate disparate security tools, automating and streamlining incident response processes through consistent, repeatable workflows.
  • By leveraging automated playbooks and actions, SOAR reduces manual work, accelerates threat detection and remediation, and enables security teams to focus on higher-value work.
  • Integrated case management, threat intelligence, and collaboration features provide centralized visibility, audit trails, and improved cross-team coordination for more effective incident handling.

An important piece of cybersecurity, SOAR solutions provide a single location for you to observe, understand, and decide how to respond to security incidents. Short for security orchestration, automation and response, true SOAR solutions are operational tools that can be very flexible and powerful, useful even beyond security use cases.

In this article, we’ll explore what SOAR is, why it’s important for enterprises and how you can get the most value from your SOAR solution.

What is SOAR?

SOAR has revolutionized security operations, specifically the way security operations teams manage, analyze and respond to alerts and threats. Without security automation and orchestration, your security analysts are left to investigate every detail manually.

Today, that’s simply not enough. And it’s a guarantee for disaster: cyberattacks of all stripes are rising. SOAR can remedy many of these all on its own. SOAR also helps analysts to more efficiently remedy other threats.

So, let’s talk about what SOAR really is. Technology analyst Gartner defines SOAR as:

“solutions [that] combine incident response, orchestration and automation, and threat intelligence (TI) management capabilities in a single platform.”

Next, we’ll break down these three pieces. As we go along, we’ll see how they realize the rest of what SOAR can do: “document and implement processes (aka playbooks, workflows and processes); support security incident management; and apply machine-based assistance to human security analysts and operators.”

Incident response

Of the three components, incident response is the easiest to understand. NIST defines incident response as “the mitigation of violations of security policies and recommended practices”. Basically, any incident or event that violates your organization's security policies and/or overall cyber best practices.

Incident response is a full practice, made up of a variety of pieces including incident planning and incident response itself. (There are several steps, depending on the framework you use.) You can put all of this under the umbrella of incident management.

(Related reading: incident response 101, incident response metrics & CSIRTs: critical incident response teams.)

Security automation & orchestration

Next, let’s look at automation and orchestration. These are different technologies:

Automation and orchestration are best used in concert. With SOAR, you’re not choosing one or the other: you get both. This capability relieves your security pros from weeding through logs, manually addressing every single alert. (Let them focus on investigation and strategy!)

In a matter of seconds, security automation and orchestration can:

Let’s be clear: SOAR is in no way a replacement for human staff. You will continue to need highly-skilled security analysts to investigate emerging and non-standard issues. And then to orchestrate appropriate responses as necessary.

Threat intelligence

Threat intel is its own full subject! For our purposes here we can define cyber threat intelligence as “evidence-based knowledge” — things like known TTPs and indicators of compromise or attack. When folded into your SOAR solution, this information can help your security teams to better:

(Read our full explainer on cyber threat intelligence.)

A high-level SOAR workflow

SOAR use cases & benefits

A lot of the alerts your security teams receives are mundane, requiring rote manual responses. Others are redundant or false positives — you can ignore these.

SOARs remove rote tasks and makes clear exactly which alerts are worth exploring more. This way you’re handling incidents more efficiently: the easy ones get handled automatically, and more complicated ones get the attention they deserve. That’s an ideal security posture.

Successful SOARing can really change how your SOC teams operate. We can sum up the benefits in three categories:

Ultimately, SOAR solutions free you to investigate the things worthy of analyst time.

Use cases

The smartest thing you can do when exploring SOAR solutions is to imagine how your organization will use it — both initially and over the long term. That’s where SOAR maturity models can help. So, what are common use cases? They often depend on your industry and company profile, but common use cases include:

SOAR features & capabilities

OK, so we know what SOAR tools can do. Now, you’ll need the right features in your SOAR solution. There’s plenty of options out there — including Splunk SOAR — though only a few will have all the features you need.

Here are the capabilities that you should look for:

(Take a guided SOAR tour or try Splunk SOAR for free.)

Comparisons with other cyber solutions

SOAR vs. SIEM

SOAR solutions are often deployed alongside SIEM technology (security incident & event management) because they have distinct differences. Key differences include data sources, alerting vs. investigating capabilities, and the need for tuning. We can sum up these differences:

(See how Splunk is a Leader in SIEM.)

