Cybersecurity, Artificial Intelligence, Automation

How AI Cybersecurity Can Reduce Your Security Operations Costs

Table of Contents

AI threats are advancing by the hour, orchestrated by sophisticated individuals and groups worldwide. These threat actors utilise AI to launch targeted attacks on businesses for various motives, including financial gain and political reasons.

The growing trends of AI-driven phishing techniques and impersonation tactics has heightened the need for organisations to integrate advanced, proactive strategies into their cybersecurity posture.

Using AI is not just an option but a necessity. Without utilising advanced techniques for both offense and defence, businesses risk falling behind in addressing the complex challenges presented by changing cyber threats.

Modern Security Operations Challenges

Let’s be honest. Humans have their limits. We live in a world where security operations typically rely heavily on human interactions. Security Operations Centers (SOCs) house teams of Security Analysts tasked with monitoring and responding to cyber threats. It’s not sustainable, efficient or effective.

Relying solely on human capabilities for monitoring and responding to the sophisticated and ever-changing landscape of cyber threats presents several challenges. Today, the complexity of cyber threats far exceeds the capabilities of human analysts.

Security Analysts follow a manual and intensive process when responding to security events. Upon detection, they initiate a series of scripted actions, known as Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs), to investigate and mitigate the threat. These SOPs are essentially libraries of predefined steps to be taken in response to specific scenarios.


This manual investigative process is time-consuming, with analysts spending hours delving into the details of each event. As a result, a SOC team, even one operating 24/7, can become a factory of human-intensive tasks. The sheer volume of events, multiplied by the number of customers and the duration of threats, creates an environment prone to human errors and inefficiencies.

 

Common challenges include fatigue-driven errors, delays in investigation, and the risk of crucial details being overlooked. Human limitations in terms of working hours further exacerbate these challenges, leading to suboptimal operational efficiency and potential negative impacts on the quality of service delivered to customers.

The Benefits of AI and Automation

In addressing the challenges faced by SOC teams, the introduction of AI and automation significantly improves the capabilities of security operations. The once manual and time-consuming processes undertaken by Security Analysts can be automated to enhance efficiency and reduce response times.

Imagine an event triggering an output. Traditionally, a Security Analyst would follow a predefined script, executing a series of steps outlined in a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP). This workflow can be automated. The automated system replicates the analyst’s behaviour, executing the SOPs in response to the event trigger.

Automated cybersecurity holds the power to expedite the entire investigative process. What might have taken hours for a human analyst to complete can be achieved in minutes, or even seconds, with automation. The automation system can efficiently handle routine tasks and decision-making processes, significantly reducing mean time to resolve (MTTR).

 

While automation can handle most tasks, there may be scenarios where human intervention is necessary. In these cases, the automated system can seamlessly hand over the information and context to a human analyst. This ensures that the analyst can focus on the nuanced and complex aspects of the investigation, rather than mundane and repetitive tasks.

By leveraging AI and automation, SOC teams can maximise their value by concentrating on higher-order tasks and strategic decision-making. The result is a more streamlined and efficient workflow, leading to quicker issue resolution, improved mean time to resolve rates, and ultimately, imrpvoed customer satisfaction.

How AI Reduces Security Operations Costs

The role of AI in security operations allows for a critical perspective on cost reduction. Unlike traditional methods where SOPs are manually created for every new scenario, AI operates through learning on the fly. This self-learning ability ensures that as new, unprecedented events occur, the AI system adapts and evolves without the need for manual intervention.

True AI doesn’t require analysts to create specific procedures for each unique event. Instead, it learns from the behaviour observed during the event, eliminating the need for repeated training. In essence, the AI becomes self-sufficient in handling scenarios it has encountered before.

This self-training capability allows for rapid response times. When a similar event occurs in the future, the AI can autonomously and efficiently execute the learned processes, drastically reducing the time needed for investigation and resolution.

Moreover, the cost-saving benefits of AI extend beyond operational efficiency. In a business context, the introduction of AI allows for the creation of a leaner SOC team that heavily leverages automation.

By reducing the need for a full-fledged SOC team, businesses can significantly cut costs while enhancing operational effectiveness.

AI’s ability to handle routine tasks means that human analysts can focus on more complex, strategic, and value-added activities, contributing to a multifaceted improvement in both operational efficiency and overall cost-effectiveness.

Scalability and Future-Proofing

With a well-implemented approach, businesses can focus on expanding the modular architecture of their automation without being constrained by concerns related to human resources within growth plans.

The scalability achieved through AI is not just about adding more people to drive the expansion but revolves around investing in the scalability of the automation framework.

In contrast to a flat architecture that might hinder scalability, the emphasis is placed on strategic planning to create a system that can effortlessly scale out. The importance of scalability is a key consideration when adopting an AI-based strategy for cybersecurity posture.

