Microsoft: Navigating the healthcare cyber threat landscape
During SANS CTI Summit Solutions Track 2025, Microsoft’s Director of Threat Intelligence Strategy, Sherrod DeGrippo, discussed the growing ransomware...
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Caitlin Anthoney Jan 29, 2025 6:08:59 PM
At the recent SANS CTI Summit Solutions Track 2025, held on January 27, experts gathered to discuss how threat profiles can strengthen Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) and overcome challenges like limited resources, AI-driven attacks, and sophisticated threats.
“A threat profile is a comprehensive assessment detailing the most important and relevant cyber threats to your organization and how threats are likely to materialize and impact business operations," explains Taylor Long, Sr. Analyst for Custom Intelligence Solutions and Research, Mandiant Intelligence at Google Cloud Security.
A threat profile is a common framework for prioritizing threats. It is a shared reference point that helps security professionals mitigate the risks of relying solely on individual mental models.
Without this shared framework, organizations risk fragmented strategies informed by inconsistent research, media narratives, and isolated expertise.
Anchoring the decisions in one comprehensive threat profile builds collaboration and coordination across silos. It also equips security teams with the research they need to address cyber threats.
Organizations must identify the right people to contribute to building the threat profile. These can include:
Before diving into threats, you must understand the organization’s operational landscape. Consider the following:
Additionally, identify the organization's "crown jewels", or as Long describes, “critical services” for business continuity, like sensitive or proprietary data.
Gather insights from internal sources such as:
As well as external sources like:
To stay ahead of cyber threats, organizations must treat their threat profile as a living document, implementing quarterly or bi-annual reviews that incorporate recent threat intelligence and operational changes.
Additionally, annual or multi-year reviews can reassess long-term strategic risks and upcoming trends.
Finally, “if you don't have the resources to build a threat profile in-house, consider outsourcing it. This can help you get a comprehensive threat profile without [doing] all the work yourself.”
Learn more: Types of cyber threats
A threat profile assesses the likelihood and impact of AI-driven attacks, helping teams prepare appropriate defenses.
No, but it significantly improves your ability to detect, prioritize, and respond to threats before they cause major harm.
They help security teams identify vulnerabilities, prioritize fixes, and implement measures to mitigate the most significant risks.
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