SOAR vs. XDR

Yes, SOAR and extended detection and response (XDR) solutions are often compared: they both integrate diverse security tools and automate and coordinate the response. But how they do it — and how widely the technologies can be used — varies:

SOAR best practices for maximizing value

As with all security tools, the real value of SOAR is in how you use it. Follow these best practices to gain the most value from your SOAR solution investment:

Establish priorities

First evaluate where automation will help immediately, and prioritize those needs. Consider the big picture: prioritize incidents based on frequency and resolution time.

Then define your short-term and long-term use cases and create a list of how you will use SOAR. Involve stakeholders to identify further use cases, even if you implement them later.

Develop your playbooks

Document the steps, instructions and best practices for resolving incidents effectively, ensuring that your security team follows a consistent, repeatable process.

Inventory your tools, apps and APIs

Ensure the vendor you choose can support all the tools you’re currently using. A SOAR solution is only as good as the information you’re putting into it.

Train staff

Train staff for to use SOAR appropriately, but don’t stop there. Train your team to address complex incidents: When alerts require human invention, your staff must have the expertise and confidence to tackle those issues.

Take advantage of newfound time

Plan how your analysts will focus on value-added tasks that benefit the organization — for example, conducting a deep investigation as to why you are constantly fighting off phishing attacks. Even better: Automation will create new roles within the organization. So, use this new time for new areas of focus, like managing the automation and playbooks.

Don’t expect magic overnight

Ease in, don’t expect to use every feature immediately. Focus first on one critical area, then mature sophistication over time. This way you’ll realize the full potential of the solution while minimizing growing pains.

(Learn 5 things to automate first: watch the on-demand webinar.)

Optimize security operations with SOAR

Enable your security team to do the impossible: Keep up with the never-ending security alerts that plague a highly complex IT environment. Freeing your team from dealing with false positives, repetitive alerts and low-risk warnings, SOAR lets you pivot from a reactionary approach to a more proactive one. Rather than fighting fires, security analysts can put their talents and extensive training to better use, ultimately improving your organization’s overall security posture.

Related Articles

What Is Data Analytics? The 4 Analytics Types You Need To Know
Learn
4 Minute Read

What Is Data Analytics? The 4 Analytics Types You Need To Know

Data analytics is a whole world of information that you can glean meaning from. See the 4 types of data analytics any business practice needs today.
Monitoring vs Observability vs Telemetry: What's The Difference?
Learn
11 Minute Read

Monitoring vs Observability vs Telemetry: What's The Difference?

Don’t be confused, be creative. Observability is a lot more than mere monitoring. In fact, the possibilities are practically endless. Find out more here.
Canonical Data Models (CDMs) Explained
Learn
6 Minute Read

Canonical Data Models (CDMs) Explained

Take control of your organization's data mess. Canonical data models will reduce the work you do to your data. Find out exactly how to get started.
Ransomware Families & RaaS Groups
Learn
4 Minute Read

Ransomware Families & RaaS Groups

Every 19 seconds a ransomware attack launches. Are these standalone attacks? Are they operating within a ransomware family of shared knowledge? Find out here.
Threat Hunting vs. Threat Detecting: What's The Difference?
Learn
7 Minute Read

Threat Hunting vs. Threat Detecting: What's The Difference?

Hunting threats, detecting threats. Sounds the same — but they are not! Get tons of info (+ free resources) for prevention methods that underpin cybersecurity.
The Triple DES Intro: Triple Data Encryption Standard
Learn
3 Minute Read

The Triple DES Intro: Triple Data Encryption Standard

Triple DES is an encryption standard that’s NIST-approved for use through 2030. Let’s see how it works and when you want — and don’t want — to use it.
Elliptic Curve Cryptography: An Introduction
Learn
4 Minute Read

Elliptic Curve Cryptography: An Introduction

Let’s see how elliptic curve cryptography works, in this digestible, less academic look that still thoroughly explains this technical topic.
Splunk OnDemand Services: An Introduction & Example
Learn
3 Minute Read

Splunk OnDemand Services: An Introduction & Example

Get started with Splunk OnDemand Services (ODS), an advisory service that bridges the gap between Technical Support and project-based services delivered by Professional Services.
Honeypots Explained: Hitting Hackers Where It Hurts
Learn
3 Minute Read

Honeypots Explained: Hitting Hackers Where It Hurts

Entice hackers to your system to gather cyberthreat intelligence. Get the latest on honeypot types and interactions and see why it isn’t all so sweet.