However, there is also an ethical dimension to scalability that must be considered. Rather than advocating for indiscriminate role displacement, businesses must consider a more nuanced approach.

Rather than cutting roles, businesses should repurpose their teams, creating a learning environment that contributes to the AI strategy.

This approach is not only more ethical but also more rewarding, creating a collaborative partnership between human expertise and AI capabilities. In essence, the focus is on achieving scalability while future-proofing the workforce through strategic repurposing and upskilling.

Conclusion

Striking the right balance between AI, automation, and human expertise in cybersecurity operations is essential. AI is a powerful tool that businesses can leverage to help reduce operational costs and allow security teams to demonstrate their value through higher order tasks and strategic decision making.

Gone are the days where Security Analysts spend hours manually investigating a single event. However, the unfortunate trend of tech brands using AI buzzwords for marketing can cause confusion among decision-makers as it creates the misconception about the ease of deploying comprehensive AI solutions.

CloudGuard’s approach to combatting threats combines AI for intricate threat analysis, automation for handling mundane tasks, and human involvement for contextualising and refining the outcomes – offering businesses a comprehensive cybersecurity solution.

Author: Javid Khan
Share:
Author: Javid Khan
Share:

Related Resources

two men talking on a podcast posted on linkedin with a red arrow pointing towards a deepfake
Why Social Engineering Always Works: How Hackers Use Phishing & Deepfakes
We’ve all done the training, so why are attackers still getting through? Attackers no longer rely on bad spelling or suspicious links, they use AI-generated deepfakes and psychological profiling to manipulate people with astonishing precision. By exploiting the brain’s emergency response system, they trigger fear, urgency, or authority to override...
Dark purple background with claude logo and words pro, team and enterprise.
Claude Business Security: Choosing the Right Account for SMBs
When I shared my last article, a few people got in touch asking for a more practical follow-up, specifically around how small teams can use Claude Pro without putting business data at risk. This piece goes step by step through exactly that. Understand what you’re actually adopting Claude Pro is...
Two analysts looking surprised. Purple cyber background with phishing hook.
What Happens After a Phishing Attack? A Real Microsoft 365 Incident Walkthrough
If your organisation thinks a password reset or MFA alone are enough, think again. In this phishing attack breakdown by CloudGuard’s SOC team, Conor and Jon reveal the reality behind an actual breach involving a UK law firm, exposing how hackers use four methods to regain access long after initial...
purple background with computer that says threat from the field in cartoon like design
Cyber Threat Trends Q1 2026: Data Theft, AI Attacks and Emerging Risks
Executive Summary Every 90 days, we review the latest cyber threat trends to identify what IT leaders should learn, where resilience gaps are widening, and what practical actions organisations should take next.  The first quarter of 2026 has been intense. The UK threat picture is not defined by one single...
Microsoft Defender for Cloud
Microsoft Defender for Cloud Cloud environments change fast. New workloads, new services and new risks appear daily, often without full visibility or clear ownership. Microsoft Defender for Cloud provides continuous assessment across Azure, hybrid and multi-cloud environments to help organisations understand and reduce cloud security risk. CloudGuard ensures your cloud...
Woman looking at tablet with cyber imagery across the top.
The Limitations of External Penetration Testing (And What to Do About Them)
Core argument  Traditional internal penetration tests gives executives false confidence because it’s typically scope-limited, scheduled, doesn’t reflect real attacker behaviour and ignores the AI threats with user access. Would you feel comfortable boarding a plane if the pilot had practised emergency landings but had never actually simulated an engine failure?  So, why do businesses specifically exclude their...
CloudGuard logo and Stonewater Housing logo on a pastel purple background
Stonewater Housing Achieves 24/7 Security Monitoring Without Expanding Its IT Team
Image of man with half blue face on left and half red face on right. ÂŁ20 notes falling in the background.
Date | Time: 24/03/2026 | 12:00 pm
[On Demand] The AI-Enabled Insider Threat: When Trusted Access Becomes Competitive Advantage
Your most trusted employees can now distil years of institutional knowledge in days, sometimes without realising the risk they’re creating. Insider risk has fundamentally changed. We’re past the days of someone copying files onto a USB stick. Today, trusted employees are using AI tools to summarise reports, analyse strategy documents,...
Continuous Security Validation: How to Prove Your Cybersecurity Controls Actually Work
Core argument CISOs are increasingly measured not by the security they implement, but by the breaches they fail to prevent. Most cybersecurity investments create a false sense of protection because they’re never truly tested under realistic conditions.  Zero trust applied new controls but the new wave of Agentic AI solutions will fundamentally...
Get In Touch

Our Cybersecurity Services Can Instantly Improve Your Business’ Security Posture

Complete the form to find out more about any of our one-off or managed cybersecurity services. Not seeing what you’re looking for? Our cybersecurity consultants and MXDR experts are always on-hand to provide the guidance and support you need.