Security teams now face a dilemma: Maintain many outdated and disjointed tools, like legacy SIEM, or migrate to a singular SOC platform built for today’s challenging, complex environment.

In this report, 451 Research uncovered that the increasing maturation, prevalence and affordability of cloud-native platforms has led to a global trend of organizations moving toward consolidation. Other insights from the research support this finding, including: 

  • 72% of respondents have more than one SIEM, and 41% have more than two (mean of 2.4).
  • The #1 technology organizations seek to layer on top of SIEM is threat detection and response.
  • 49% of respondents’ third-party tools and services are designed to work with multicloud environments.

Migrating from a legacy SIEM can be complex, particularly in larger organizations. 451 Research recommends that organizations evaluate several factors prior to making the transition.

Explore the full report to learn 15 actionable next steps for planning and executing cloud-native SOC transformation.

Copyright © 2026 The Infotech Beat, All Rights Reserved.

Navigating from legacy SIEM to modern SecOps.

Start your SOC transformation.

By accessing advertiser content, your details will be used by The Infotech Beat & Palo Alto Networks for the fulfillment of 'the offer' and follow-up after the fulfillment of the offer.

See the Privacy Policy for more information on the privacy practices of Palo Alto Networks and how your personal data will be processed by or on behalf of Palo Alto Networks.

Palo Alto Networks may follow up in accordance with their Privacy Policy, which offers more information on the privacy practices and how your personal data will be processed by or on behalf of Palo Alto Networks.

By submitting this form, I understand my personal data will be processed in accordance with Palo Alto Networks Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

Data-backed insights on executing cloud-native SOC transformation.

Actionable steps for planning the move to a cloud-native platform.

451 RESEARCH REPORT